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Home » Glossary » Bluetooth

Bluetooth

Definition

Bluetooth

Bluetooth is a short-range wireless standard that lets devices swap data over low-power radio waves, usually within ten metres. It runs on the 2.4 GHz band, doesn’t need a router or cellular signal, and powers most pairings between phones, earbuds, cars, keyboards, and smart-home gear today.

Key takeaways

  • Bluetooth operates on the unlicensed 2.4 GHz ISM band using frequency-hopping spread spectrum across 79 channels.
  • More than 5 billion Bluetooth-enabled devices shipped in 2024, according to the Bluetooth Special Interest Group.
  • Bluetooth Low Energy, introduced in 2010, drives the wearables and IoT segment because it sips battery instead of draining it.
  • The standard sits beside Wi-Fi rather than competing with it — short hops and pairings, not internet pipes.

Bluetooth was invented in 1994 by Ericsson engineers and named after a tenth-century Danish king who unified warring tribes — a nod to the protocol’s job of uniting incompatible devices. The first Bluetooth-enabled mobile phone, Ericsson’s T36, shipped in 2000, and the standard has shipped in a new version roughly every two years since.

For outsourcing teams running distributed contact centres, retail floors, or warehouse operations, Bluetooth is the quiet backbone behind headsets, barcode scanners, asset tags, and visitor-tracking beacons. You probably don’t think about it until a pairing drops mid-call.

How it works

Bluetooth devices talk by hopping between 79 narrowband channels inside the 2.400-2.4835 GHz band, switching frequencies up to 1,600 times per second to dodge interference. One device acts as the primary (formerly “master”), the other as the secondary, and they negotiate a shared link key during pairing so future connections happen automatically.

The standard ships in two main flavours: Bluetooth Classic (BR/EDR) for continuous audio and file transfer, and Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) for short bursts of telemetry from sensors and wearables. BLE was added in version 4.0 in 2010 and is what makes a fitness tracker last a week on one charge.

Range depends on the radio class. Class 1 devices push roughly 100 metres at full power, Class 2 (the most common, found in phones and headsets) covers about 10 metres, and Class 3 stays under one metre. Bluetooth 5, ratified in 2016, doubled BLE data rate and quadrupled range to roughly 240 metres line-of-sight.

Bluetooth versionYearMax data rateNotable feature
2.1 + EDR20073 MbpsSecure simple pairing
4.020101 MbpsBluetooth Low Energy introduced
5.020162 Mbps (BLE)4x range, mesh networking
5.320212 Mbps (BLE)Lower latency, better channel classification
5.420232 Mbps (BLE)Encrypted advertising, PAwR for retail tags

Source: Bluetooth SIG specifications.

Examples

Bluetooth shows up wherever a cable would be a nuisance. The patterns repeat across consumer, enterprise, and outsourced operations.

Contact-centre headsets. Most BPO floors in Manila, Cebu, and Bogotá run on Bluetooth headsets from Jabra, Plantronics (Poly), or Logitech. Agents pair once, then move between huddle rooms without losing the call. Quality-assurance teams care about codec support — LC3 in Bluetooth 5.2 cut latency to roughly 20 ms, close enough to wired audio that customers stop hearing the delay.

Retail and warehouse beacons. Walmart, Target, and DHL deploy BLE beacons to track stock, route forklifts, and trigger app notifications when shoppers enter aisles. The beacons are coin-sized, run on a CR2032 battery for two to three years, and broadcast a small ID payload that an app phones home.

Connected vehicles. Every new car sold in the EU since 2018 ships with Bluetooth hands-free pairing as a near-universal feature, and Android Auto and Apple CarPlay use a Bluetooth handshake before handing the heavy lifting to Wi-Fi.

Medical and wearable devices. Fitbit, Apple Watch, continuous glucose monitors from Dexcom, and hearing aids from Phonak all stream sensor data over BLE to a paired phone. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration treats these pairings as a cybersecurity surface and has issued device-maker guidance since 2023.

Related terms

FAQ

Is Bluetooth secure enough for business use?

Modern Bluetooth (4.2 and above) uses AES-128 encryption and Secure Connections pairing, which closes most older eavesdropping attacks. Risks remain around weak PINs and forgotten devices, so most enterprise IT policies require BLE-only profiles and a passkey on every pairing.

What’s the difference between Bluetooth and Wi-Fi?

Wi-Fi carries internet traffic at hundreds of Mbps across a building. Bluetooth carries small payloads between two paired devices at up to a few Mbps within roughly 10 metres. They share the 2.4 GHz band but solve different problems and usually run side by side.

How many devices can one phone pair with at once?

Bluetooth Classic typically supports up to seven active connections per device, though most phones throttle this lower for stability. BLE supports many more simultaneous sensor streams, which is why a single hub can talk to a houseful of smart bulbs.

Does Bluetooth use mobile data?

No. Bluetooth runs on its own radio and never touches your cellular plan. Tethering uses Bluetooth as the pipe but the data itself still rides your phone’s cellular connection.

What is Bluetooth Low Energy used for?

BLE powers wearables, medical sensors, retail beacons, smart locks, and most IoT pairings. It sends short bursts instead of continuous streams, which lets a coin-cell battery last months or years.

If you’re scoping a contact centre or back-office team and want hardware that holds up under shift work, talk to Outsource Accelerator about BPO providers that already standardise on enterprise-grade Bluetooth headsets and BLE asset tracking.

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