
Faith
Popcorn's Predictions 2007 - The New Networked Self
includes a ‘Return to Respect’ for elderly
NEW YORK, Dec. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- Leading future-focused trend
consultancy Faith Popcorn's BrainReserve anticipates
the forging of a new type of identity in the coming
years: The New Networked Self. The technological
advances of the information age have produced the
most powerful tools yet for shaping our collective
human destiny. The world has simultaneously become
more fluid and more connected, one of both infinite
possibility and extreme intimacy.
As a result,
people are turning away from the ego-driven
self-aggrandizement that characterized the old era
of hyper-consumption. The New Networked Self is far
more ecologically aware than her predecessor and
sees herself as a tiny, but instrumental part of a
much larger picture that is constantly in flux. With
this newfound awareness comes a personal sense of
responsibility to understand and engage with the
whole.
Oldies but Goodies
Our culture is
suffering from an experience deficit. With the
availability of online knowledge, we're claiming
expertise based only on secondary experience. Now
that everyone's a web-educated know-it-all, we're
secretly longing for authority figures to guide and
assure us with indispensable nuggets of wisdom that
could only come from having actually accumulated
life experience.
The Future:
Respect for elders makes a comeback in the form of
Ask Your Grandma hotlines and the proliferation of
online video clips by seniors showing us how to tie
knots and concoct home remedies.
Identity Flux
Technology has
enabled us to experiment with different
personalities, leading to a much more fluid sense of
who we are. Having tasted the nectar of virtual
liberation, we're beginning to reject the singularly
defined roles we're expected to play in society.
The Future:
Gender-neutrality goes mainstream. People list
skills on their business cards rather than title,
and dress up in various costumes depending on who
they feel like being that day.
Liquid Brands
Today's consumers
are capricious and non-committal. Brands will have
to become more liquid to keep up with their
constantly moving targets.
The Future:
Chameleon-like brands focus less on communicating a
static message and more on being the right thing for
the right persona at the right time. Constantly
morphing retailers carry products until they sell
out and never restock.
Virtual Immortality
Consumers globally
are creating fully fleshed out existences in the
virtual world-dressing up their avatars, making
friends, having affairs and buying property for
their pixilated alter-egos. And now that people have
multiple lives, who says you can't live forever?
The Future: While
some let their avatars drift away to online
purgatory, many more leave behind specific
instructions on how their virtual selves should
proceed. Services offering avatar surrogates
flourish, and we bequeath avatars to friends and
family in our wills.
EnvironMENTAL Movement
Like the movement
to combat environmental pollution, the next
consumer-led reaction will be against the mental
pollution caused by marketers. With every corner of
the world both real and virtual becoming plastered
with marketing messages, bombarded consumers are
starting to say they've had enough. The current
attack against marketing to kids is just the
beginning.
The Future:
Companies are expected to reduce the amount of
damage they are doing to our minds. Savvy companies
sponsor marketing-free white spaces in lieu of
polluting the environment with models and logos.
Product PLACEment
In the globally
networked age, consumers are much more concerned
about the consequences of consumption. Is my garbage
poisoning someone in a developing country? How much
fuel was burned in order to get these strawberries
to my local supermarket?
The Future: Enviro-biographies
are attached to just about everything, letting
consumers know the entire life story of a product:
where the materials were harvested, where it was
constructed, how far it traveled, and where it ended
up after being thrown away or recycled.
Brand-Aides
The government has
let us down when it comes to providing the social
services we had once expected from it. Brands are
stepping in to take over where the government left
off. Companies are already finding there's profit to
be made from providing affordable healthcare to the
masses.
The Future:
Socially responsible brands make a buck while
providing desperately needed services. Communities
are revived by Target daycare, Starbucks learning
centers, and Avis transportation services for the
elderly.
Moral Status Anxiety
In today's
increasingly philanthropic climate, expect
conspicuous self- indulgence to go straight to the
social guillotine. The globally conscious consumer
regards altruistic activities as a necessary part of
self- improvement.
The Future: A
person's net worth is no longer measured by dollars
earned, but by improvements made. Families compete
with each other on how many people they fed while on
vacation, and the most envied house on the block is
not the biggest, but the most sustainable.