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A summary: the nVision UK Client Conference – October 2011

Thank you to everyone that attended our Radical Times – Radical Response event yesterday at the Congress Centre.  The presentations have been sent out to all nVision UK clients this afternoon complete with speaker notes but we thought it would be useful to summarise the key points from each of the sessions here.

Our Managing Director Meabh Quoirin opened the day and provided the social context by examining the issue of radicalism from the perspectives of consumers, citizens and brands.  The primary hypothesis of this session revolved around the concept of the “pop radical”.

Radical, in terms of the mood today, is calling for conversation. It is exploratory and discursive & iterative in emphasis; it is less didactic and unilateral. It is not about a revolution in the French sense. It’s all about asking the questions. Lots of questions.

Think also in terms of lots of bubbles. The big one that burst, but also lots of causes, questions and anger floating around which quite often disappear as soon as they’ve popped up. And there now appears to be enough momentum to know that the questions are going to keep on coming. So far, it doesn’t matter too much that there are not very many answers.

For so many of us, we might sympathise, identify with, stay interested in causes or the 99%ers, but most of us are only ever going to wear the t-shirt indoors. Pop is more about the mood than consumer movement per se. This almost doesn’t matter, for the new radical, in pop radical, it’s mostly about keeping the questions afloat.

The trend is about fundamental concerns (money, trust, shared reward). And in this context anyone can be a “pop radical”. The pop radical keeps on consuming. But he/she also keeps on asking brands & business to do a better, fairer job.

We are seeing:

  • A lot of little explosions, not a big bang.
  • Some real causes and calls for action, more about (often online) conversations and questions, less about anarchy (and no one needs to pretend they don’t want to consume).
  • A lot of anger, some appetite for a better way – delivered in small chunks of change from progressive brands.
  • A lot of attention paid to the inner rebel – there is a market for edgy evolution.

Our Economics Editor Richard Nicholls then provided the macroeconomic backdrop.  It’s certainly an interesting time for a presentation on the economy. A year ago the UK economy and the wider global economy were recovering. Growth wasn’t spectacular and it was uneven and we all knew that the worst of the austerity was still to come, but we were in recovery. The economy was about where we’d expect it to have been at that stage of the cycle.

But there’s a little phrase that’s been appearing a lot recently in the economic news – Double Dip. The big question now is : how likely is this? Certainly more likely than it was.

A double dip could happen due to global factors or domestic factors.

If we look at recent and projected near term GDP growth rates for the UK then we can see that we are not far off a mild double dip already. If we just look at consumer spending – we’re actually already there. It wouldn’t take much to tip the UK into a technical double dip recession.

We’ve seen that consumer confidence does not support sustained consumer spending growth at present. The housing market remains weak. UK consumers have high levels of debt and are trying to pay them back. And fiscal austerity is hurting.

But this is not the nightmare scenario. Two mild quarters of negative growth would not be that dissimilar to what we’ve experienced lately. This would be worse than the central forecast, but it’s not the worst outcome.

A global double dip would be more painful. The biggest and immediate threat is the Eurozone crisis. The US could slip into recession as they embark on their own fiscal austerity programme and if it’s a severe one, it could drag the UK into recession too. But it is not likely to be too severe without collateral damage from the Eurozone crisis.

Most large emerging markets have been growing very rapidly. The forecast is for them to continue to do so – as many of them did throughout 2009. There have been murmurings of the potential for an over-heating and a slowdown in China, but the forecast is for continued growth.

It’s impossible to predict factors that could trigger a commodity price surge. But civil war in a major oil producing country would push up oil prices and inflation and harm disposable incomes.

So what’s the immediate outlook?  Well firstly, it’s likely that GDP grew in Q3.

Unless we see a new commodity price surge, then inflation should fall back quite soon. If this happens it will enable disposable incomes to finally rise and encourage consumers to spend. So if we avoid a double dip then happier times might not be too far away.

A mild double dip is possible, but an increase in consumer confidence would reduce the likelihood of this.  However, the biggest current threat to our economic prospects remains the Eurozone sovereign debt crisis.

We then heard from our Head of Research, Katie Toll, and analyst Kerry Rheinstein on the ‘End of Inefficiency’ and ‘Smart Networking’ respectively – two of our newest additions to nVitro, our library of emerging trends.

The End of Inefficiency is a fascinating proposition that rethinks the role of choice in the age of the algorithm.  The age of price comparison is still relatively young. However, there is now such an array of price and quality comparison sites that it is hard to imagine making a purchase without consulting them first.   In fact, this year, for the very first time, our nVision research shows that it is now a majority of consumers who are using the internet to compare prices and products.

Never before have consumers been so well guided towards good choices in our purchasing decisions. In fact, arguably, there is now no element of our consumption in which we would not seek third party advice to guide us to good decisions and we are increasingly trusting this input to refine and narrow our purchase choices.

But, in the story so far, the final decision has, in the main, been left to the consumer’s personal discretion. What is anticipated in this trend is that consumers will realise that they can actually optimise their decision-making by embracing systems and services which process choice options on their behalf. And, with limited or no further reference to them, select and activate the best one. This emerging trend therefore carries radical consequences for how certain products will be bought in the future and how brands might retain visibility with their customers.

Smart networking is propelled by the growing recognition of the indelible nature of online activity. This realisation has pushed consumers into a culture of digital housekeeping. Whereas the internet was once seen as a dream for one to be invisible, we now apply decorum measures – ways to behave – for our off-line and online lives.

This new self-awareness is driven by our increased use of the Internet and the merging of our personal and professional worlds. In the past, we had two lives (one online and one offline) and now we only have one.  As consumers learn the consequences of their online activities’ half lives, the value of restraint will become ever more clear. Consumers feel the ongoing tension between the urge to share versus their preference for privacy, the desire to be free in cyberland versus the pressure for regulation and the desire for enhanced services versus feeling that companies are intruding into their personal lives.

The morning concluded with an interactive session led by the co-founder of the Future Foundation, Melanie Howard.  This was focused on understanding the importance of irrationality and its implications on the way we approach consumer insight.

Our CEO, Christophe Jouan, then began the afternoon by analysing the importance of aspirations.  Our proprietary research programme stretches back to 1980 and allows us to track how consumers have changed in their attitudes and behaviours since then.  There is a (valid) assumption that our values as people lead to our choices as consumers and so brands always strive to fulfil emotional, as well as practical need. And, if this emotional need is a deep value or aspiration, so much the better.

Discovering these aspirations is even more important during radical times, when brands have to compete even harder for a smaller pool of money. Consumer knowledge can enable a brand to stand out in the ocean of price cuts, special offers and promotions.

Along with the rise of creativity, the need for recognition and fame is probably the aspiration that has grown most significantly but what was startling to see in the data was that many of the values and aspirations that shape our lives have remained incredibly stable across three decades.  Although the way we interact with the world has changed dramatically, our core values generally have not.  Will this change over next 5 to 10 years? We don’t expect so.

Jason Mander, a Senior Analyst on our editorial team looked at the rise and resilience of the “freemium”.  Many of you, I’m sure, will be familiar with the concept of “Freemium” – a service model adopted by several online businesses in the quest to monetise digital content.

A combination of the words Free + Premium, it advocates giving a service or product away for free to a lot of customers on the expectation that some will choose to upgrade to premium access; essentially, service a large customer base but expect to draw revenue from a relatively small section of it. For this particular model to work, the revenue generated by that small proportion of paying subscribers is critical. But, as the profit reports of Spotify show, convincing consumers to upgrade from free versions is an extremely difficult feat  -  in the digital age, so many online users have become accustomed to receiving content at no charge that the thought of paying for it is simply unpalatable.

So, as Freemium companies attempt to stem the tidal wave of free content sweeping across various sectors  -  as they bid, as it were, to halt the obliteration of price  -  Jason asked us to consider whether the tactics being employed online have relevance in other retail contexts. And at a wider level, what light can the Freemium debate shed on the question of what customers in the 10s are willing to pay for? Will millions of consumers simply want something for nothing?

There was a specific focus on Freemium’s impact on, and relevance to, three of the themes we monitor within nVision – Considered Consumption, The Responsible Consumer and The Networked Society.

By exposing the latest attitudes among consumers and tracking innovative service propositions from a range of markets, we looked at how, and when, consumers may be tempted to hand over their money.

Last but certainly not least, Yasmine Baladi, Associate Director of Client Services, took us back into the world of nVitro to complete the day.  She spoke about 2 emerging trends: The Wealth Siren and Self-Service Redefined.

What the mega-rich devour every day, the rest of us would like to taste at least once in a while.  Furthermore these people continue to challenge the limits and boundaries of consumer aspirations and shape the dreams of billions of people.

The wealth siren theme demonstrates that there is no sign of the interest in the mega-rich diminishing. The number of uber-wealthy is constantly growing and as they do so, their importance  and influence grows accordingly. We looked at a number of examples – of decaffeinated versions of what the super-wealthy are offered  – and this will, we believe, continue to stimulate new waves of service and product innovation.

Self-Service Redefined was the final session of the day and Yasmine took us through how the humble vending machine is evolving to revolutionise consumer attitudes towards self-service and acquiring new status as it creates a third space between e-commerce and traditional retail.

Looking forward, the next generation of vending machines will continue to bridge the gap between traditional retail and the convenience of e-commerce.   We envisage a future where smart terminals refine our expectations of service, where they perform a variety of additional social functions and provide features that help to simplify one’s daily life.

If you have any questions or comments about any of the content from the day, feel free to let us know in the comments or through your nVision Account Manager.

The 3 stages of social media engagement

When we look at examples of successful social media engagement, we can identify several distinct stages through which a campaign tends to move – a trajectory which will be of obvious relevance for any marketers hoping to optimise their strategies in this area.

Step 1: Socialising promotional activity

Word of mouth is a tremendously potent force when it comes to spreading information about promotional activity; as our chart demonstrates, the majority of consumers in the UK freely admit that they enjoy talking to friends and family members about particularly good deals or discounts they’ve managed to obtain (nVision Research).

So often, the most successful social media campaigns revolve around incentive and reward schemes and, in a previous post, we saw this in action with the case of IKEA opening a new store in Malmö.  Realistically, nobody wants to “friend” the manager of a furniture store unless they are incentivised to do so – and this was indeed what the furniture chain managed to achieve. The creative execution of this campaign certainly helped accelerate the speed at which the message was transmitted across the network but, without that incentive at the heart of it, I dare say the marketers involved would have struggled somewhat to engage so many users about the opening of a new retail space.

The difference between social media marketing and traditional marketing is that, whereas the latter is all about a big message, the former requires building a conservation over time. Many of us, I’m sure, will have “friended” or “followed” a brand in order to enter a competition or access a discount voucher – only to sever our ties a few weeks later when the campaign has ended. The interesting aspect of this for me, however, is that I never do so immediately after I get the voucher simply because I am not that engaged with the list of people that I am following. In fact, it’s only after the brand has put out a few banal “so what’s everyone doing with their weekend?” updates that I am finally reminded to cut them off – and I imagine many of you will have done likewise.

What’s important is the critical gap in-between: the period which follows the end of the promotion but precedes the “defriending”. If I may use cricket as a metaphor, more important than the incredible ball which the batsman can’t play is the next delivery the bowler makes. For us, then, the transition period between these phases is arguably more vital than the short-term wins delivered by the initial promotional activity. Only in this intermediary phase can we can start building sustainable relationships with consumers.

Step 2: Converting the conversation

Step two requires marketers to build the promotion-based message into one that can be sustained as a conversation over time. This, of course, is the step which is the most difficult and, sadly, there are no magic formulae to guarantee continued engagement. There are, however, several points to keep in mind when building a strategy – not an exhaustive list but a set of essentials which should always be considered. We’d love to hear your personal essentials in the comments.

1. Understand their needs. In so many aspects of business, success is intrinsically linked to how well we understand our customers’ needs. This is why insight is crucial but too often we see the link to insight being under-utilised in social media situations. And that baffles me:  understanding the motivation for consumers to “friend” or “follow” your brand in the first place is absolutely critical to knowing how you can turn short-term excitement driven by promotional activity into a long-term conversation.

2. Be transparent. It is so important here that any communication comes directly and transparently from the brand in an authentic tone that resonates with fans’ expectations.  Remember, this is a space owned by the consumer so simply broadcasting messages at them will encourage them to click that “unfollow” button.

3. Look to convert your customers into fans. If we think about the types of pages we tend to like on Facebook, as well as which accounts we follow on Twitter, they very often belong to those individuals or organisations of whom we would consider ourselves fans (be they bands, teams, artists etc). The perfect example here is Coca-Cola – a brand with over 34 million fans on Facebook, despite the fact they didn’t even create the page on the social networking site themselves. For decades their marketing has been focused on building a brand that their customers connect with at a deep level that is reminiscent of a sports team rather than a soft drink.  It’s an illustration of how, if your wider marketing strategies are focused on building a fan base rather than a customer base, engaging people on an ongoing basis can become much simpler and allows you to start building brand equity. Social media must be part of that strategy too of course but without the additional drive across other channels, the challenge is made that much more difficult.

Step 3: Harness the community

So, you have excited your customers with a socialised promotion and, by progressing your understanding of what they need, you’ve successfully converted this into a conversation that is proving sustainable. What next?

Now we enter the most powerful stage of social media engagement: the construction of a community where conversations happen from consumer to consumer rather than between brand and consumer. For me, this represents the holy grail of social media marketing; once a community has been built, we can step back and allow customers/members/fans to share their experiences with each other. It is at this point that we can begin to see the real fruits of our labour and explore ways to harness that community to help the brand move forward. One of the purest expressions of this is co-creation.

While hardly a new phenomenon, the ability to have your new product development, branding or strategy informed by the very people who love your product is a powerful goal to keep in mind while developing your social media programmes. I believe this is what we should always aim for and, as we discovered during a research project that we undertook on behalf of Google last year – looking at the future of work – businesses around the globe are already capitalising on it.

Once again, though, it’s vital to think about what motivates consumers to get involved. For a hardcore niche – your hardened fanbase, as it were – the chance to shape the future of the brand will be sufficient. For the vast majority, however, incentives will prove much more effective. In our 2011 research, we asked consumers if they would be interested in contributing ideas for the creation of a brand’s new products, advertising or marketing campaign in the future. And while just 1 in 8 answered with a firm yes, a further two thirds said they would if they were rewarded for doing so.

So, there we have it: three key steps that we believe represent the trajectory of a successful social media strategy. Needless to say, it is a difficult journey and requires a serious commitment to insight and to truly knowing your customers. But the benefits of converting these customers into fans and providing them with the opportunity to connect and share their experiences is worth the effort. Indeed, this decade will prove that the ultimate expression of a brand’s social media presence is not about creating and sharing content with your customers but allowing them the opportunity to build that content alongside you.

The Launch of nVision Global

This week was a momentous one for the Future Foundation as we officially launched the new nVision Global website.  In recent years we have increasingly been asked to apply our trends work to global issues on ad-hoc projects as multinationals have looked to centralise their insight functions and embed consumer trends at the leading edge of their strategies, and as domestic brands have been forced to look globally in search of growth.  It was a natural step for us to take our proprietary research programme global in order to provide a library of trends and insights to draw on and we now undertake quantitative and qualitative research in 23 countries across the globe.

In addition to this, we have a network of global Trendspotters providing us with a continuous flow of ideas, local innovations and information on how trends are taking different forms in different markets.  And as with our other nVision services  -  nVision UK and nVision Europe  -  we combine our research with an extensive range of complementary external global sources spanning many different commercial sectors to provide clients with a comprehensive analysis of how their target audiences are evolving across the world.

Subscribers to nVision Global have unlimited access to:

  • Over 60 global consumer trend reports : each containing a concise description of what the trend is, corroborating quantitative and qualitative evidence, a future outlook outlining the evolutionary trajectory of the trend, actionable implications as to what this trend means for our clients’ business and a number of trend manifestations (see below).
  • 69 (and counting) nVitro trends : emerging, niche trends that we believe should be on your radar.
  • A library of constantly refreshed reports analysing markets, demographic groups and issues in depth.  This ranges from quarterly economics updates to reports on the future of mobile culture or the changing relationship that consumers around the globe have with price.
  • 1000+ trend manifestations : one of the most popular new additions to nVision, these showcase innovative examples of how brands around the world are already finding commercial opportunity in using consumer trends.
  • Beyond 2020 : a series of reports examining the future of specific sectors or industries. Each one contains an analysis of what is shaping the future for brands in that sector as well as visualised product concepts of how consumers will be living in 2020 and beyond.
  • Special analyses : One-off reports on the most topical issues  facing brand owners and marketers.
  • Economic profiles for 160 countries, including all of the key economic stats and figures and all-important future projections.
  • Hundreds of individual charts and forecasts to download.
  • Vastly enhanced search functionality.

One of the immediate changes to the site that you will notice is the addition of nVision DNA.  This is an interactive trend map that has been has been specifically designed to provide clients with an overview of the key trends affecting distinct global regions and countries as well as an immediate and visually engaging indication of the links that exist between the 60+ trends monitored in nVision Global.

The rationale behind this particular innovation is that trends cannot be considered as isolated entities operating in a vacuum; their future direction and vitality is reliant upon the status of related trends.  Should a trend’s trajectory shift, its impact on another, related trend will also be affected. Using nVision DNA, clients can instantly see which trends are most directly related to another and are presented with an alternative means of navigating the trend universe.  Subscribers can also re-orient the map according to different global regions, allowing them to quickly prioritise those trends that are impacting most heavily on their target audience in different markets.

Not to mention of course, the dedicated account management team and complimentary tickets to our calendar of events throughout the year.  Our second annual nVision Global conference will be at the end of November so stay tuned for updates regarding that.  The revamped version of our UK and European nVision websites are now in the final stages of testing and we are expecting them to be live before the nVision UK Client Conference at the end of October.  In the meantime, if you’d like to know more about nVision Global, then feel free to get in touch with my colleague Dominic Harrison.  For now, we will leave you with this video of Christophe Jouan, CEO of Future Foundation, speaking about nVision Global and what subscribers can expect from the new service.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBeC6KOHPkI&feature=channel_video_title[/youtube]

Social media’s role in the evolution of communication

During the relatively short period of time for which they have been in existence, social media platforms have exerted an intense pressure on our industries. And given the whistle-stop speed with which a message or meme can now be transmitted across groups of friends – and, in the process, potentially transform a market overnight – marketers are increasingly focusing their energy on monetising this new platform. In a way there is an amusing touch of Magic Nostalgic about this – word of mouth is after all the oldest form of marketing.

In this post, however, I want to go deeper into the subject and look at how social media platforms have fundamentally altered the way in which we communicate with our peers – as well as how this has imbued word-of-mouth with a renewed sense of potency.

In the past, if I wanted to check up on a friend, send my parents a message or ask my brother for his recommendations about which mobile phone I should buy, I had to contact them directly. This was the age of active communication – one where it was difficult to manage a large network of friends or contacts because of the time-intensive and potentially costly one-on-one form of communication which was required. And thus conventional marketing activity could operate relatively safely because the speed at which marketers could transmit a message across the consumer population generally exceeded the rates at which consumers could communicate with one another.

In the early stages of the web, however, and as mobile telephony began to take off, it become ever easier for us to communicate in groups. The advent of e-mail and SMS meant that messages were able to move around groups of friends quickly and easily, accelerating the speed with which word-of-mouth recommendations could influence purchase decisions.

Today we find ourselves in the age of the social web, where communication has evolved to be ‘many-to-many’ rather than one-to-one. Our friends, contacts and acquaintances are sharing messages, ideas, photos and content – broadcasting 24/7 in a way which allows us to tune in or out as desired. We are connected to everyone in our past and present in a network where maintaining simultaneous contact with numerous individuals involves a more “passive” form of communication. Of course, “revolutions” in personal communication are far from new and the introduction of innovations designed to make contact faster, simpler or easier have been a feature of the consumer landscape for centuries (stretching as far back as telegrams, carrier pigeons and beyond). Yet for me, the switch from active to passive communication is one of the most fundamental shifts in consumer behaviour we have ever seen.

In this environment, our natural instinct to talk and share has spectacular ramifications for marketers – namely that, long before any officially sanctioned marketing communications have reached a consumer, they will very likely have been exposed to the brand in question through hearing about their friends’ experiences (whether positive or otherwise).

Back in 2008, we undertook a scenario planning exercise for the IPA on the effect that the Networked Society would have on the advertising industry and one particular observation from that report has now been reinforced on multiple occasions:

“…every member of a target audience for a communication or campaign is not simply a recipient, or even an active consumer of the message – now they are also a transmitter of messages within the context of their networks. This requires a completely different evaluation of the value and potential of an individual within an overall campaign and new ways of measuring the network effects of any communication”

This is precisely the commercial landscape in which we now find ourselves. We are the TripAdvisor generation, more than happy to broadcast our experiences across our networks. And thanks to the arrival of passive communication, whatever we say will spread with such speed and reach that few PR departments are able to react in a timely enough fashion. To see this in action, we might look to the now infamous case of a Houston restaurant which ejected a patron for tweeting that a member of the bar staff was a ‘twerp’.  Old-fashioned insults aside, reading the timelines of those involved gives you an idea of how quickly this story spread across the world and how difficult it is to keep up with the Networked Society.

There are a number of strategies that have emerged to respond to this shift. The most comprehensive is to monitor, anticipate and intercept – continually tracking our messages as they fly across consumers’ networks to analyse where and why they gain traction (and how they might be twisted into something negative). However, to realise the full potential of this approach requires significant analytical agility to keep ahead of the message and to understand what role each individual plays within their wider networks.

By far the simplest is to put customer service at the heart of every single channel. Easier said than done.  We are still in the early days of the truly multi-channel world and, since the tone to which consumers respond varies according to the medium in question, it can sometimes prove difficult to maintain service excellence across all channels. However, with nVision Research showing that 49% of the UK population say that they have taken their custom to a different shop or company because of poor customer service, the effort  is clearly worthwhile. Disappoint someone – anyone, in fact – and their grievances will most certainly find an audience; in e-space, everyone will eventually hear a customer scream.  And if we aren’t careful, we will certainly be among the last to do so.

Temporary tattoo measures heartbeat

In summer 2011, John Rogers  -  professor in Material Science at the University of Illinois  -  published a study in Science containing details of his ultra-thin electronic device which, while looking a tattoo, was capable of measuring a person’s heart rate and other vital signs.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltolmZTbYlg&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

The tattoo, which can be applied to natural skin without irritation and lasts for more than 24 hours, means a patient is freed from having to wear the type of bulky electrode normally used for hospital monitoring. More, it also increases the wearer’s mobility as they are able to monitor themselves without constant assistance from others.

Rogers said in his paper that he hoped the technology would be developed to help speed up the rate at which wounds, burns and other skin conditions heal and, ultimately, that it might replace other hospital adhesives.

A sign of the growing number of devices which are now able to monitor seamlessly various aspects of our lives.

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