A conversation with some Doha bankers the other day” “Oh, the global credit crunch hasn’t affected us in Qatar”. I bit my tongue. “My brain was screaming, “Are you for real”?
Apart from the fact that it’s people like you, sitting in ivory towers in London, New York Frankfurt and Beijing that caused this mess in the first place. Don’t you get it, finally, that the world is one BIG global village? Who was it who said that if a butterfly flutters its wings in Brazil, it causes a tornado in South Carolina? We’re all one! When you reduce everything to its smallest constituent element, whether it’s a rock or a human, it’s all vibration, tiny electric charges. That’s it, that’s what you and I are made of.
OK, I digress perhaps. Causative formation is a topic that interests me. My point simply is that this ‘credit crunch’ and the aftermath is a seismic reaction of a much deeper malaise. The fundamental changes that are taking place in society are signs of a macro trend that will affect everyone’s lives, everywhere. It’s the dawn of a new enlightenment where people power rules.
Many of us know someone who has lost his or her job. That person now is moving into his or her own one-man business. The days of staying in a job for life are gone. We don’t believe in corporations anymore, we don’t believe in BIG business. We don’t want to be sold to.
We don’t even believe in government anymore if you review the decline in voting numbers over the years. These are HUGE changes.
Many of us (bankers excluded) have cut back spending, trying to live within a budget and buying only what we have the cash to pay for. So we’re looking at utility and functionality rather than ostentatious “it looks great, but it doesn’t do anything”. This, combined with the other macro trend, “save our planet – think green” means that we re-visit design from the basis of how, when and where we dispose of a product, what it can be made of that’s reusable, recyclable or bio-degradable as a function and format of design, even before we start drawing, visualizing or creating. This is a sea change to our thinking. Gone is “bling-bling” of the nineties and noughties. Now we’re into retro chic, back to basics, chicken soup ‘cos it’s good for you’ careful living.
The new consumer is saying, “where’s the value?” and “why should I bother” when you try and sell your products. Financial services companies of all persuasions are sinking faster than Venice in the minds of the public. Their brands are no longer credible.
“Hello?” Are you trying to sell me something?” Do you know who I am? No?. Well find out and try and get to know me first. Financial institutions are shouting about safety and security. Really? And where were you when the bonuses were being handed out?
“Safety” and “Security”, the buzzwords of old are just not credible anymore. We, the public want innovation with real, tangible benefits for us, the consumer (yes it is OUR money!), based on an honest, transparent, authentic PARTNERSHIP in the financial services sector.
The worst recession since the Great Depression is now nearly over and people who survived this ordeal are now seeing the first green shoots of recovery. This will lead to a renewed focus on spending, after salting away any savings they had under the mattress. But it won’t be the big-ticket items that they will be spending on. It will be the necessaries: food, shelter, and clothing. And when we say shelter, we’re talking about doing up your home, rather than buying a new one. Clothing will be more about accessorizing for that jacket, rather than a new suit and food will be cooked at home rather than blitzing out in that new Gordon Ramsay restaurant. Having said that, people will be looking for new experiences to celebrate their survival and rebirth. So travel, probably in your country, rather than long haul, films and DVD rentals as well as sporting and cultural events should see a rise in numbers. We’ll need new cars to get there, but probably more hybrid models and smart cars than Hummers, for which the death-knell is already sounding.
Fundamentally this crisis has accentuated and positioned brands even more at the centre of communications. For brands, after all, are the greatest gift that commerce has ever given to culture and people will buy brands now even more based on what these brands say about them.
Does this brand reflect my values, as well as provide value? Does it communicate and resonate with who I am and who I want to be? Does the company that make them have a corporate social positioning that is authentic and that I believe in?
And finally the clarion call is going out to change the moniker given to us, we, the people. We are no longer “consumers”, buying products and services as an amoebic reaction to artificial stimulus (advertising) of perceived needs based on fear, must-have or peer pressure. This is so 20th century. We have moved on from that. In the main. Now the environment is one based on truth, authenticity, honesty, value and values.
We are co-creators. Talk to us as equals. Involve us in the process, whether through crowdsourcing, social media and networks or digital engagement. The balance of power has shifted. We are now in charge and demand to be heard. The genie of awareness and enlightenment is now truly out of the box.
Monday, May 10, 2010
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