Knowledge-based work and routine tasks will increasingly be sliced, diced and contracted to the lowest online bidder as companies and consumers post micro-jobs like proofreading, translation, coding, doing laundry and much more. Coffee & Power, Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, Freelancer.com and others are creating the next assembly line, splitting up knowledge-based assignments. Companies like TaskRabbit, available [...]
Our most recent report spotlights what’s trending in the social good space. Our research found that when it comes to CSR efforts, consumers care deeply about their communities and feel that brands should too. Across age groups, consumers believe local authorities aren’t doing enough to help and that it’s better to take matters into their [...]
A unique project to capture some of New York City’s spirit is under way at MyBlockNYC.com, an “interactive mapping website” that’s part of a Museum of Modern Art exhibit. More than 600 users have contributed around 1,400 short videos—the only criteria is that they be shot outside and take place on a single block—that document [...]
As Borders liquidates, Barnes & Noble contracts and more readers access material via digital download, it’s easy to believe the bookstore is going the way of the record store (and books the way of the CD). But some small booksellers are staying strong by serving as a “third space” for book lovers and providing great [...]
Whether for environmental, community-minded or simply business development reasons, consumers are being encouraged to “buy local” at an ever-increasing pace. But brands looking to capitalize on the trend will need to tread lightly, as consumers and watchdogs are increasingly skeptical of large corporations asserting local credentials. Allstate, for example, has been trying to boost its [...]
In our latest piece of research, Changing India: Trends for the Near Future, we examine how rising prosperity is changing relationship dynamics, moral views, consumption patterns and overall lifestyles in urban India. Common drivers behind these trends include globalization/Westernization, modernization, urban migration, rising stress and increased connectivity. What it means to be Indian in today’s [...]
The chart below from social media consultancy Eyes and Feet examines restaurant representation on Facebook. Of all restaurants and cafes listed on Yelp for 10 U.S. cities, just 9 percent have fan pages. Of these cities, Houston has the fewest restaurant listings on Yelp (1,947) but the highest percentage of restaurants with fan pages (25 percent). [...]
At a time when culture has never seemed more global—with an event like the World Cup—a growing percentage of our online activity revolves around the local. This chart, from online marketing firm OrangeSoda, shows that local search is increasing at a meteoric rate in the U.S., from 1 billion local searches in 2009 to a [...]
With the FIFA World Cup in South Africa expected to break monetary records, an extensive Mint.com infographic looks at “The Economics of the World Cup” over the past 16 years, weighing corporate sponsorships, revenues, costs, boost to local business, retail and television rights. The only direct income the host country receives comes from tickets sales [...]
Melissa Schweisguth (@changemaker1), one of Time magazine’s 2009 Responsibility Pioneers, has worked in the food sector for nearly 10 years. She consults on corporate sustainability issues and communications for mission-driven businesses and also works for the Food Trade Sustainability Leadership Association, which helps organic companies measure, report on, manage and improve their sustainability performance. Schweisguth [...]
In a post last October, we looked at innovative ideas for crowdfunding movies. The new film Iron Sky, a sci-fi comedy involving Nazis on the moon, was financed both by traditional crowdfunding (from some 10,000 contributors) and crowd-investing (around 200 people are shareholders and stand to benefit from any profits, according to Wired.co.uk). And Finnish writer-director Timo Vuorensola, who amassed fans with a low-budget Star Trek spoof, also involved the crowd in the creative process—e.g., to help with historical research, props and visual effects. This had the added benefit of creating evangelists, he told The West Australian: “When people are contributing to a film, they take ownership of it and spread the word.” Iron Sky is playing around Europe, in Australia and a few other markets, and has a North American distributor lined up. —Marian Berelowitz
More flat surfaces are becoming screens, and more screens are becoming interactive, as we note in our 10 Trends for 2012 report. In one recent manifestation of this trend, the upscale Hong Kong Jockey Club installed several 10-by-4-foot touch-screen tables, where members can view videos and see updated race results, as well as gamble, using RFID-enabled smart cards to place bets. The tables, which each accommodate eight players, can also interact with members’ digital devices.
The Club is looking to install the tables at other tracks around the world, according to Possible, the WPP agency that created them. “Designed to resonate with the always-on tablet and smartphone generation,” screens such as these will increasingly replace formerly static flat surfaces. —Will Palley
While some are questioning how much potential remains in the Facebook gaming market, a batch of celebrities are turning out their own apps for the social network. Oprah’s Thank You Game, which aims to “help spread gratitude around the world,” was designed by game maven Jane McGonigal’s SuperBetter Labs. Jay-Z’s new Empire is based around his rise to fame, with players creating a Sims-like avatar before running empires of their own. Another famous rapper is behind 50 Cent’s Blackjack, basically a version of the casino game. And Jersey Shore’s Snooki beat them all to the punch with Match Game in February. —Will Palley
Brands are increasingly using Twitter in innovative ways—e.g., via “micro-affiliates” or for e-commerce. To help manage demand for sought-after new sneaker editions, Nike recently debuted a Twitter RSVP process that allows customers to reserve a shoe at any of a dozen U.S. stores, avoiding long lines and mayhem. Sneaker fans must follow the Twitter account of their local store, which sends a tweet at a random time on the designated day. Consumers must then direct-message the store within 60 minutes, including the product-specific hashtag, their name and shoe size. Shoes are awarded on a “first respond, first serve” basis and can be picked up on the launch day. —Will Palley
Launched in late 2011, BackBid.com is a booking site that pits hotel against hotel to gain a client’s business—in the end helping the consumer to win out above all. Here’s how it works: Users book a room and post the details to BackBid.com. From there, other hotels in the area can outbid the current booking, offering lower rates or room upgrades and more amenities. Users can then accept one of the offers and rebook at the competing hotel. The model offers hotels an opportunity to fill empty beds without resorting to heavy discounting—which could ultimately cheapen the brand’s image. Instead, hotels can make savvy travelers feel like VIPs by offering a seemingly personalized discount package. But it’s a potential catch-22, since those beds might be empty due to would-be guests defecting to competitors with better bids. —Jessica Vaughn
It’s one thing for a brand to have millions of followers on Twitter; it’s another to have that army doing some work for you. American Express recently started offering a credit to customers who tweet an Amex-related promotion (e.g., #AmexWholeFoods, to receive $25 off a $75 purchase at Whole Foods). U.K.-based Park Resorts, similarly, is offering savings and credits to brand followers who share promotional links.
“It’s simple and frictionless,” as Ed Gilligan of American Express told The New York Times. The ease of getting consumers to send a brand’s message certainly saves on media costs, and the message is more likely to be noted (Nielsen reports that 92% of consumers around the world trust recommendations from friends and word-of-mouth more than any other form of messaging). “Micro-affiliates,” as these consumer participants are sometimes termed, is an idea that fits well in a post-Groupon world, where deal-loving consumers respond to offers to save money they may not have spent otherwise. —Aaron Barr
With businesses like TOMS Shoes and Warby Parker, we’ve seen the rise of the “Buy One, Give One Away” business model—a strategy we highlighted in our 2011 100 Things to Watch List. Now, we’re seeing more brands linking customer purchases to tangible do-good initiatives. Apparel maker United by Blue, a certified B Corp, says it has “one hand in the apparel industry and the other hand in waste management.” That’s because UBB vows to remove a pound of trash from oceans and waterways for each item sold (since launching in 2010, they’ve removed some 83,000 pounds of junk). The company proudly “does its own dirty work,” as the UBB website lays out, and the brand-organized cleanup events serve as organic community-building experiences for the volunteers, typically local residents. With more cause-minded products and CSR activities launched every day, socially focused efforts will increasingly need to promise tangible results so that customers associate each purchase with a measurable benefit. —Jessica Vaughn
TV networks aren’t the only ones experimenting with complementary mobile apps. Big-screen producers are seeing potential in the second screen, with movie apps that go beyond the outtakes and commentary of classic DVD extras. A $4.99 iPad app that debuted along with the Blu-ray edition of Monty Python and the Holy Grail yields the screenplay, Michael Palin’s diary and more. And if synced with a Blu-ray player, the app doubles as a remote control and surfaces pertinent extras at key points. Kids flicks are a particularly good fit: Warner Bros.’ free Happy Feet Two app, for instance, helps viewers “sing, dance, and play along” in sync with the Blu-ray. Disney offers free second screen apps for Bambi, The Lion King and Lady and the Tramp that include extras like stills, storyboards and flipbooks along with Blu-ray syncing. These apps provide a window into a future where viewers access augmented content across synced screens. —Deanna Zammit
Formerly known as Miss Bank$, 20-year-old rapper Azealia Banks has been garnering significant attention since she released her debut single, “212,” in December. She topped NME’s 2011 cool list and came third in the BBC’s Sound of 2012 countdown. The New Yorker’s first EPis set to launch April 17, and she’s working on a full-length album, Broke With Expensive Taste, while collaborating with Kanye West and Lana Del Rey. —Will Palley
Hang on to your popcorn. Another “dimension” is being added to the theatrical experience: physical effects. In some cases, theaters are installing seats that shift, rumble and otherwise move in sync with the action. “We are trying to reflect everything you would feel in real life without crossing that line of being like a theme park ride,” Guy Marcoux of high-tech seat manufacturer D-BOX told The Guardian. Around 3,000 D-BOX seats have been installed in theaters across North America, Japan, Germany, the U.K., Australia and New Zealand. Other 4D experiences incorporate “in-theater special effects,” like Broadway 4D, a permanent musical theater attraction planned for a long-vacant historic Times Square theater.
It seems the entertainment industry is working ever harder to create experiences that manage to entice viewers away from the big screens and high definition they already have at home. —Deanna Zammit