Every Tom, Dick and Harish puts out his trend sheet for 2025; I thought I might as well do it. Here is a list of marketing trends I see in the year ahead and in the years that will roll out thereafter. Do take it with a pinch of salt, if not a shovel of it.
The second currency is the first currency now: All of us as consumers carry two currencies that take us through life. The first has typically been money and the second, time. The second currency now overtakes money. While money can be topped up in our lives in myriad ways, we are yet to discover how to top up time. Consumers in 2025 will be that much more demanding when it comes to how their time is used by marketers. This has ramifications for media, entertainment, distribution systems, retail, ecommerce, quick commerce, customer service and a whole host of arenas.
Gone are the days when patient marketers expected their consumers to be patient as well. Marketers need to brush up their act on how they create time-saving products, services and systems for their consumers. Charge a fee for it if need be, but save time. Remember, we as consumers are not living; we are dying. One day at a time. How I die must be my choice, dear marketer, not yours.
The consumer becomes weak, not strong: As marketers of yore kept saying the consumer is king, a whole consumer-centric movement fell into place. Customer journeys, customer personas and tools of every kind kept being put together by marketers. These tools are there with us, but their use will lessen in the years ahead. The marketer is becoming that much more powerful today.
This story is from the December 10, 2024 edition of The New Indian Express Thiruvananthapuram.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 10, 2024 edition of The New Indian Express Thiruvananthapuram.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Paul Mescal to play Paul McCartney in The Beatles biopic
PAUL MESCAL is reportedly set to portray Paul McCartney in an upcoming four-part biopic centered on The Beatles.
Paul Mescal to play Paul McCartney in The Beatles biopic
PAUL MESCAL is reportedly set to portray Paul McCartney in an upcoming four-part biopic centered on The Beatles.
IMDb announces list of popular Indian titles of 2024
INTERNET MOVIE Database (IMDb) has unveiled its list of Top 10 Most Popular Indian Movies and Series of 2024.
Shane's 25th film begins in Coimbatore
THE POOJA and switch-on ceremony for Shane Nigam's 25th film was recently held in Coimbatore, with the cast and crew in attendance.
A$AP Rocky to play the lead in Highest 2 Lowest
AS PER latest reports, American rap artist A$AP Rocky has been cast as the lead actor in Spike Lee's Highest 2 Lowest, an Apple Original film.
Fourth installment of Meet the Parents in the works
ROBERT DE NIRO, Ben Stiller, Teri Polo and Blythe Danner are in negotiations to reprise their roles in the new Meet The Parents film, which is in the works at Universal Pictures.
MEET THE 'GERMAN NAMBIAR'
TNIE speaks to Hartmut Schmidt, a German national who is on a mission to popularise Ottanthullal in Europe. Recently, he performed at the Tripunithura Sree Poornathrayeesa Temple as part of its Vrischikolsavam festival
Engineering a thullal trend
TNIE talks to Kalamandalam Vishnu M Gupta about his mission to bring all of Kunchan Nambiar's works to life on stage
A police 'motocross' thriller along Indo-Bangla border
Days ago, on a foggy morning along the treacherous bends of the Padma River, the India-Bangladesh border dissolves into uncertainty as a Kerala police team closes in on their elusive target in their style.
A reckoning spurred by Hema Committee report
The hum gradually becomes a murmur that swells with the voices of women—working, creating, and resisting. This is the atmosphere at The Neighbour Gallery, a new space in the capital city envisioned by artists Joe Paul Cyriac and Valentina Abenavoli. The gallery opened with an exhibition that reflects its mission: exploring the power of shared spaces where gathering fosters care, nurtures creativity, and challenges societal norms.