Executive Style

Consumer trends for 2011

December 17, 2010
Group buying, status symbols and more people renting are tipped to be the big consumer trends for 2011.

Group buying, status symbols and more people renting are tipped to be the big consumer trends for 2011.

So what are the big consumer trends to watch out for next year? The trends site, trendwatching.com,  has some interesting tips about what we can expect. It’s a consultancy based in London and Amsterdam, and it’s sufficiently networked to provide some good insights.

It tells us that social networking will continue to shape our activities and set us off in new directions. According to the consultants, we can expect more group buying and GPS-driven deals, more status symbols that will define who we are, more consumers broadcasting, compiling, commenting, sharing and recommending content, products, purchases, and experiences to both their friends and wider audiences. They will offer unsolicited opinions to their online friends about places they visited, restaurants they ate at or products they purchased. In 2011, everyone’s going to be a critic. Also we can expect more status symbols, like luxury goods, shaping our buying patterns. We all want to be perceived as special.

And it predicts that more people will abandon the idea of buying. They will embrace the idea of owner-lessness and they will start to rent and share products and services instead. Better for the wallet, better for the environment.

The interesting part about their insights is that they offer examples of companies that are already moving in these direction. In other words, it’s a trend now taking shape and we are being told to watch this space.

The Economist says status seeking is becoming more common and that is likely to shape consumer behaviour next year. Everyone wants to be noticed. But it reminds us of other forces that will shape our world next year.

“In the long run, other trends may shape markets more. The rich world is rapidly ageing. People over 50 will account for two-thirds of all growth in consumer spending in France over the next two decades. Emerging markets are starting to look like America in the 1950s: people are obsessed with acquiring their first fridges and cars. The recession is forcing Western consumers to pay more attention to prices than they used to. But people, like peacocks, will never tire of displaying to friends and potential mates just how wonderful they are. Firms whose offerings scream “status” will never want for customers.”

Market research giant Mintel predicts massive behavioural changes flowing from the global financial crisis. Things to watch out for include consumers’ increasing unease about the recovery. People are expected to spend less and save more which is bad news for retailers. At the same time, it says stores are likely to become more creative in the way they lure back customers. Stores are more likely to become venues for advice and demonstrations, not just a shop.  We can also expect to see more life-long learning in the workplace, corporate sponsored degrees and cost-constrained companies investing in employees through education and training, rather than salary and benefits. Mintel also says we can expect to see more marketing to women, especially in sectors such as automobiles and sports, and more focus on health, beauty, vitality, energy and longevity in the marketing of food and drink.

Mintel predicts that 2011 will see a growing interest in "grow your own”. While this mainly translates into opportunities for garden centres, at the supermarket level this may mean catering to small gestures towards self-sufficiency, such as stocking herbs for window boxes and for roof top gardens.

What consumer trends are you expecting in 2011? What are the signs ahead? Do you see any big changes for next year? 







7 comments so far

  • I expect to see more bankruptcies and more civil unrest as a result of governments' tax increases and general price increases. Every time we get a pay rise (at or below the OFFICIAL CPI) tax takes half of it, and the rest NEVER makes up for the cost of living increases.

    Commenter
    Mike
    Location
    Brisbane
    Date and time
    December 17, 2010, 3:38PM
  • I predict an increase in self-styled trend pundits, making safe and unarguable pronouncements on what's going to happen in the near future.Gimme a break... it's worse than reading the astrology column.

    Commenter
    gp
    Date and time
    December 19, 2010, 5:38AM
  • Not very insightful given that all of this is happening right now. How about some future trends say for example how many people are starting to switch off to social media.

    Commenter
    Dave
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    December 19, 2010, 9:00AM
  • @ Mike - spot-on. We have just had a pay rise announcement and the half that's left after tax is a mere nod toward the gap between what is actually required to break even and the constant shortfall. Referring to this article, how is the rise of "status symbols" (how pathetically superficial) in the form of luxury goods to come about if people are supposedly to abandon the idea of buying - shoplifting?

    Commenter
    survival of the fittest
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    December 20, 2010, 10:19AM
  • @Mike

    Tax does not take "half of it" for anyone. In 2009-2010 the very top marginal tax rate was 45% for each dollar earned over $180,000 per year and 38% for each dollar between $80,000 and $180,000. Are the individuals earning these salaries the people rioting in the steets or crowding the bankruptcy courts? Please!

    Commenter
    Dave
    Location
    Melb
    Date and time
    December 20, 2010, 8:08PM
  • @dave 9.08 you seem quite pedantic in picking up @mike. By the time youve finished adding all the various rates, levies, gst, ad valorems, fines and other means of revenue raising, were all paying far more than 50% (and getting little infrastructure, poor service and added bureaucracy) in return
    Any engine that losses so much energy from its system eventually fails

    Commenter
    Taxed to death
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    December 21, 2010, 9:22AM
  • While we do get taxed now, and there's more rates and levies etc and everything is really hard etc, we still have it pretty good compared to a lot of other countries. If the average income is 60k a year (roughly), everyone takes home roughly 45k or more in income. If we factor in all expenditure, it costs a person roughly 10 to 15k to eat and transport and approximately 20k is spent on housing (assuming rent) or one bedroom unit at approximately 200-250k and associated costs. If this is the case, everyone should have 10k left at the end of the year.

    if you have a family, then the income would be doubled but housing would not cost u double. Hence conservatively you would have 15k left at the end of the year depending on your situation.

    Anyway, it all depends on how realistic and thrifty you wish to be. If you want to buy lots of things and spend lots of money then this calculation doesn't work for you.

    To me, that sounds like everyone's living comfortably.

    Commenter
    anonymous
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    December 21, 2010, 1:22PM

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