Comedian Lewis Black called it out: This new millennium sucks! It’s exactly the same as the old millennium. You know why? No flying cars!
No ad to show here.
OK, to be fair, there are folks currently working on that, but true, not the sky-scape envisioned by science-fiction writers and comic book artists. On the other hand, technology has focused on loftier heights if not precisely the sky.
Follow consumer expectations
As brand consultants we look to consumer expectations to point clients in the right direction. Year after year consumer expectations get higher and higher in nearly every category and, as independent validations have proven, brands that better meet consumer expectations always see better results.
The thing about consumer expectations is that they are mostly emotionally driven, are usually something that consumers cant easily articulate, and are different from imagination. And, if you want to identify where you should be digging for brand gold, you really need to know how to measure expectations.
This has been particularly obvious in the tech arena. No consumer anywhere ever imagined, Can you just imagine a cellphone with a built-in camera? (BTW, the need did show up in expectations as an increased desire for personal connectivity but not something stamped, CAMERA GOES HERE.)
But, as we’ve seen over the past five years, technology marches (and marches) on. And havent you occasionally marvelled at it and thought, ‘What can’t these guys do?’ Today, apparently, if they can imagine it, they can do it. The ultimate question is: should they?
Ready for smartwatches?
This thought occurred to us as more and more full-page ads have recently shown up for the newest early-adopter geek must-have — wearable computing technology (AKA smartwatches), which apparently take all the functions of your smartphone and collection of apps and relocates them to your wrist. The ones, currently with the largest ad budgets have been Samsung’s Galaxy Gear and Sony’s SmartWatch2, although rumours abound regarding Apple and Google entries.
Feel free to check out the specs (or rumors) for each, but if your next thought/question was, ”It’s very techy/nerdy/cool, but why do I need this?” welcome to the club. Expectations – even those that seem totally unrealistic and unconstrained by reality, and that are indistinctly described in form and foundation — always reflect what people really want. And sometimes (particularly as regards technology) the offerings are everything the sci-fi writers imagined, but nothing that actually meets consumer real expectations.
Wearable computing will eventually become an expectation, but based on current consumer expectations, no time soon. So technology brands beware: just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.
Will smartwatches become as ubiquitous as smartphones? Maybe when cars fly!