Me, Me, Me

Key Takeaway:
After years of putting community first, post-Covid consumers are re-focusing on themselves, using digital technologies to customize services, products, and self-centered moments.
Trend Type: Social & Business
Sub-trends: Me, Me, ME, E-Customization, Everyday Celebration, Moments Economy, No self-restraint, Self-care & Empathy
- Offering bespoke options will become more common for big-ticket goods
- Consumer demand for enhanced customization will grow in emerging markets
- Advancements in AI will revolutionize and redefine customization in the digital realm
Use Cases
Me, Me, Me: Nike Korea opened a tech-equipped experiential store in Hongdae, South Korea, optimising the store format to enable consumers to explore their style. The fitting rooms are equipped with special screens where consumers can choose their background, filter and stickers to create their own ‘look’.
E- Customization: Starbucks has set the gold standard for customization with its mobile app, which allows users to choose from over 170 000 options on drink orders. This has powered sales growth for the company, with app enabled US sales expanding over 400% from 2017 to 2022.
E- Customization: Samsung’s Bespoke Design Studio allows consumers to order appliances customised to their individual specs. In 2022, Samsung added the ability for shoppers to incorporate artwork – and even their own photographs –into design elements.
No Self Restraint: Apple Pay Later is adding functionality to Apple Wallet allowing purchases to be split into four equal payments spread over six weeks, with zero interest and no fees.
Self-Care & Empathy: None of us is a stranger to the occasional triumphant fitness journey popping up on our social media feed. So, when celebs Dr Alex George, Motsi Mabuse and Jada Sezer shared their exercise ‘before and after’ pics this month, with no dramatic physical transformations to be seen, people were perplexed. It was soon revealed that Asics and PR firm Golin were behind the idea, wishing to highlight the power of exercise to transform the mind, and not just the body. A simple idea that got people talking this World Mental Health Day, the campaign encouraged people to get moving for a mood boost, leaving behind the obsession with body image.