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JWT Worldwide has issued its annual list of 100 things to watch in 2011.
Many items on the list, which includes 3D printing, virtual mirrors and electronic profiling, are technology-centric. With regards to online, the list predicts a growth in Facebook commerce, apps beyond mobile and more social browsers.
“Many of the items on our list reflect broader shifts we’ve been tracking over the past few years, such as the evolution of the mobile phone into an ‘everything hub,’” says Ann Mack, director of trendspotting at JWT. “Others reflect counter-trends - for instance, to balance out our growing immersion in the digital world, people will increasingly embrace face-to-face gatherings and digital downtime.”
According to a release, the people on the list have the potential to "drive or shape trends in the near future".
Highlights from the list include:
Apps beyond mobile which sees web developers applying the principles of the mobile app culture to desktop computers. Apple is set to launch an app store for Macs in January this year.
Banner ads that do more including showcasing live video, letting users bookmark the ad for later viewing or act as a gateway to credit card-linked offers.
The digitally savvy Brazil as an e-leader with the world's highest Twitter penetration, PC penetration of 32 per cent, mobile subscriptions penetration of 86 per cent and its recent 2010 census conducted entirely paperless.
A buy one, give one away strategy that makes a strong statement about the marketer and turns a purchase into more than a mere transaction.
Facebook alternatives including niche communities and DIY social networks and subsequent counter-moves from Mr. Zuckerberg's camp.
Group-manipulated pricing or group buying online. JWT predicts more inventive variations in 2011. The report refers to Uniqlo's 'Lucky counter' which saw the price of goods decrease in real time as more people opted in.
mHealth. Mobile health apps to change the way patients and physicians interact. Global opportunities in this market are valued at as much as US$60 billion plus The Bill & Melinda Gates Gates Foundation is currently funding research into mHealth.
The Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN). Enough said.
Scanning barcodes or QR codes with smartphones are being adopted everywhere from in-store communications and loyalty offers to information points and comics.
YouTube the broadcaster expanding its role from a platform for video clips to a broadcasting channel.
In alphabetical order, here are 100 things to watch in 2011, according to JWT:
- 3D Printing
- Africa’s Middle Class
- Apps Beyond Mobile
- Art.sy
- Auto Apps
- Automatic Check-Ins
- Bamboo
- Bank Branch Out
- Banner Ads Do More
- Beer Sommeliers
- Biomimicry
- Bjarke Ingels
- Brazil as E-Leader
- Breaking the Book
- Brigadeiro“
- Buy One, Give One Away”
- CAPTCHA Advertising
- Children’s E-Books
- Coming Clean with Green
- Costlier Cotton
- Culinary Calling Cards
- Decline of the Cash Register
- Deforestation Awareness
- Detroit
- Digital Downtime
- Digital Etiquette
- Digital Indoor Maps
- Digital Interventions
- East London Tech City
- E-Book Sharing
- Electronic Profiling
- Entrepreneurial Journalism
- Facebook Alternatives
- Fashion Fast-Forward
- F-Commerce
- Food, Ph.D.
- Gay-Centric Hotels
- Global Disease, Refocused
- Green Luxury Cars
- Group-Manipulated Pricing
- Heirloom Apples
- Home Energy Monitors
- Ignorance Is Bliss
- In the Flesh
- Jennifer Lawrence
- London Tourism
- Long-Form Content
- Matcha
- mHealth
- Michael Jackson Lives On
- Micro-Businesses
- Mobile Blogging
- Mobile Memes
- The Nail Polish Economy
- Nanobrewers
- Near Field Communication
- The New Mobility Industry
- New Nordic Cuisine
- Next-Generation Documentarians
- Neymar
- NKOTBSB
- Objectifying Objects
- Odyssey Trackers
- Older Workforce
- The Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN)
- Pedro Lourenço
- Personal Taste Graphs
- Piers Morgan
- Pogo
- P-to-P Car Sharing
- Rooney Mara
- Rum
- Rye Rye
- Ryo Ishikawa
- Scanning Everything
- Self-Powering Devices
- Smart Lunchrooms
- Smart-Infrastructure Investment
- Smartphone Cameras Take Over
- Smoking on the Fringe
- Social Browsers Go Mainstream
- Social Networking Surveillance
- Social Objects
- Space Travel Goes Private
- Storied Products
- Stricter Green Building Standards
- Tablets for Tots
- Tap-to-Pay
- Tech Liaisons
- Tech-Enabled Throwbacks
- Temporary Tattoos Go High-End
- Tintin the Movie
- Transmedia Producers
- Tube-Free Toilet Paper
- Ukraine
- Urban Industrial Parks
- Video Calling
- Virtual Mirrors
- Voice-Activated Apps
- YouTube the Broadcaster
This article first appeared on Campaign Asia.