Traditional family demographics are changing, and businesses must adapt to new consumer behaviors and family-based marketing if they’re going to succeed in tomorrow’s marketplace.
As digital media takes a bigger role in how people express love, that’s changing what people want from love tokens like rings and diamonds, says Pandora Jewelry North America President Luciano Rodembusch.
How will people meet their partners? How many will they have at once, and over their lifetimes? These answers are changing, and increasingly technology and platforms are playing a role. What the Future Editor Matt Carmichael outlines how love in all its forms will drive how people live, spend, relate and even vote.
Join us on Valentine’s Day as we explore shifts in the functional constructs of love and how they will impact brands and services across dating apps, weddings, media, retail and more.
Play isn’t just fun and games — it’s a serious business, and its future will impact sectors spanning food, spirits, sports, streaming, toys, retail and more. What will that mean for the ways we watch, shop, and have fun?
The future of play faces multiple inflection points. Will forces like climate change, technology, and inequality spawn new ways to play, or kill traditional ones?
Fun and games play an important part in our lives — but how will this change as technology evolves? Best Buy’s Jill Giefer considers how we’ll play and socialize in the future.
From Twitch to tournaments, esports players have increasingly large audiences – and like traditional athletes, they have a responsibility to act as role models, says pro player Jeannail Carter.
Nina Johnson-Pitt, a senior strategy executive with Little League International, explains how youth sports leagues can stay fun and relevant for the next generation.