GOOD THINKING
GOOD THINKING
Ralph is thrifting, Margiela is selling art.
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-32:23

Ralph is thrifting, Margiela is selling art.

Bland brands are finally behind us. Plus: 4 other signals from the last 4 weeks.

Hi all,

We’re back with another edition of GOOD SIGNS—a monthly round-up of 4 letters, looking at what’s bubbling up.

Again, we’re not calling these trends. That’s way too heavy for a month’s worth of content. These are signals, patterns, counter-trends. Stuff that’s emerging, continuing, sticking out, or simply, what we’re finding interesting in the last month.

Enjoy! And let us know what you think.

Skip to the bits you fancy.

1.

02:19 — POTENT NEEDS // Hard to say if mainstream isn’t cutting it right now, or if it’s too much. But regardless, consumers are chasing intensity as a salve. Think sauna raves, drinkable nicotine, supersonic jet setting and Titanic-esque cruises. We’re upping the risk, rupturing from reality in any way possible. Potency is a dial best turn up.

Places it’s showing up:

Pendulum swing → Parents, and adults generally, are begging for a brake pedal. Calling for the return of classic iPods, Tin Can landline phones, and education that, sure, uses tech, but only for 2 hours, the rest: hands-on learning.

2.

10:54 — JACKS OF ALL TRADES // For a hot minute, in a deeply performance-marketing-driven world, brands got tunnel vision. Product was king. It was the land of bland and narrow. Times are a’changing. Brands and business are rapidly expanding their wings, becoming entertainment studios, job centers, art dealers, and vintage resellers. Being more than one thing is back.

Places it’s showing up:

Pendulum swing → Less is more. Brands are coming offline entirely. Restaurants are only serving one thing a night. Friction, tight curation, and experience are all the rage..

3.

18:04 — SILVER LUXURY // Forget being aged, boring, and uninfluential. Silvers are shaping entire categories. Think good looking senior housing, cruise lines that don’t give ‘cruise’, and pickles hawked by a Silver goddess. Silvers are redefining themselves and proving they’ll spend with brands that get it.

Places it’s showing up:

Pendulum swing → Younger cohorts, meanwhile, are DIYing and hacking aging altogether. They too have no interested in aged. But they are hoping to completely avoid it. Think GLP-1 micro-dosing, blood-cleaning, AI-driven health care, and more. Forever young is a full time job..

4.

23:46 — CO-SIGN HOUSEHOLDS // The Alpha-parent dynamic isn’t top-down anymore. It’s side-by-side. Alphas bring the interests, parents bring the spend, and, interestingly, together they’re aligning on some very mainstream moments. Back-to-school hauls, K-Pop sing-alongs, and more.

Places it’s showing up:

Pendulum swing → While Alphas and their elder Z/Millenial parents are loudly co-signing mainstream moments, Zs are pulling in the opposite direction. Their decisions have moved to group chats, where context and approval come only from peers. They’re not interested in the comment section or the masses' opinions.

5.

23:46 — NO WHISPERING // Health used to be whispered, but now we’re in megaphone-mode. From herpes pride campaigns to men’s clinics disguised as members’ clubs. Medical and health brands aren’t settling for technical and bland because consumers aren’t interested in that either.

Places it’s showing up:

Pendulum swing → Cosmetic acupuncture (aka Notox), undetectable face lifts (and hand lifts?!), and micro-dosing ‘maintenance’ GLP-1 programs prove that we don’t want to be loud and proud about everything. Even if you know we’re trying, we’d prefer to look like we’re not.


The four letters referenced in this episode:

That’s all, folx.

-Chris

If you read this and liked it, that little heart is there for that. The algo and I appreciate it.

PS. If you prefer Apple, Spotify, or YouTube you can listen there too.

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