Some Observers - Emerging Futures + Technologies + Consumers

Brazil's Census Goes Digital

Brazil's 2010 national census, which commenced August 1, is being entirely conducted on the ground using smartphones and laptops for data capture. Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) is using standard issue LG smartphones which are GPS-enabled, allowing data collected to be pinpointed to a specific geographic location at the point of capture. Like the Rede Jovem project to map slums, IBGE hopes this effort will help color in many unmapped and underrecorded areas of the country, providing a much richer and more accurate picture of the country. IBGE also said it designed the census to use technology in order to more accurately and quickly assess where Brazil stands relative to the UN Millennium Development Goals for 2015. Designed to reach 58 million Brazilians, the project reportedly has a budget of R$ 1.67 billion (US$909 million), about 1/15th what the US census cost.

 

Filed under  //   Brazil   census   data   government   mapping   mobile   services  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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E-readers in Africa: Continued

It seems that our idea of using e-readers to aid literacy efforts in underdeveloped markets is a viable concept. Such an effort has been taken on as a mission by Worldreader, a non-profit that is testing programs to use Kindles, donated by Amazon.com, in schools in Ghana. Having run limited trials outside Accra, Worldreader now has permission to broaden its efforts in a larger number of Ghanian schools. We wish them good luck and look forward to seeing the outcomes. You can keep track of this initiative at Worldreader.org's blog.

Filed under  //   Africa   Amazon   e-readers   education   Ghana   learning  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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SO Links: Week 30

Another long break, but diverse research hits kept flowing in:

 

 

Filed under  //   Apple   batteries   Bubbly   China   drugs   Europe   India   links   microlending   mobile   power   tablets   technology   Twitter   Unilever  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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SO Links: Week 26

Slow research week, but the pace is picking up. 

Filed under  //   BOP   China   Danone   food   India   infrastructure   links   mobile   science   technology  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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SO Links: Week 24

Filed under  //   broadband   China   crime   India   infrastructure   Mexico   mobile   Singapore   Tianyu   transportation  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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SO Links: Week 21

Took last week off. Here are a few items from this past week's research:

Filed under  //   Android   Bangladesh   Brazil   computing   Dell   OLPC   Russia   science   smartphones   technology   Women  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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SO Links: Week 19

As a resource, starting this week, we are posting selected links gathered during our research each week. 

Filed under  //   banking   Brazil   complexity   consumers   India   mobile   money   netbooks   resilience  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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Looking To a Post-Prahalad Future

 
This morning many awoke to read the sad news that renowned management professor and development theorist CK Prahalad passed away after a brief illness. Even though his most well known work, "The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid", was released in 2004, it seemed that in some ways, Prahalad's vision of a world where the poor, to paraphrase his obituary in the Times of India, are not seen as victims but as consumers in their own right, was reaching its largest audience today. In an era where so many companies in the developed world are seeking new opportunities to replace the weakening consumer markets of the West, Prahalad's enticement to create demand from, and deliver value to, people in emerging and underdeveloped markets looks very attractive. And not a few of these companies are staying in business at this stage due to the relative strength of these emerging market economies.
 
And now, many top global players followed Prahalad's advice and have poured resources into India, China, parts of Africa, Southeast Asia and Latin America in hopes of selling cars, soap, PCs, appliances and many of the trappings of "mainstream" consumer society to new buyers. Banks, NGOs and technology companies are hard at work finding ways to speed the arrival and movement of money and credit to these sectors. And local companies in these regions are rapidly developing inside tracks to serve their own markets. Ironic that the week of Prahalad's passing the Economist carries a special feature on bottom-up innovation and the success stories of companies and brands many in the West have only just become aware of. 
 
So, what comes next? What is the post-Prahalad world? As a futurist, my job is to think about these things—to observe, think, sketch and describe possible futures that may emerge, and look at possible models that aren't just extrapolations of the past, or fulfillment of management fantasies about the successful transplantation of Western strategies to other regions. To me, we are already starting to see some of the signals that outline this future: not just rising incomes and new consumers, but a fundamental shift in global power dynamics in economics, social values, technology models, and more. We are seeing a swing from acquisition to utility, from consumption to production. And the producers, creators and builders are the ones that will call the shots for some time to come. We aren't just seeing our own ideas and values with an Indian or Chinese or Brazilian name on the label. We've spent five centuries in the West creating models of commerce that reflect our deeper cultural values. Why will the next phase be any different for those people, countries and cultures that have the momentum in the next five centuries? 
 
If one believes that Prahalad's ideas have helped bring us to the edge of an era where "the other 90 percent" are the leading innovators, we need to be prepared for how those innovations differ from what's come before, with what values they will teach and shape us, and how we might find new economic and social pathways forward as our current ones increasingly falter. Prahalad's ideas have been interesting, stimulating and to some extent catalytic. It's what comes next, however, that will be really powerful.

 

Filed under  //   Africa   Asia   BOP   China   Economist   futures   India   innovation   Latin America   Prahalad   scenarios  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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The Last Scooter: Upgrading the Indian Middle Class Dream

(Image: Premii/Flickr)

India's fabled Bajaj will issue the last of its classic scooter from its production line in a few weeks, signalling a shift in Indian consumers' transportation choices and, more importantly the benchmark for middle class aspirations. Like the Volkswagen Beetle and Italy's postwar classic Vespa, designed to be affordable, accessible, simple-to-maintain means of getting to a job, shop or visit another town, the Bajaj scooter put a similar tool of middle class aspiration within reach.

Those aspirations are higher now. The reason Bajaj gives for the shutdown of the scooter lines is shifting consumer demand: India's rising consumers want a little more. They see the noisy, boxy Chetak scooter as a symbol of the country's past, not its future. They see the motorcycle or a small, simple car like the Nano as something better, less focused on utility and more on image. 

This shift is telling. We've seen it with mobile phones, for example, in India and other countries. Basic is fine, but a little style, brand and power to go with the utility is not just welcome but demanded, and consumers want to be the ones to make the choice. Understanding this evolution, and how to strike the balance, will be key to succeeding in this booming economy, and may provide lessons that can be used elsewhere in emerging markets.

Filed under  //   consumers   India   manufacturing   transportation  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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The World is Flat, but in a Different Way

New Scientist today carries a report on how scientific research is surging in areas such as the Middle East (notably Turkey and Iran), as well as in Asia, which passed North America last year in total scientific papers published. Judging by total published papers is at best a simple metric, but it indicates an important shift in knowledge production—itself an indicator of innovation overall. 

As I wrote about with regard to Chinese IT and the long-term implications of its growth, these weak signals point to a future where the roles of innovators and copiers may well shift and swap. Science and technology driven by these emerging regions will change the cultural mix of global S&T and will certainly over time take away the West's perceived birthright as the engine of global technology. Flat worlds run both ways. 

(Thanks for the link goes to @mgorbis)

Filed under  //   Asia   innovation   Iran   science   technology   Turkey  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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