
Over the last two years, my startup has helped 12 companies accelerate their growth ā a mix of startups, scaleups, and corporates. Being slightly obsessed with data, my team and I collected quite a bit of it along the way.
We now use this data to predict what the future is more than likely going to look like, and what our clients need to prepare for as a result. Weāve got 12 main market indicators that we look to when planning for future growth.
Today Iām going to share four of those with you. If youād like to know what the other eight are, pop me a direct message on LinkedIn ? But letās dive into the first four!

1. Customer attention spans are going down
To put it bluntly, our attention spans have shrunk. Our days are flooded with daily headlines, viral clips, newsletters, comments, threads, ping notifications and more ā all this came at a very high cost to our brains.
Dr Joseph Firth, Senior Research Fellow at Western Sydney University reported that: āHigh-levels of Internet use could indeed impact on many functions of the brain. For example, the limitless stream of prompts and notifications from the internet encourages us towards constantly holding a divided attention ā which then in turn may decrease our capacity for maintaining concentration on a single task.ā
Want proof? Even our music is getting shorter as Spotify announces that the economics of streaming is making songs shorter every year ?
2. Switching costs are going down
This is hitting the insurance and banking industries the hardest, but it will creep into more industries over the next decade. What does it mean? To put it simply ā there are more companies in each sector, and the ācostā of consumers switching providers or brands is getting less, meaning itās not as difficult to switch as it used to be.
Weāve spent the last decade reducing friction for new customers to sign up, making it easier to become a customer and automating onboarding in real time. Our competitors did the same. The net result is that weāve actually made the process of switching between banks, insurers and brands a whole lot easier for all consumers.
Our understanding of the LTV (lifetime value) of our customers is also playing a role here ā because we are getting better at predicting how much revenue weāll earn off a customer in the future, weāre able to incentivize customers to switch with rewards, double value, free services, and more. Itās just like credit ā weāre using the money our customers will bring us tomorrow, to get them to sign up today.
3. As dark social rises, activity on the feed goes down
The rise of dark social will see more one to one conversations, group chats, and DMs than ever before. Consumers are moving conversations off public feeds and into private chats and they are doing it at lightning speed. We know this because private messaging apps have seen more growth in the last few years than Twitter, Snapchat, and Facebook combined.
Instagram use as a ādirectā channel is on the rise too. I had been suspecting this for a while, but it was recently confirmed when my mother asked me what it meant to āslide into somebodies DMsā ?

Get ready for the next wave of word of mouth marketing! Brands are going to have to find new ways to inject themselves into consumers conversations on WhatsApp, iMessage, and whatever chat platform comes next. Referral programs have largely been a growth tactic for startups in the last decade but large organizations will see the value of them as they realize that their customers are their only direct line into WhatsApp.
This insight was one of the reasons we built out a referral marketing division at Aerialscoop last year, offering referral software geared for enterprise brands.
4. The cost of ad inventory on digital platforms is going up
As consumers spend more time online, more brands will want to advertise there (demand rises). And as more brands shift their budget away from traditional channels and to digital channels the amount of ad inventory available to buy will get less (supply falls).
This rise in demand and fall in supply will cause the price of digital ad inventory to go up ā meaning weāll pay more for impressions on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube etc.

So, what does all this mean for marketers and companies looking to hire them?
It means marketers should be focusing on building the skills below. We use our twelve market indicators to guide our focus at Aerialscoop, and these are the things weāre working hard to help our clients masterā¦
Loyalty ā this means finding ways to get your current and new customers to stay for longer, and not to switch even when costs are low.



The best example Iāve seen of this lately? Visa releasing a credit card, ājust for geeksā.

This article was originally published on LinkedIn.
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