Hands up, who was playing Snake on their Nokia 3210 back in the early 00s? Interesting to read the return of the iconic phone with the tag line, 'JOMO' - 'The joy of missing out'. It will be intriguing to see how this plays out and whether the desire to be disconnected from the many social media apps on modern day smartphones is genuine or not. Our latest Touchstone Partners Shoppercentric WindowOn report certainly highlighted some interesting insights into the impact of using social media and apps; -Heavy social media users are significantly more likely to feel extremely/very anxious about current day life. -Heavy social media users are significantly more likely to be feeling loneliness/isolation, despite their increased online presence. -Qualitatively, even our respondents who were claiming to be low level users of social media and smartphones were still spending hours each day glued to their devices, highlighting the addictiveness of these medias and just how much of a time-drain they can be. -And one of the scariest figures we found came from Dr Aditi Nerurkar on a recent Diary of a CEO appearance who stated that the average person checks their phone 2,617 times a day. https://lnkd.in/eNvgw9is
Founder & CEO of Gen Z VCs | Forbes 30 Under 30, 2023 & 2022 LinkedIn Top Voice | Gen Z Speaker & Creator (200K) | Oxford
It's 2024 and smart phones are OUT. Let's talk about the "joy of missing out" and how this trend is in fact a step forward, even if it feels like a blast from the past ⬇️ 📞 Last week, Nokia relaunched their Nokia 3210 phone that initially debuted in 1999... despite the new modernized look, it promises the things you WON'T find (no TikTok, no IG, no 5G according to the CMO Lars Silberbauer). Nokia's approach to "newstalgia" is bringing everyone back to a Y2K era where conversations mattered more than likes and shares. 🌟 New Nokia 3210 design updated with 4G, Bluetooth® 🌟 Access news, weather, and videos (YouTube Shorts) via the cloud app portal 🌟 Long-lasting battery that lasts for days 🌟 Play Snake as a form of nostalgic entertainment In Nokia's view, "If it’s important, they’ll call or text." We've seen this trend emerge among Gen Zers, buying flip phones to take out with them to nightclubs or girls-night-outs so they can be more present in a world of ever-present distractions on their phones. This Nokia launch commercializes this trend... and for only £74.99 (<1/10th the price of a new iPhone). As a Gen Zer, I have a bunch of thoughts on this: 1⃣ Love that there's still a camera: this phone has 128 MB (to contrast, my iPhone has 512 GB... 4,000x more & yet I still run out of storage every day), so I wonder how quickly you run out of storage! Taking "vintage" pics on nights out would be fun & entirely on-theme. 2⃣ Interesting that they included YouTube Shorts: It's only available on the U.S. version (not Europe or China), but kind of detracts from the core purpose. I imagine there was a big sponsorship or brand deal behind-the-scenes to include YT Shorts, which has the same exact content as TikTok and IG Reels (up to 60 second videos) and is equally addicting/distracting. 3⃣ Marketing opportunity: I've only seen this launch on LinkedIn (shoutout to Nokia/HMD's CMO Lars Silberbauer!), not organically on other platforms where Gen Z is spending time that might leverage creator voices... I'd like to see more potential user POVs weighing in (huge opportunity for Nokia to get creative with! ie: I have 100K+ followers on IG and would love to use this on a night out with friends at Oxford Uni). In any case, I love seeing brands take advantage of rising consumer interests & viral trends like Y2K... this is a perfect example, and with lots of room to grow on the marketing side to have their viral moment with Gen Z! FOMO is out... JOMO is in. Be present, have real conversations, and spend less time rotting away on our phones! What do you think, would you buy one??? #nostalgia #nostalgiamarketing #y2k #nokia #phones #smartphone #genz #genzmarketing #viral #viralmarketing #socialmediamarketing #marketing