Inflation and monetary policy topped the list, while crypto and cyberattacks dodged the top 10.
They’re generally women, ethnic minorities, or the younger population. Open banking could save them from high-cost credit.
A study reveals one quarter of surveyed consumers would switch banks for a good rewards program.
Our predictions that Block would launch a super app and that multinational firms would ramp up acquisitions in Africa in 2022 deserve a second look.
Which retailers and brands won (or lost) in 2022? Retailers that catered to the budget or luxury ends of the price spectrum did well, while those that dealt in discretionary categories like apparel and electronics saw the biggest drop-off in consumer spending.
Will Elon Musk’s Twitter flourish or falter? Despite the current chaos, some see potential for significant changes.
ChatGPT shows the power of AI to disrupt marketing: Its capabilities can be used for good and bad effects
Meta accused by EU of violations over online classified ads: Regulators contend tying Facebook social network to Marketplace service hurts competition.
Marketing and advertising has room for improvement on diversity: A study shows progress in female and non-white worker representation, but concerns remain.
“The sky isn’t falling,” according to The New Consumer and Coefficient Capital’s “Consumer Trends 2023” report. But consumer habits are changing as a result of high inflation, shifting attitudes around COVID-19, and the battle for digital attention. Here are our key takeaways from the report.
The firm completed big down rounds, branched out with new products, and battled intensifying BNPL competition.
Ad-supported video-on-demand (AVOD) viewing will reach more than half of the US population in 2026, up from 41.8% this year, per our forecast.
On today's episode, we discuss whether streaming's golden age is suddenly waning, the race to build a do-everything app, Amazon's new TikTok-like shopping feature, how Disney+ is doing, Walmart's drone deliveries, the numbers that best sum up this year, and more. Tune in to the discussion with our director of reports editing Rahul Chadha, vice president of Briefings Stephanie Taglianetti, and analyst Paul Verna.
Twitter’s turbulent takeover: The Twitter-Musk saga is one of the biggest stories for 2022 that will likely continue into 2023. It could strangle other Musk-owned businesses like Tesla, which Musk is using to sell stock to keep Twitter afloat.
Apple’s sports ambitions take a hit: YouTube TV has won NFL Sunday Ticket rights over the consumer tech giant.
AI, the creator … and destroyer? Potentially one of the most disruptive technologies in history, generative AI has caught the legal system flatfooted. Alongside litigation, expect commercialization to start maturing in 2023.
New account openings, P2P payment features, and BNPL transactions have been hit the hardest.
They fear their accounts will be hacked or improperly accessed. Banks must mitigate these concerns to realize their mobile app’s true potential.