By Marc Stoiber
Some of the hottest giveaways at this year's Sustainable Brands conference were Relan's iPad
totes.
Made from jettisoned billboard vinyl, the colorful, playful bags
grabbed eyeballs from across the room.
But there was more to these bags than meets the eye.
As Della Simpson, co-owner of Relan said "What we're doing is taking
materials symptomatic of linear production thinking, and
repurposing them to line up with new consumer values. The best part
is, we're doing it with products that look cool and engage
people."
It's no secret what those new consumer values are.
Sustainability, innovation, and a healthy dose of irony, to name a
few.
But I also think these bags answer a real need. And from real
needs,futureproofinsights are born.
Futureproof Insight One: We Want Control
For decades, advertising was a one-way street. The advertiser
presented a glossy vision of their product, which the consumer
passively absorbed.
If consumers thought an ad missed the mark, they grumbled at the
water cooler. On the rare occasion where they complained en masse,
they were either lulled by PR, or informed that the ad had been
pulled. There was no avenue for collaborating with the brand to
improve the message.
Social
media upset that apple cart. Ads were crowdsourced. Citizen
bloggers interpreted the brand for the masses. Consumer reviews
became currency. Transparency and imperfection were lauded above
airbrushed, sterile messages.
Relan is simply taking that control shift to the street.
Carefully crafted ads are literally sliced apart, re-stitched, and
presented in a way that was never envisioned by their makers.
Futureproof Insight Two: We Want To Create
Not long ago, we were happy to define ourselves by what we
consumed. It was fine to be a Nike guy or a Harley guy.
Self-expression took a back seat to fitting into the right
crowd.
Today, that's changing. Thanks to an explosion of creative tools
like Final Cut and Garage Band, and public forums like Pinterest and Instagram, we're
defining ourselves increasingly by our own output.
Sadly, even the best tools do not an artist make. But everyone
can buy unique. Antiquing is hot TV. The craft market is exploding,
supported by sites like Etsy. And products like the Relan bag, each one
unique, are capturing the eye.
Futureproof Insight Three: We Want
Absolution
A few years ago, oil defined progress and prosperity. Today,
it's regarded by many as some sort of fossil heroin: we hate it
because we can't kick it, while acknowledging it's slowly killing
us.
This sort of mixed response is increasingly common. We feel
we're consuming things that simply aren't good for us or the
planet, but dread the idea of doing without.
In this context, Relan is a small icon of absolution. We
understand the luxury car we're driving was sold to us by an ad,
but believe repurposing that ad as a handbag helps us reduce the
bad. It's a tiny ray of hope in our anxious, self-critical
existence.
Small Product, Big Insight
There are a number of elements that go into a
futureproof brand. But the one piece that is
absolutely essential is an insight into the needs of rapidly
evolving consumers.
Relan is an example of a product that has tapped a number of
those insights. It may be a humble bag, but its story perfectly
positions it for success.
About Marc Stoiber - Marc Stoiber is a creative
director, writer, innovator and green brand specialist. He consults
with clients across North America. He also speaks and blogs
extensively on trends that will influence the destiny of today's
brands. View other postings by Marc Stoiber