The year is 2022. Towering over Birmingham’s red brick terraces, dominating its Victorian warehouses and canals, a bright glass building shimmers in the setting sun, crowned with wind turbines and coated in solar panels.
No-one lives here, and only a handful or people work on its eight floors.
It used to be a high-rise car park. Now it’s a farm.
A vertical farm, to be precise: a shining example of the new urban agriculture - climate-controlled, filled with fruit, vegetables and even a few pigs. It generates all its own energy, harvesting its water needs from the rain that falls on the roof. On the ground floor, there’s a marketplace where local people buy its produce and that of other nearby farms.
That’s one vision of 2022. Here’s another: an intelligent web-based advert for hand cream, making its way around the world from network to network. As it does so, it adjusts itself to appeal to the different people and groups it meets, talking with them, learning new information to help persuade its audience to buy the product.
The advert discovers from one conversation that the company producing the hand cream has provided false information about safety tests. The advert checks this new information from other sources, verifies it, and begins a new campaign of its own against the company which developed it – forcing it to mend its ways, while at the same time earning it brownie points for allowing such open source-style auditing of its activities.
Then again, in a parallel 2022, people have stopped shopping altogether – at least for everyday staples. Instead, milk, bread, pasta, washing powder and toilet tissue simply turn up in their porch whenever they are needed, triggered by messages sent automatically to the retailer direct from their cupboards and fridges.
These are three visions of 2022, each providing a glimpse of the future in which UK retailing will have to operate. They’re not science fiction: each of them could really happen by 2022.
Supported by Tesco and Unilever, we’ve conducted a wide-ranging exercise to ask what the future could hold for UK retail, focusing particularly on fast moving consumer goods (FMCG). We’ve carried out a thorough literature review, staged workshops and interviewed more than 50 people. This has allowed us to develop four distinct scenarios that describe radically different possible futures for UK retail, and their implications for sustainable development.
Why did we develop these scenarios?
With these scenarios, we hope to:
In this report, we look briefly at past developments in the UK retail sector’s efforts to come to grips with sustainability, then review the factors that are likely to shape its future over the next 15 years.
We then present the four scenarios - ‘my way’, ‘sell it to me’, ‘from me to you’ and ‘i’m in your hands’ - and end with an analysis of what the scenarios could mean for retailers looking to a more sustainable future.
Listen to the Retail Futures podcasts
Retail Futures offers a glimpse of what the retail experience of 2022 might involve. Through four radically different and detailed scenarios, Retail Futures 2022 explores many of the issues the retail sector will have to face in the years to come.
Taken together, the four scenarios provide valuable tools to help the retail sector develop robust, future-proof strategies that will deliver more sustainable retail in a time of radical change.
Comments
SHOPPING RETAIL FUTURES
WHY NOT IMAGINE A FUTURE WITHOUT MULTINATIONAL GIANTS SUCH AS TESCO AND UNILEVER?
Future of retail for independent stores
There is a lot of talk about larger retail business regarding these issues, but there are also 250,000 smaller retailers (under 25 personnel) in the UK. What we are seeing now is fast growth in these retailers adding an online channel to their businesses. As it becomes cheaper to deploy the technology to integrate shop and online channels then more small retailers will move this way.
In 10 years time the standard for small retailers will be to have a multichannel presence offering speciality products and services online. The impact on the environment is potentiually a positive for two reasons:
1. They will use delivery services from major national couriers that overall cut the consumption of fuel in comparison to consumers driving to buy goods.
2. The use of technology also reduces their waste in overbuying.