This data was originally featured in the November 6th, 2024 newsletter found here: INBOX INSIGHTS, November 6, 2024: Take Care of Yourself, Emerging Trend Identification
In this week’s Data Diaries, let’s explore more on the topic of trend identification, especially emerging trends.
One of the great challenges of emerging trend analysis is… well, it’s emerging. Traditional quantitative methods like anomaly detection, breakout and trend identification, etc. tend to fall down because an emerging trend is still emerging. There may not be enough quantitative data to identify it as a trend.
The challenge, of course, is discerning signal from noise. Emerging trends are weak signals – a few sparks that might catch fire, amidst a whole lot of irrelevant stuff that isn’t going to catch. And these sparks can be lurking quietly in the background for a very, very long time.
Consider the emergence of generative AI as an example. When was the transformers architecture, which powers tools like ChatGPT, first invented? Everyone thinks generative AI began with ChatGPT in November of 2022, but the research paper that started it all debuted in June 2017, a full 5 years earlier.
So how do we identify emerging trends? Mainly through qualitative data, things like conversations and observations, knowing our audience and our domain really well. Spotting interesting things that don’t exactly fit the known patterns.
Here’s what a couple friends had to say over on LinkedIn.
Deborah Carver: “I watch what people do and say in person, rather than what they do and say on the internet or in media. I especially pay attention to the actions of people who are not like me, especially those who are younger. How people behave and what they embrace usually takes a few years to surface via data, but it’s often evident if you’re paying attention on a personal level.”
Ashley Faus: “It’s counterintuitive, but I look at adjacent disciplines or outlier generations. What’s happening in the design world? What’s happening in the engineering world? Because marketers love to grab principles from those professionals and tweak ’em for our purposes 😀 Same thing with outlier generations. Not the current upcoming generation, but what about my grandparents in their late 80s? What about my nieces and nephews in their toddler years? What’s happening in their worlds? Because someone has discovered a problem that they need solving, and that’s gonna have butterfly effect at some point.”
Missy Voronyak: “Consuming a lot of news and content, especially following people who are early adopters/thought leaders. Paying attention to new things and then if it’s repeated a second or third time it might take off as a trend.”
When we look at these and many other answers, they’ve all got the same underlying theme: paying attention and ingesting lots of information, some of which may not be directly related to what we want to know about.
Could we use generative AI to find, at the very least, a starting point for emerging trend identification? We sure can. One of the key principles for doing so, given the feedback above, is to look for the non-obvious. This is where generative AI’s often-cited bland content comes in handy.
Through a process known as contrastive prompting, we can first have a large language model like ChatGPT or Google Gemini tell us what the obvious trends are, then provide it data (such as conversation data, public forums, etc.) and tell it to look for emerging trends, explicitly excluding the obvious.
Here’s an example. We asked Google Gemini what the obvious trends in social media marketing are:
- Short-Form Video Remains King
- The Rise of Social Commerce
- Authenticity and Transparency
- Community Engagement
- Influencer Marketing Evolves
- Social SEO
- AI-Powered Marketing
- Social Listening for Customer Care
- The Metaverse and Web3
- The Power of Playful Content
- The Rise of “Anti-Social” Social Media
- Social Media as Search Engine
- Ephemeral Content Making a Comeback
- Social Listening Beyond Marketing
- The Creator Economy 2.0
- Gamification and Interactive Content
- Focus on Employee Advocacy
- Livestreaming for Connection
- The Decline of Traditional Social Listening Tools
This list seems perfectly reasonable. We’ve seen SO many of these “trends” appear on trend lists year after year. They’re far from emerging. So given 90 days of social media marketing discussion from online forums, what might we find remains after we wash away all the obvious?
- *Demand for Platform-Agnostic Media Archiving & Retrieval Tools: Users are seeking solutions to independently archive and access their social media content, regardless of platform availability or account status.*
- *Increased Scrutiny of Influencer Marketing Practices (Focus on Transparency and Accountability): Marketers and brands are demanding greater transparency and accountability within influencer marketing to combat scams and inauthenticity.*
- *Growing Demand for Hyper-Personalized Social Media Management Tools for Small Businesses: Small businesses are seeking affordable, tailored social media management tools that address their unique challenges and resource constraints.*
- *Shifting Focus from Platform-Specific Metrics to Holistic Brand Performance Measurement: Businesses and marketers are prioritizing a holistic view of brand performance across all channels, moving beyond platform-specific metrics.*
- *Exploration of Alternative Revenue Models for Content Monetization: Creators are actively seeking monetization methods beyond traditional platform-based advertising or sponsorships to diversify income streams and gain control over revenue.*
- *Emergence of Niche Social Networks and Communities: Users and marketers are showing increasing interest in specialized social platforms and micro-communities catering to highly specific interests, demographics, or geographic locations.*
That’s not terrible. Certainly, it’s not the usual stuff that you see on the obvious trends list. With a bigger dataset and more original data, we might uncover additional trends, but at the very least, there are some interesting tidbits in here that go far beyond “Make Tiktoks!”
As the trends lists roll out over the coming weeks and months, examine them with a critical eye and consider using generative AI and techniques like we’ve described here to identify your own emerging trends.
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Trust Insights (trustinsights.ai) is one of the world's leading management consulting firms in artificial intelligence/AI, especially in the use of generative AI and AI in marketing. Trust Insights provides custom AI consultation, training, education, implementation, and deployment of classical regression AI, classification AI, and generative AI, especially large language models such as ChatGPT's GPT-4-omni, Google Gemini, and Anthropic Claude. Trust Insights provides analytics consulting, data science consulting, and AI consulting.