Video above published Dec 22, 2016 by L2inc.com. Scott Galloway's 2016 Digital Winners & Losers and some 2017 predictions.
"We were right on:
- Wearables and 3D printing - calling them out as headfakes months before their respective stocks plunged.
- Jet.com. The startup was purchased by Walmart as an acquihire, just as we forecast on Winners & Losers last October.
- Messaging. Brands are flocking to messaging platforms, particularly Facebook Messenger, just as we predicted in March.
More in the video and transcript below.
Without Google and Facebook, digital advertising is in decline (source: L2inc.com video above) |
- Google 41%
- Facebook 17%
- Microsoft 4%
- Yahoo 3%
- Twitter 2%
- Others 33%
YouTube.com auto-generated transcipt:
0:02 At the end of the year, we look back at our predictions for 2016.
0:06 In fact, one of the biggest losers of '16 was wearables.
0:10 When Fitbit emerged from its 2015 IPO with a $4 billion valuation we weren't convinced, and neither was the market.
0:18 With Fitbit stock at record lows,
0:19 it looks like we got this one right.
0:21 Last January we also predicted headwinds for 3D printing and VR.
0:26 3D printing - that's my favorite.
0:28 Build anything you want, right away, real-time?
0:30 Well, guess what. We have the world's best 3D printer right now - and it's called China.
0:35 The next big headfake?
0:37 Virtual reality.
0:39 For $600 you can buy the Facebook Oculus.
0:42 Porn and gaming may take off here, but that's it.
0:44 3D printer stocks have plunged to record lows
0:46 and the Oculus CEO's move to a new project at Facebook is the death knell for virtual reality.
0:54 In October 2015, we predicted Jet.com was a loser
0:57 and would be bought as an acquihire.
0:59 Our prediction: Jet.com has absolutely no hope of success against Amazon.
1:04 Walmart in fact acquired the company in August,
1:07 at a cost of - get this - $12.5 million per employee and a 6x multiple on revenues.
1:15 At the time of the acquisition, Jet was spending $5 million per week on advertising
1:19 and would be operating at a loss until they reached $20 billion in sales, with 15 million paying customers.
1:27 So Walmart paid $3.5 billion for a company that needs to reach $20 billion in sales to break even.
1:33 This is what you call panic. In a digital age, that costs shareholders billions.
1:38 This will be one of the biggest writedowns in retail history.
1:42 So our prediction on Slack?
1:43 Too early to tell.
1:44 In September 2015, we posited that email for internal communications would be replaced by Slack.
1:51 So we hear a lot about the death of email, but who's the executioner?
1:55 One culprit might be Slack.
1:57 The platform's recent integration with Google Drive makes clear that it's gaining momentum.
2:02 However, there are still 625 million active business email accounts.
2:06 Slack recently added video calling capability,
2:08 suggesting they're not just going after email, but broader workplace communications.
2:13 On messaging, we definitely got the trend correct.
2:16 In March, we predicted that messaging was the next frontier for brands.
2:20 What is the final frontier?
2:21 We don't know, but the next frontier: messaging.
2:26 We've already seen that prediction take hold,
2:27 particularly on Facebook Messenger,
2:30 which an increasing number of brands are using to connect with their customers.
2:34 And the celebrity death match for '17?
2:36 Facebook's Instagram taking on Snapchat.
2:39 Our prediction?
2:39 Snapchat will lose value in 2017 at the hands of the most agile, impressive company in the world - Facebook.
2:49 We did in fact predict Facebook would expedite the death of the industrial ad complex.
2:53 The advertising industrial complex is coming to an end.
2:57 Advertising has become a tax that poor people pay.
3:00 For twenty bucks a year, we should be able to opt out of your sh*tty advertising, Facebook.
3:06 News of this year is that the firewall of live TV, specifically sports, has been breached.
3:12 It's clear that two players own the future: Google and Facebook.
3:14 If you look at the incremental revenue Facebook and Google each command,
3:20 it adds up to 103%.
3:22 You think, wait, that doesn't make any sense.
3:23 It does because, sans Google and Facebook, digital marketing is now officially in decline.
3:30 .....
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