Nick Gillespie | September 10, 2004
...and other things that cater to intangibles.
In the NY Times, former Reason editor Virginia Postrel writes,
For successful restaurants, aesthetics is no longer an afterthought. Customers are paying for memories, not just fuel.
What's true for restaurants is true across the economy. New economic value increasingly comes from experiences.
Americans have not stopped buying stuff, of course....But the marginal value of tangibles versus intangibles has shifted....
Products as well as services increasingly distinguish themselves through aesthetics, adding emotional value to practical use. This trend confounds those who equate "quality" with function.
Whole thing here.
Via Arts & Letters Daily.
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"Customers are paying for memories, not just fuel."
And, apparently, lots of crazy crap hung on the walls.
"This trend confounds those who equate "quality" with
function."
Is this just a long-winded way of saying "engineers"? :-)
"This trend confounds those who equate "quality" with
function."
Is this just a long-winded way of saying
"engineers"?
Well, most engineers will *claim* to to be all about
function.
Until you show us one of those new PC cases with the clear sides
and the neon lights on the water-cooling system. :)
In all seriousness, though, most experienced engineers understand
that an aesthetically pleasing system that does 90% of what the
customer wants is probably going to make them happier than a
crappy-looking system that does 95% of what they want. There's also
a perception (an inaccurate one, but oh well) that "making stuff
look good" is the easy part. So customers at some level believe
that if a system *looks* bad, it probably *is* bad, because the
people who made it couldn't even do the "easy part" right.
The engineers have done so well that most comparable tools are
functionally excellent. Differentiation must be made by industrial
design and marketing.
I think Postrel is also saying that we are all suffciently rich
with the tools for surviving and living healthfully, so we can
spend more resources seeking pleasure and refining our identities.
The survival mindset lingers, seeing a trip to Vegas as a waste,
since we don't need it to live.
The survival mindset and its toolmaking industries also delivered
lifetime support and security for workers. The new ephemeral style
industries do not offer the same security, which reinforces the
perception that they are less valuable.
Until you show us one of those new PC cases with the clear
sides and the neon lights on the water-cooling system.
:)
I will admit to have considered dismantling my laptop and slipping
in red and green pieces of cellaphane so that my apple lights up in
color :-)
(but that is ALL I will admit to as far as non-functional
tinkering!)
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