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The 12 warmest trends for 2023

We spent months analyzing the top predictions from the 2023 trend buffet so you wouldn’t have to wait in line. You’re welcome.

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Once upon a time, the changing of the year was marked by hanging a new calendar on the wall. Nowadays we have something else: the appearance of annual predictions and trend lists.

It's understandable to take comfort in thinking that we can know what the future will bring. That's why horoscopes and tarot cards are so popular! But instead of clairvoyants, the business world has analysts and consultants .

So, we read the cards—well, many, many analysts' reports, trend reports, and futurists' reports—flew a kite close to the sun, and stuck a finger in the air. Here we present for your consideration (and hopefully delight) the definitive list of exactly what will happen over the next year (or so).

Supply chain jam: Going with the production flow

1. Plus-ones for the supply chain party. China, the place where (almost) everything comes from, is experiencing a popularity crisis. Meanwhile, the broader Southeast Asia region has developed into a viable alternative provider of goods (Vietnam is now the world’s second largest exporter of smartphones, for example). That won’t mean a complete divorce from China, more like, hmm, an open relationship. The spread of manufacturing could make for a more stable supply chain situation—eventually. In the short-term, though, China is still crucial for stuff so expect a rocky year ahead, according to BNP Paribas.

2. Get used to it. The key word here is permacrisis. Yes, that is now a word, according to Collins Dictionary! Environmental disasters are increasing in number and scope, we have global fragility, and there’s a pandemic. Sorry to be a downer, but it's better to be realistic. Sure, some things seem normal-ish: People are back at work, travel, and play (mostly); and the stockpile of goods waiting in warehouses during the pandemic is trickling out as people revive their buying habits. But we really can’t be bubbly, because pandemics don’t play nice or predictably. COVID-19 is hanging on and with inflation and general concerns about the economies—yours, mine, theirs—consumer demand won't come roaring back in 2023. This year’s global trade growth is expected to sit at 1%, well below the 10-year average of 2% to 3%, according to ING.

Insights’ advice

Sources

Concentrating African American woman brainstorming while coding data on desktop PC

Computing, we hardly knew ye

3. Crime, at your service. How convenient. If you're up to no good, that is. Instead of hackers having to make their own evil tools, they can be bought off the rack, just like other tech platforms. Crime as a service includes ransomware as a service and malware as a service—in other words, plug-and-play villainy. But it gets worse: There’s also reconnaissance as a service, where digital criminals hire digital detectives, basically outsourcing research for sensitive info like financial data or credentials that can help sharpen their attacks, predicts Fortinet.

4. AI’s teenage crisis. There have been plenty of shiny, new AI products that looked great at first glance, yet flatlined when it turned out they couldn't scale. Although some would say that scale is the least of AI’s problems. And why do baby AIs get moody and rebellious when they become teenagers? It’s because their data diet stinks—low quantity, poor quality, and convoluted architecture—you know the drill. “This is the year for a makeover,” says McKinsey.

5. Everybody in the code pool! Low-code/no-code apps are taking over and being created by, as Gartner calls them, citizen developers. We had no idea developers weren't citizens, but okay. Anyway, LC/NC is growing quickly because it’s cheap ’n easy—Gartner says it’ll make up 65% of apps by 2025—making us all citizens and developers.

Insights’ advice

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people gather together to work over a digital blackboard

Humans and resources

6. Who’s got talent? Not enough companies, apparently. The skills crunch is big and getting bigger quickly. Just check out this stat: In the U.S. alone, there are 10.7 million jobs just waiting for that perfect hire. Solving the skills crisis means there’s really no choice but to think outside the box (start by not using clichés like “think outside the box”). Companies are being strategic: they’ll swoop in to get that talent before it’s even hatched by targeting schools and other training organizations to sign up students before the ink on their diplomas or certificates is dry. Those companies will figure out training for those new hires that's hyper-focused on specific skills. And they’ll look at stats like this one: 2023 U.S. salary budgets are expected to increase by just 4%—roughly half the 2022 rate of inflation, and think really, really hard about what they could possibly do to attract workers. What could that possibly (more money) be?

7. Red scare! Collective ownership is coming to strike fear into the hearts of capitalists everywhere. Are we talking about (gasp!) communism? Heaven forfend—don't revoke our Adam Smith credentials! Nope, we’re talking about decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs). A DAO is a collective structure that’s owned and run by members. DAOs are smart all the way, in the digital sense, at least: blockchain and smart contracts are the digital tools that make DAOs possible because they provide transparency and decentralization. A few early examples went down in flames (see: FTX) but there is a consistently growing number of DAOs offering some new (well, slightly digitally repurposed) ideas about how companies are formed, owned, and run in a world that’s increasingly digital by default.

8. The Keystrikes Back. The "work from where?" debate is getting hotter. Some companies—Forrester says 40%—are making news because they’re trying to get workers (and by get, we mean order) back to the office, and that ain't going down well. We understand that office leases and real estate are expensive, but still. Then there are the companies that are keeping remote work (in whatever form) but also turning to surveillance tech to track what their workers are doing when they work remotely. This is apparently due to concerns about productivity, even though there’s plenty of research (mostly pandemic-induced) that shows remote work does not negatively affect productivity. Quite the opposite. Old habits die hard, we guess. Why consider quality when quantity is so easy to monitor, right? But 2023 will see more attention paid to work-tracking software by lawmakers, rights groups, and workers themselves.

9. How AIre you? Calling an AI a colleague is, in our humble opinion, questionable (file under: anthropomorphizing). But in 2023 companies will grapple with AI trust in terms of its direct effects on actual human employees. Companies will opt for clarity and transparency to help their people—actual people—understand the AI they’re using. Much remains to be seen, however, like which doughnuts our AI colleagues prefer, filled or glazed? (Asking the important questions here.)

10. C-suite AI? Why constrain AI to its greatest hits—chatbots and RPA and other biz tools? Some companies, like rum brand Dictador and gaming company NetDragon Websoft, have “hired” AI bots as CEOs to help them become Web 3.0 businesses. In Dictador’s case, CEO “Mika” will be running, among other tasks, the brand’s DAO. (Do we spot a trend?) Guess that’s one way to put a check on executive comp packages.

Insights’ advice

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Aerial view of a sustainable green cubic farm

Sustainability: Hot and getting hotter. Literally.

11. So, about those end times. Can’t look away from the Doomsday Clock? Wondering about business survival (or just survival)? A survey from IBM finds that while most organizations have a sustainability strategy, less than half (35%) have actually put it into motion. External pressures are increasing but opposition persists, often due to people unconvinced by ROI and reliant on conventional fiscal metrics. Well, it’s time to get it in gear. The EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive kicked off in January, and that’s just one example of regulations and pressures that are forcing companies to up their sustainability. Needed: More action on commitments, greener providers, and prioritizing sustainability. Delay further at your peril (and the planet's).

12. Green it like you mean it. Regulators are on to the fakers. As Forrester puts it, 2023 is the year “greenwashing becomes a serious business risk.” Why? Because fines are being given and they are not insignificant. Plus people care. Companies may still be obsessed with shareholder value, but regular people are watching their personal wealth, stability, communities, and hopes for the future go up in flames and drown in floods. 2023: Let’s do better.

Insights’ advice

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