Torbjorn's Blog

Torbjorn's Blog

Tag >> World without borders

Biometric fingerprint payment, interactive dressing room assistance and intelligent shopping trolleys could depart the realms of science fiction for the real world, as a TNS study reveals that new technologies look set to revolutionize the way we shop.

Six in 10 Internet-connected consumers across the globe believe that they will be able to pay for purchases using just their fingerprint by 2015 - with this innovation rated top by the greatest proportion of people questioned. The UK is most in favour of this shopping solution - with 31 per cent giving it their thumbs up. Canada ranked slightly below average with 24 per cent in favour, but above their neighbours to the south. In the United States, 19 per cent support the concept.

A confident 73 per cent of shoppers say that they expect to be using interactive touch-screens in dressing rooms to communicate with sales assistants by 2015.

For Canadians, the interactive dressing room rated highest among all future retail technologies presented, in terms of both appeal and likelihood to use.

Interestingly, as with fashion, shopping priorities change dramatically between countries. While Chinese consumers rate the concept of an in-store holographic sales assistant far above other countries (named as first choice by 59 per cent compared to an average of 23 per cent), German shoppers are far more concerned about having a body scan to help their clothes to fit.

Consumers across Canada, the US, Europe and Asia ranked these concepts among a range of futuristic product innovations which look set to revolutionize the way we shop over the next decade. Next generation Web-based services, new technologies and the need for tighter security and faster shopping will drive demand - with concepts as far-fetched as networked refrigerators automatically ordering groceries likely to fuel new product developments.

TNS's New Future In Store report surveyed 4,500 primary household shoppers online in eight countries - Canada, China, France, Germany, Japan, Spain, UK and US - and asked them to comment on 12 innovations.

Other result highlights include:

  • 41% of consumers see biometric fingerprint payment as having 'high appeal' - rising to 69% in China but falling to 24% in Germany
  • 81% of consumers believe collaborative product development Web sites will be in use by 2015. Canada rated higher than average in both  appeal and likelihood to use
  • The concept of receiving product sales and promotion information via mobile phone (based on location) rated lowest among the future retail technologies surveyed
  • North American consumers are most keen on 'smart' shopping carts - consumers in France and Germany are least interested
  • 3D body scanning is most popular amongst Germans (21%) compared to an average of 12%
  • Spaniards are keener than other Europeans on the concept of a fridge networked into other devices to order groceries and have them      delivered. 29% of Canadians claim they would likely use this technology, a rate slightly below the average
  • 59% of Chinese consumers rank a holographic sales assistant as their top innovation - while Japanese and British like this least, at 15%

What does it mean to be Canadian when we come from everywhere?

How do we forge a shared national purpose among people who have never shared anything before?

The world is coming to Canada. More and more Canadians are global citizens, exploring the world or staying connected to our countries of origin more instantly, more easily and more inexpensively than ever before.

We are Canadians without


There are some made-up words that really should be in the dictionary.

destinesia (noun) : a disease in which one enters another room/area and forgets what they came for. Although he marched angrily and purposefully into the room, the moment he stepped in from underneath the door, he had destinesia and forgot for what he had come.

Garage Mahal (noun) : an extremely large house , similar to other