21 Oct 2024
IFA 2024 - Business as Usual?
IFA Berlin 2024, Europe’s largest consumer electronics show, was as usual full of exciting product announcements showcasing key trends for all to look forward to in the months ahead and beyond. It was another sold-out show celebrating its Centenary with a new image and fresh approach paving the way for the next 100 years ahead. Recording 215,000+ visitors from 138 countries who came to Messe Berlin over the course of 5 days to witness innovation, experience inspiration, and discover the future of tech from over 1,800 exhibitors. Whilst IFA Berlin may have changed considerably since 1924, some may think that 2024 was a deja vu experience.
Ok, so there's a lot of AI on offer from almost every brand stretching and relying on the most tenuous of references to AI in relation to their products. AI aside, it could be considered all a bit the same. Once you've seen one air fryer, you've seen them all and I suspect if you lined up all the air fryers on display in Berlin it would pave a crispy path all the way to London.
However, in all seriousness, IFA remains an essential part of the product life cycle, launching innovation that may have been talked about at CES in January but becomes reality by September for all to marvel and revel in at IFA.
The vast majority of innovation ranged from future tech to the present day and reflected various consumer trends, old and new. Naturally, AI was an important feature, with brands aware that consumers are expecting adoption and development. While AI was prevalent, it largely fed into the idea of user convenience with features that centre around making consumers lives easier. These innovations are present predominantly in products like AI-enhanced appliances, where automations are set to enhance efficiency.
The affordable premium trend also continued, with brands responding to people's desire for maximum features and durability at a justifiable price. As the cost of living crisis effects continues, consumers are still looking for access to the best aspirational features from savvy brands. Categories delivering this ethos ranged from phones, foldables, smart home devices, laptops and drones, alongside AV and MDA categories, with consumer-centric innovations which are vital in driving the recovery and development of the consumer electronics industry.
The trends evident at IFA were AI, sustainability, and connectivity. All were linked back to AI, which creates convergent devices that save you time, energy, waste, and money as demonstrated fabulously by those geniuses at Samsung who presented the reality of family life in a real house, with kids, pets, clutter and reflective of how the vast majority of us truly live. Time strapped, cash conscious and tired, needing a little bit of help, whether through your Samsung Jet robotic vacuum that docks or Samsung’s Family Hub AI Vision fridge doors that open by voice command and also scan the dates on your produce to tell you what you need to eat quickly and wait for it, even suggests a recipe using those items on the turn that need to be consumed immediately - in my case usually spring onions. This is CE embracing AI to help consumers make decisions they'd rather not have to make, facilitating our choices and enabling consumers to spend their time and money more astutely.
To read the published article by Dan Todaro, Gekko Group CEO, please visit ERT