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by  Bob Hoffman (@adcontrarian), San Francisco Bay There is nothing dumber than a magazine with a vision. And there’s no kind of magazine with a vision dumber than a trade magazine with a vision. And there’s no kind of trade magazine dumber than an advertising trade magazine.

So today we are going to discuss an article that wins the triple crown of dumbness — an article with a vision of the future, from a trade magazine, in the advertising field.

The article is called: “MasterCard’s Vision for a Cashless, Cardless, World” and it appeared in Ad Age a while ago.

Like all these pieces it takes the flavor of the week, in this case “mobile,” applies no perspective, and elevates it to the status of earth-shaker. The guy who is peddling this nonsense escapes from the article unchallenged, and we are left with the impression that sometime in the near future we will be living in a “cashless, cardless world.”

Perhaps you are old enough to remember the 1980s when we anointed the “paperless society.” That was a real winner. In 2012 the U.S. Postal Service alone handled 160 billion pieces of mail.

Then in the 1990’s the visionary geniuses announced disintermediation — brick and mortar retailing was dead. All our retail transactions would be done online, directly with the manufacturer. Just one problem. According to the latest U.S. Dep’t of Commerce report, about 95% of all retail spending is still done in stores.

The newest breed of hysterical futurists are the mobile maniacs. You can’t swing a dead QR code without hitting a dozen articles about how “mobile” is going to “change everything.”

A headline on c/net’s website recently screamed that “Shopping via mobile devices increased 81 percent in 2012.” Ohmygod, 81%!

Let’s see exactly what this means.

Mobile devices accounted for 11% of all online purchases last year. And online purchases accounted for 5.2% of all retail sales.  So mobile purchases accounted for a whopping .57% of retail sales — not even 1%. If that represents an 81% increase from the previous year, then it rose from .32% to .57%. Stop the freakin’ presses!

(I have edited out a paragraph here which is offensive in light of the horrible events that occurred in Boston after this was posted.)

So now mobile devices are going to make money and credit cards disappear and we’re going to have a “cashless, cardless world.”

Yeah, when monkeys fly out of my butt.

– The Ad Contrarian is Bob Hoffman, ceo of Hoffman/Lewis advertising in San Francisco and St. Louis. Hoffman is the author of The Ad Contrarian and 101 Contrarian Ideas About Advertising. Reprinted from his blog The Ad Contrarian.

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Published by Herman Manson

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