The world economy is back on a positive track and the financial crisis in 2008/09 is almost forgotten. But things have changed and the old world is not coming back. Consumption as a religion, big shopping sprees as amusement, and the fallacy of indeptness taking out mortgage loans over the rooftop of our houses, is not coming back.
Today we are again looking at a brighter future and our priorities as consumers have changed. We do not need the biggest house or car in town. Instead consumers are more engaged in nature, health and organically grown products. The trend “back to nature” has been significant for some years now as a reaction to the global financial crisis and the over-consumption. Worldwide people long for, or desire to, live with old values and giving them a redesign. An ever growing trend over the last years is our focus on health, healthy lifestyle, nutrition and superfood, doing exercises in order to keep our bodies strong and fit – and this trend will rise increasingly in the coming years.
The new luxury is different from the old one. Many will still purchase some very expensive items from major brands, although that has changed too. Luxury sales normally grows from the bottom of an economic crisis and most of the way out of it. Since the last financial crisis luxury has been growing, but at the same time consumers has expanded their view of luxury into new ways.
The new luxury is primarily composed of what modern consumers think and feel is a scarce commodity to them like time, attention, space and room, peace and quietness. Time is becoming a scarce good as we are connected via smartphones 24/7 and accessible to bosses, family and friends at any time. We want to regain our time, just as we want to regain our own space and room. Monkey class is okay as long as we arrive at the right destination. We want peace too, so we can recharge before getting back to our daily life.
Just as time is, attention is a scarce good too. Getting the full attentive presence of a member of our family or from good friends is difficult today, where smartphones, streamed video and music is all around us thanks to the 24/7 access to the internet. Still, we also demand full attention from our next of kin and friends.
Another issue is nature. Nature is hot and spending time outdoor is hot. Spending time in outdoor settings is even hotter. Take it all together and add an extra little luxury – time for ourselves, attention of family and friends, nature, peace and quietness – and you get Glamping. Adding a little glamour to camping brings it right in the middle of the desires of modern consumers. Staying in a big tent in the middle of nature with plenty of space and real furniture, eating luxury food from the fireplace outside and having a good chat with your friends and family is modern luxury!
Situated in beautiful nature close to at beach, in the deep forest by a small lake, in the desert or on a small island you suddenly have a very attractive holiday destination. It might not be the place to stay for two weeks of vacation, but it is a great place to spend a night or two, at few days or a full week. Combine it with other features such as sports, trekking, safari or even hunting, and most people would love to stay there even longer.
Add health and health trends to the diet together with opportunities for sports, exercises, wellness and mental health training or meditation, and you have a total package of what we long for and miss in our everyday life. That’s why Glamping is so hot. It is the new luxury in a box.
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Generations and GlampingGenerations experience Glamping in different ways. For seniors (the baby boomers born 1940-55), glamping reminds them of camping, which they know so well from their younger days – but now with an addition of luxury and comfort.
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The coming years will show what generation New Millenium (born 2001-12) will do to glamping. Augmented reality changing the perception of nature, friends around you and of cause the glamping site itself will be a part of their take on glamping.
Extreme sport is fashionable. We are longing for the ultimate experience that comes with five marathons or triathlons in five days. Climbing the highest mountains without air supply, diving with sharks or running around the world for 6 months.
Extreme Glamping would be extremely luxurious camping. Bigger tents or three tents to a couple, the finest destinations in the world at really spectacular sites in nature, having the finest food in the region and being with the most interesting people you will ever meet in a social setting. Make it half or just 20% of the way, and you probably hit the glamping trend in a few years from now. Get there today, and you will get the best possible guests already today.
One of the more extreme versions of Glamping already exists north of the Polar Circle. Get up to the northern part of Norway. The destination has all the ingredients of a comfortable, yet adventurous Arctic adventure: A dogsledding trail, sauna, hot tub and an overnight stay in a glamping tent overlooking a snowcapped landscape.