After multiple undetected falls, the son decided to take his mother home.
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Senior products and services -- how about delighting the customer?
Reinventing the aging experience – who will transform this market? Over the weekend I saw a Woody Allen movie (he is now 77 and in trouble in Mumbai), read an article about Robert Redford (he is also 77), noted that Bill Cunningham -- the NY Times bicyclist-about-town -- is now 85, Betty White (accused of ageism this week) is now 91. These are well-to-do and well-noticed folk – likely they feel secure in their limos, the NY streets or wherever. You wanna bet that none is considering or would ever consider moving into a CCRC or an Assisted Living, or wearing a PERS device around their neck, mobile or otherwise?
Assisted living and PERS are the domain of families of the oldest and frailest. Increasing longevity – anticipated or a surprise and unprecedented in history – is the future of more and more aging adults. There were more than 2 million seniors who were in their 90’s after the last census. Eventually, most will not be like Betty White or even Helen Cairnes in Palm Beach – they will outlive their resources, maybe their mental or physical capacity, and to be fair, they are not the target market of PERS or ALF marketers – both of which do not offer useful options for the very frail, the very poor, or the most demented among the very old. But what if the statistics with scare warnings about the percentages that will have disabilities or severe dementia are incorrect – and for a growing number, 90+ is a good life, as it is likely to be for Woody, Robert, Bill and apparently Betty?
Is it time to make cool and appealing products and services for older adults? Smart phones are always competing to appear cool, even as their functions may be buggy or awkward and their ‘phone-ness’ does not yet match a feature phone. So Lively’s remote home monitoring device, white and sleek, looks like it was designed, not just built. Yet it is performing a similar function as its numerous (and less cool-looking) predecessors. Perhaps they could partner with folks who produce dreary-looking memory care wander bracelets. New memory care designs like the Cottages at Cedar Run are attempting to improve the beauty, look and feel of a locked memory unit inside more traditional assisted living architecture. If cool buildings and devices had redesigned processes to match them, fundamentally changing from a staff-optimized to a resident-centric approach, that would be cooler still.
Too often, design and function match the customer’s low expectations. Today’s PERS device is an artifact of desperation – fear of falling. Today’s assisted living memory care units -- a ‘gold rush for the industry’ -- are targeted to family shoppers who are similarly desperate. In either case, the prospective customers are not expecting innovation (like the Cottages at Cedar Run) or slick physical designs (like Lively). If they have a moment where they realize that their low expectations have been exceeded, that there is something delightful – beyond basic functionality – and if these examples are part of an overall trend to rethink the healthcare/medical and function-ugliness of products and places for frail seniors, finding a way to delight – now that wouldn’t that be cool?
Comments
Thank you, thank you Laurie.
Thank you, thank you Laurie. I agree that it's finally time for designers --correction-- manufacturers of assisted living and other assistive devices to realize that huge chandeliers and cafeteria food kinda suck. What we want is what the successful marketplace wants-- a clean sophisticated look-feel like Apple, Target, Google and Diane Keaton. They (we?) also need to realize that we have met the enemy and they are us. No more condescending to the "elderly" we are all elderly or headed there.
"Delighting the Customer"
So true. After one year of diagnostic work, followed by sometimes questionable home care, two years of various SNFs of horrible caliber, finding a great CCRC and then an amazing ALF for my wheelchair-bound mother was surprising and unexpected. Yes, we were looking for care that would feel like an extension of family, but so much of this is a business decision. A consumer choice. A financial decision. But there are so many limitations and so little quality (and so few established or regulated standards for care), anything we get that seems good and right feels like a gift, a lucky break, as opposed to an informed choice.
Do they want "cool" or are we
Do they want "cool" or are we just assuming? We MUST find out what this consumer group REALLY wants and will use. And then of course the affordability factor...what to do about that? It is a complex process, but until the consumer of these products and services is involved from concept to shelf, we cannot get it right.