This is not being driven by sustainability and climate activists, or driven by concern for the the toxicity of consumer culture or the moral superiority of a stronger diy type culture. It's being driven by necessity, will stay out of preference, but will have a bigger effect.
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The thing about all this diy stuff is that it shifts preferences at a hugely important meta-level: time vs. money and the quality of life equation.
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When people discover that their time-money tradeoff curve has more elasticity than they thought, because new skills make the time-cost of things much lower, and supply chain vagaries make the time+money cost higher, preference for more money over more time shifts significantly.
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This is the home edition of the build-vs-buy decision-making that all businesses are very familiar with. It is the consumerization of build-vs-buy decisions. For most people, for most kinds of domestic consumption, build-vs-buy decisions were not even available. You had to buy.
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So all the business process skills that businesses learned in the last 40 years -- outsourcing vs. insourcing, build vs. buy etc. and unwittingly taught a lot of their employees, are now being applied at scale in homes.
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All these are kinda good from the pov of a lot of values/mission-driven perspectives (climate, sustainability, retreat from financial productivity/yield as the driving legible metric of the economy), but it is important to note that it doesn't actually "belong" to any mission.
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So a key mistake you will be tempted to make is to interpret the shift through just one values lens. Do that and you'll be disappointed. Maybe 70% of the shift will align with climate action, but 30% won't and you'll be tempted to knee-jerk fight that or eliminate it as noise.
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The changes are at what I call the log level, and are a shift in phenomenology of lifestyle variety at population scale. Supervening narratives will necessarily reductive. The idea of supervenience is good to get comfortable with for thinking this through https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supervenience …
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People's habits are changing --> their identities are changing --> how they fit into any story you craft will change
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Definitely not. Take schools. Almost all are rolling back on reopening. Online k-12 learning shift is probably a much bigger deal than WFH.
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Sure, but how many are turning that into skills, vs rage-drinking and QAnon?
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