Here's How My Predictions for 2016 Fared (Hint - Pretty Darn Well)

Originally published by John Battelle on LinkedIn: Here's How My Predictions for 2016 Fared (Hint - Pretty Darn Well)

At the beginning of each year I make predictions, and at year's end, I hold myself to account. It's kind of fun to look back and see how wrong (or right) my musings end up being. Last year I published my 2015 review here on LinkedIn, and it went viral, so I'm back for another go!

I'll be writing my Predictions 2017 post this weekend (I think), and publishing it shortly thereafter. But for now, let's take a stroll down memory lane, and see how I did. Here's a short report card for each of my twelve 2016 predictions.

#1 - 2016 will be the year that “business on a mission” goes mainstream. Well, this was pretty self serving, given it's at the core of the work I did all year long at NewCo and NewCo Shift. But I did predict that massive companies would put their missions at the core of their marketing, and that certainly happened with corporations like Unilever, Ikea, H&M, and many others. I also said the press would start covering the story as a regular beat, more than just annual "doing good by doing well" lists. While coverage (and the number of those annual lists) has increased, I can't argue the story has broken out as big as I expected. And while organizations like Just Capital have launched to track company data beyond price and profit, I think this story needs another year or two to mature. Overall, this prediction trended in the right direction, but didn't fully come true this year, so I'm going to give myself a (noble, well intentioned) whiff on this one.

#2 - Mobile will finally mean more than apps. It may seem counterintuitive, but I think this is the year my mobile prediction actually came true. Here's the detail from my post: "by year’s end, we’ll find ourselves interacting with our technology in new and far more “web like” ways – bouncing from link to link, service to service, much as we did on the original web, but with the power, context, and sensor-laden enablement of mobile apps and devices." In fact, that's exactly how using my phone now feels - deep linking has gone mainstream, and more often than not a link from a search opens an app on my phone, or a call to action in an email or inside an app opens another app - or a mobile web view - inside a third party site. Plus, every new release of Android (I don't use iOS) seems to increase the utility of notifications, voice, and search. That's how the next generation internet should work, and it's here, now. Which is a really good thing (and augurs some very cool new opportunities, which I'll probably explore in my predictions post). I'm going to grade myself a "mostly nailed it." Why mostly? Because at the end of my prediction, I said Google's app streaming was going to help make it all happen. While the company continues to refine and roll out the service (and related services like Instant Apps, or Apple's On Demand Resources), I deserve a ding for that call. I'd rate it a 75% win.