37
TOP TRENDS IN INDONESIA T [email protected] 2014

Top Trends in Indonesia

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

A short report about top trends in Indonesia. Link: https://readymag.com/u52919213/34670/

Citation preview

Page 1: Top Trends in Indonesia

TOP TRENDS IN INDONESIA

T

[email protected]

2014

Page 2: Top Trends in Indonesia

DIGITALIZATION

SOCIAL MEDIA EXPANSION

UPRISING CITIES

TOP TRENDS IN INDONESIA

ASEAN INTEGRATION

ENTREPRENEURIALISM

NEW TOURISM MARKETS

INFORMAL SECTOR TRANSFORMATION

RISING CONSUMPTION

SOCIETY & TECHNOLOGY

ECONOMY

CHANGING LIFESTYLES

Page 3: Top Trends in Indonesia

DIGITALIZATION

SOCIAL MEDIA EXPANSION

UPRISING CITIES

FUTURE TIMELINE

SOCIETY & TECHNOLOGY

TOP TRENDS IN INDONESIA

CHANGING LIFESTYLES

Page 4: Top Trends in Indonesia

Sources: Hot Chocolate & Mint 2014, CNN 2012, Eat and Treats 2014, Cyclonesia, Antara News, TechinAsia 2012

CHANGING LIFESTYLES

Page 5: Top Trends in Indonesia

INDONESIA’S POPULATION IS ONE OF THE YOUNGEST IN THE WORLD: ABOUT HALF OF THE POPULATION IS UNDER THE AGE OF 30 AND 29% OF THE TOTAL

POPULATION IS UNDER 15 YEARS OLD

THE OUTLOOK ON LIFE OF YOUNG INDONESIANS THAT GREW UP UNDER DEMOCRACY, POST-SUHARTO, POST-ASIA FINANCIAL CRISIS WITH THE OMNIPRESENCE OF DIGITAL DEVICES AND THE INTERNET IS VERY DIFFERENT TO OLDER GENERATIONS: THE YOUNG ARE OPTIMISTIC ABOUT THEIR FUTURE, EXPRESS THEIR OPINIONS AND IDEAS FREELY (E.G. ON BLOGS, SOCIAL NETWORKS), EMBRACE A GLOBAL INTERCONNECTED WORLDVIEW, ARE CONCERNED ABOUT ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES, ARE ENTREPRENEURIAL AND TECHNOLOGY-DEPENDENT

THE NEW „TYPICAL“ YOUNG INDONESIAN IS A COLLECTIVIST, IS SOMEWHAT GEEKY, POSTS FREQUENTLY ON HIS FASHION OR FOOD

BLOG, RIDES A BIKE, IS VERY CREATIVE, TWITTERS SEVERAL TIMES A DAY, IS A CITY DWELLER, SPENTS LESS TIME WITH HIS/HER FAMILY AND MORE

TIME WITH TECHNOLOGICAL DEVICES, AND WATCHES LESS TV AND MARRIES LATER IN LIFE THAN HIS/HER PARENTS

Sources: ABC 2012, World Bank 2013, Goethe Institut 2010, McKinsey 2012a, Jakarta Globe 2012, Youth Lab n/s

CHANGING LIFESTYLES

Page 6: Top Trends in Indonesia

DIGITALIZATION

Page 7: Top Trends in Indonesia

INTERNET USERS WILL GROW FROM 72.7m IN 2013 TO

102.8m IN 2016 - FROM 29% OF THE POPULATION TO 39.8%

THE SHARE OF POPULATION USING A SMARTPHONE

WILL JUMP FROM 4.8% IN 2011 TO 33.8% IN 2017

INDONESIA’S E-COMMERCE MARKET IS ONE OF THE FASTEST GROWING MARKETS IN

THE WORLD, EXPECTED TO GROW FROM US$4bn IN 2012 TO US$25bn IN

2016, WHEN THE NUMBER OF ONLINE SHOPPERS WILL HIT 49m

THE INDONESIAN IT MARKET IS SET TO GROW AT AN ANNUAL

GROWTH RATE OF 18% OVER 2012-2016, REACHING A TOTAL

MARKET VALUE OF US$11.5bn, IN LARGE DUE TO INCREASED

COMPUTER HARDWARE SPENDING - ABOUT US$8.5bn IN 2016

Sources: eMarketer 2013a, eMarketer 2013b, Research and Markets 2012

DIGITALIZATION

Page 8: Top Trends in Indonesia

Growth of Smartphone users in Indonesia

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

103,6

89,8

74,8

61,2

41,6

26,3

11,7

Smartphone users (million)

Phone type as share of all mobile phones

2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

45 %50 %55 %67 %74 %

52 %46 %40 %28 %20 %

3 %4 %5 %5 %6 %

Basic phones Smartphones Feature phones

OVER THE NEXT FEW YEARS, THE SHARE OF SMARTPHONES WILL CONSTANTLY INCREASE WHILE THE NUMBER OF FEATURE PHONES IN USE ARE EXPECTED TO DECLINE SHARPLY. THIS IS DRIVEN BY CHEAP SMARTPHONES FROM CHINA, GROWING PER CAPITA INCOMES IN INDONESIA AND BY A WORLDWIDE SWITCH FROM CONVENTIONAL PHONES TO SMARTPHONES

Sources: eMarketer 2013b, Redwing Asia 2012a

DIGITALIZATION

Page 9: Top Trends in Indonesia

Internet user growth between 2009-2012 by age group

0 %

100 %

200 %

300 %

15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-50 Total

104 %

167 %

300 %

238 %

125 %

86 %

40 %

INTERNET PENETRATION IS HIGHEST AMONG 15-24 YEARS OLD CITY DWELLERS WITH A UNIVERSITY DEGREE BUT IS INCREASINGLY EXPANDING TO OLDER AGE COHORTS. AS OLDER AGE GROUPS HAVE MORE SPENDING POWER, THIS LEADS TO AN IMMENSE BOOST FOR E-COMMERCE

Sources: Redwing Asia 2012b, Bayu Syerli Rachmat 2013

DIGITALIZATION

Page 10: Top Trends in Indonesia

SOCIAL MEDIA EXPANSION

Page 11: Top Trends in Indonesia

JAKARTA IS TWITTER CAPITAL OF THE WORLD: 2.4% OF ALL GLOBAL TWEETS COME FROM JAKARTA

[BANDUNG RANKS 6TH]

WITH ABOUT 64m ACTIVE FACEBOOK USERS, INDONESIA RANKS

AMONG THE TOP 5 LARGEST FACEBOOK MARKETS, IS ADDITIONALLY THE 5TH LARGEST MARKET FOR TWITTER AND THE 12TH FOR LINKEDIN

E-MAIL IS OUT: 70% OF INDONESIAN INTERNET USERS SEND PRIVATE MESSAGES VIA

SOCIAL NETWORKS IN CONTRAST TO 51% SENDING THEM VIA E-MAIL

ON OVER 5m BLOGS, INDONESIANS DISCUSS POLITICS, FOOD CULTURE, LIFESTYLE, FASHION TRENDS AND MORE

[blogspot.com, blogger.com and wordpress.com are all among the top 10 of most visited websites]

Sources: Semiocast 2012, Jakarta Post 2013, Redwing Asia 2012c, We are Social 2011

SOCIAL MEDIA EXPANSION

Page 12: Top Trends in Indonesia

Sources: statista 2014a, We are Social 2011, TechinAsia 2014

Number of social network users in Indonesia from 2011 to 2017 (in million)

0

27,5

55

82,5

110

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

109,999,7

89,379,3

67,2

52,2

34,4

Facebook demographics in Indonesia

2 %2 %

6 %

21 %

41 %

28 %

13-17 18.24 25-3435-44 45-54 55+

IN THE LIGHT OF THE 2014 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS, INDONESIAN NETIZENS SEEM TO BECOME INCREASINGLY POLITICAL AS NEW APPS, BLOGS AND WEBSITES LIKE APSI WATCH OR AYO VOTE EMERGE INTO THE DIGITAL SPHERE

SOCIAL MEDIA EXPANSION

Page 13: Top Trends in Indonesia

Source: statista 2012b

Online activities of mobile internet users in urban Indonesia

Access social networking sites

Instand messaging

Look up content or search for information

Access e-mail

Download free applications

Send photos taken with camera phone to family/friends

Download ringtones

Download or view personal photos

Play or stream online music

0 0,2 0,4 0,6 0,8

21 %

22 %

22 %

25 %

30 %

37 %

42 %

45 %

76 %

SOCIAL MEDIA EXPANSION

Page 14: Top Trends in Indonesia

UPRISING CITIES

Page 15: Top Trends in Indonesia

JAKARTA GROWS, BUT OTHER CITIES TOO: JAKARTA ANNUAL GROWTH RATE SINCE 2002: 5.8%

MEDAN, BANDUNG, SURABAYA: 6.7 - 7%

JAKARTA COULD BECOME A MEGACITY BY 2030

WITH 12.7m INHABITANTS

JAKARTA’S SHARE OF GDP IS EXPECTED TO REMAIN AT 22%, WHILE THE SHARE OF OTHER LARGE AND MID-SIZE CITIES [2-10 mio] IS SET TO

INCREASE FROM 17% TODAY TO 27% IN 2030

32m PEOPLE WILL MOVE FROM RURAL TO URBAN AREAS UNTIL 2030 -

THE URBANIZATION RATE WILL THEN BE AT 71%, UP FROM 53% TODAY

Source: McKinsey 2012b

UPRISING CITIES

Page 16: Top Trends in Indonesia

Source: McKinsey 2012b

Pekanbaru

Pontianak

Balikpapan

Medan

Surabaya

Bandung

Jakarta

0 % 2,5 % 5 % 7,5 % 10 %

5,8 %

6,7 %

7 %

7 %

9 %

9,5 %

9,8 %

ANNUAL AVERAGE GDP GROWTH RATE OF CITY GROUPS IN INDONESIA (ex. JAKARTA): !LARGE CITIES [5-10 mio]: 9.1% MIDSIZE CITIES [2-5 mio]: 6.9%

SMALL CITIES [150.000 to 2 mio]: 6.3%

UPRISING CITIES

Page 17: Top Trends in Indonesia

2020 2025 2030

103m INTERNET USERSor 40% of the population

US$25bn: Value of E-COMMERCE MARKET

33.8% of the population is using a SMARTPHONE

4G LTE becomes available in URBAN AREAS

110m SOCIAL NETWORK USERS Jakarta becomes MEGACITY [12.7m inhabitants]

71% URBANIZATION rate

67.5% URBANIZATION rate

Population with WORKING AGE: 70% of total

Population GREATER JAKARTA: 35m

SOCIETY & TECHNOLOGY

Page 18: Top Trends in Indonesia

RISING CONSUMPTION

ENTREPRENEURIALISM

NEW TOURISM MARKETS

INFORMAL SECTOR TRANSFORMATION

FUTURE TIMELINE

ECONOMY

TOP TRENDS IN INDONESIA

ASEAN INTEGRATION

Page 19: Top Trends in Indonesia

RISING CONSUMPTION

Page 20: Top Trends in Indonesia

INDONESIAN HOUSEHOLDS SPENDING MORE THAN IDR2,000,000 PER MONTH WILL INCREASE FROM

74m IN 2012 TO 141m IN 2020

Sources: Boston Consulting Group 2013, McKinsey 2012b, International Enterprise Singapore 2013, Knight Frank 2013

THE INDONESIAN CONSUMING CLASS - THOSE WITH AN ANNUAL NET INCOME OF ABOVE US$3,600 - WILL

GROW FROM 45m TODAY TO 135m IN 2030

CONSUMER SPENDING IS PROJECTED TO GROW BY 7.7% ANNUALLY FROM 2010-2030 - INDONESIA’S CONSUMER SECTOR IS PROJECTED

TO BE WORTH US$1.1 trillion BY 2030

LUXURY PROPERTY PRICES IN 2012 JUMPED IN JAKARTA MORE THAN

ANYWHERE ELSE IN THE WORLD BY 38%,

THE ISLAND OF BALI IS SECOND WITH 20% GROWTH

RISING CONSUMPTION

Page 21: Top Trends in Indonesia

Source: McKinsey 2013

Annual consumer spending in Indonesia (CAGR, 2010-2030, in %)

Financial services

Leisure

Health care

Education

Personal items

Food and beverage

Apparel

Telecom

Transportation

Housing and utilities

0 % 2,2 % 4,4 % 6,6 % 8,8 % 11 %

4,5 %

4,6 %

4,7 %

5,0 %

5,2 %

5,3 %

6,0 %

6,2 %

7,5 %

10,5 %

RAPID URBANIZATION, RISING INCOME LEVELS, FAVORABLE DEMOGRAPHIC PATTERNS AND CHANGING LIFESTYLE TRENDS ARE JUST SOME OF THE FACTORS THAT ARE BOOSTING CONSUMER SPENDING IN INDONESIA

RISING CONSUMPTION

Page 22: Top Trends in Indonesia

Source: Boston Consulting Group 2013

Indonesian population divided into various income groups (2012-2020 in million)

Elite

Affluent

Upper middle

Middle

Emerging middle

Aspirant

Poor

017

,5 35 52,5 70

28,3

47,9

50,5

68,2

49,3

16,5

6,9

64,5

65,4

44,4

41,6

23,2

6,6

2,5

2012 2020

Monthly household expenditure* (IDR millions)

Elite 7.5 and more Emerging middle 1.5 - 2.0

Affluent 5.0 - 7.5 Aspirant 1.0 - 1.5

Upper middle 3.0 - 5.0 Poor less than 1.0

Middle 2.0 - 3.0

RISING CONSUMPTION

*Expenditures include regular household expenditures (food, utilities, transportation, communication, regular household supplies) and exclude discretionary spending

Page 23: Top Trends in Indonesia

ENTREPRENEURIALISM

Page 24: Top Trends in Indonesia

DIGITALIZATION, THE YOUNG POPULATION AND PROMISING ECONOMIC PROSPECTS ARE PROPELLING THE ENTREPRENEUR LANDSCAPE IN INDONESIA, MAKING IT A HOTBED FOR TECH AND CONSUMER START-UPS

Source: TheNextWeb 2013, BBC 2011

A BBC SURVEY OF MORE THAN 24,000 PEOPLE ACROSS 24 COUNTRIES CONCLUDED THAT INDONESIA IS THE BEST PLACE FOR ENTREPRENEURS

THE INCREASED FLOCKING IN OF INTERNATIONAL INVESTORS AND INCUBATORS, BETTER INFORMATION CHANNELS AND BUSINESS INFRASTRUCTURE FOR NEW ENTREPRENEURS

AND THE INDONESIAN ENTREPRENEURIAL AND COLLABORATIVE CULTURE INDICATE THE HUGE POTENTIALS THE COUNTRY HAS FOR ESTABLISHING A START-UP HUB

THE INDONESIAN STARTUP SCENE DEVELOPED RAPIDLY FROM A STARBUCKS MEETING OF 30 FOUNDERS IN 2010 TO REGULAR MEETINGS OF 200-300 ENTREPRENEURS (#StartupLokal), HIGH-CLASS CONFERENCES (Startup Asia Jakarta 2013), CO-WORKING SPACES (vOffice) AND MANY BLOGS AND INFORMAL GROUPS - ALL IN JUST 4 YEARS

ENTREPRENEURIALISM

Page 25: Top Trends in Indonesia

NEW TOURISM MARKETS

Page 26: Top Trends in Indonesia

IN 2011, BEACHFRONT LAND IN LOMBOK COST IDR1-2m PER 100m2,

TODAY IT COSTS MORE THAN IDR15m (US$1.600)

Sources: Euromonitor 2013, Property Magazine 2010, Property Report 2012, AirlineLeader 2013, Timetric 2013

WHILE THE RENOWNED TOURISM ISLAND OF BALI IS STILL SEEING PROMISING GROWTH RATES, NEW TOURISM MARKETS IN THE OVER 17.000 ISLANDS RICH ARCHIPELAGO ARE RISING, IN PARTICULAR ON THE ISLANDS EAST OF BALI. HERE, UNCROWDED BEACHES, VAST COASTLINES AND STILL COMPARABLY CHEAP LAND AND PROPERTY COSTS ARE BOOSTING DEVELOPMENT

THE INDONESIAN GOVERNMENT HAS IDENTIFIED 16 PRIORITY TOURIST DESTINATIONS TO BE DEVELOPED IN THE COMING YEARS. AMONG OTHERS: LAKE TOBA (Sumatra), PANGANDARAN (West-Java), LOMBOK AND THE RINJANI VOLCANO, PULAU WEH (Aceh), FLORES, DERAWAN ISLANDS (East Kalimantan), TORAJA (Sulawesi),…

INDONESIAN AIRLINES ARE INTRODUCING MORE AND MORE AIRLINE ROUTES: INDONESIA’S DOMESTIC AIRLINE MARKET IS EXPECTED TO GROW BY

20% ANNUALLY, REACHING 180m PASSENGERS IN 2021

NEW TOURISM MARKETS

Page 27: Top Trends in Indonesia

Sources: Mandalika Resoort, The Development Advisor 2014

AT THE SOUTHERN COAST OF LOMBOK, A 1,200 HECTAR BIG RESORT AREA IS BEING BUILT. OVER THE NEXT TWO YEARS, FIVE TOP-NOTCH INTERNATIONAL HOTELS WILL CONSTRUCT LUXURY RESORTS, THEME PARKS, A GOLF COURSE AND EXCLUSIVE VILLAS IN THE AREA, WHICH IS JUST 20 MINUTES AWAY FROM LOMBOK’S NEW INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT

NEW TOURISM MARKETS

Page 28: Top Trends in Indonesia

INFORMAL SECTOR TRANSFORMATION

Page 29: Top Trends in Indonesia

Sources: ILO n/s, International Markets Bureau 2012, SMERU Research Institute 2007, USDA Foreign Agriculture Service 2010, Euromonitor 2013

INDONESIA HAS A HUGE POTENTIAL FOR MODERN GROCERY RETAILERS SUCH AS SUPERMARKETS, HYPERMARKETS AND CONVENIENCE STORES, AS APPROX. 80% OF GROCERY SALES ARE STILL COMING FROM TRADITIONAL RETAILERS. SEVERAL STUDIES INDICATE THAT THIS IS ABOUT TO CHANGE OVER THE MEDIUM TERM.

THE SHARE OF TRADITIONAL OR INFORMAL MARKETS IS DECLINING DUE TO…

NEW INFRASTRUCTURE, STRONG GROWTH OF PACKAGED FOOD AND BEVERAGE SALES (92.2% FROM 2006 TO 2011), RISING INCOMES, CHANGING LIFESTYLES AND HUGE POTENTIALS IN UNSATURATED MARKETS SUCH AS NEW EMERGING CITIES AND REGIONS IN EAST INDONESIA

SALES FROM MODERN FOOD RETAILERS INCREASED FROM US$1.5bn IN

1999 TO OVER US$5.6bn IN 2009

INFORMAL SECTOR TRANSFORMATION

TODAY, 68% OF THE INDONESIAN POPULATION IS STILL EMPLOYED IN THE INFORMAL SECTOR

Page 30: Top Trends in Indonesia

Sources: ASEAN 2013, The Diplomat 2013, EastAsiaForum 2012, ATUC 2012, Deinla 2013 , ASEAN n/s

IN 2007, THE ASEAN COMMUNITY AGREED TO ESTABLISH AN ASEAN ECONOMIC COMMUNITY (AEC) BY THE YEAR 2015 TO TRANSFORM

ASEAN INTO A SINGLE MARKET WITH FREE MOVEMENT OF GOODS, SERVICES, INVESTMENT, SKILLED LABOUR, AND FREER FLOW OF CAPITAL

ASEAN INTEGRATION

ASEAN MEMBER STATES ARE CURRENTLY ALSO INTO NEGOTIATIONS WITH AUSTRALIA, CHINA, INDIA, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA AND NEW ZEALAND FOR WHAT WOULD BE THE WORLD’S LARGEST TRADING BLOC.

THE REGIONAL COMPREHENSIVE ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP (RCEP) IS SET TO START IN 2015 AND WILL INCLUDE 16 NATIONS, 3 BILLION PEOPLE WITH A COMBINED GDP OF US$17 TRILLION AND ACCOUNT FOR OVER 40 % OF WORLD TRADE

ASEAN’S GDP IS FORECAST TO GROW FROM US$2.3 TRILLION

IN 2012 TO US$10 TRILLION IN 2030 - WITH INDONESIA ACCOUNTING FOR 40% OF THE TOTAL

ASEAN INTEGRATION IS SLOWLY BUT STEADILY TAKING PLACE IN OTHER AREAS SUCH AS POLITICS (SEE AIPA) AND ENVIRONMENT (E.G. ASEAN

INITIATIVE ON PROMOTING ENVIRONMENTALLY SUSTAINABLE CITIES)

Page 31: Top Trends in Indonesia

ASEAN INTEGRATION

Page 32: Top Trends in Indonesia

ASEAN founded through the Bangkok Declaration by the five

founding member countries:

Malaysia, Philippines, Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand

First ASEAN SUMMIT in Bali

First ASEAN Parliamentary Meeting

(APM) in Jakarta

First ASEAN-EU Economic Community ministerial meeting in

Brussels

Brunei Darussalam joins ASEAN

ASEAN establishes the ASEAN Regional Forum

Vietnam joins ASEAN

Laos and Myanmar join ASEAN

First Meeting of ASEAN +3 (China, Japan, South Korea)

Cambodia joins ASEAN

First Meeting of ASEAN +6 (China, Japan, South Korea,

India, Australia and New Zealand)

ASEAN signs charter giving its 10 members a legal identity, a first step towards its aim towards a free trade

zone in 2015

Free Trade Agreement with Australia and New Zealand

signed

Negotiations start on Regional Comprehensive

Economic Partnership (RCEP)

Envisaged launch of ASEAN Economic Community

Inception of AIPO (ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Organization)

23rd ASEAN SUMMIT held in Brunei Darussalam

1967 1975 1976 1977 1978

1984199419951997

1999 2005 2007 2009

20132015

ASEAN INTEGRATION

Page 33: Top Trends in Indonesia

Sources: investvine 2013, Xinhuanet 2013

ASEAN IS MORE AND MORE BECOMING A MAJOR PLAYER

ON THE WORLD TRADING FIELD:

TRADE BETWEEN ASEAN AND CHINA JUMPED FROM JUST US$54.8bn in 2002 TO US$400.1bn IN 2012 AND IS FORECAST TO HIT US$500bn IN 2015 AND

US$1 TRILLION IN 2020

Bilateral trade between ASEAN and China in billion US$

0

250

500

750

1000

2002 2012 2015* 2020*

1.000

500400,1

54,8

ASEAN INTEGRATION

Page 34: Top Trends in Indonesia

2020 2025 2030

CONSUMING CLASS tops 135m people

HOUSEHOLDS spending >IDR2m in non-discretionary goods will rise to 141m

GDP per capita: $15,000

GDP per capita: $8,883 7th largest

ECONOMY in the World

CONSUMER SPENDING at $1.1 trillion/a

Indonesia enters TOP TEN ECONOMIES

ECONOMY

180m domestic AIRLINE PASSENGERS

BBC Survey: INDONESIA BEST PLACE FOR ENTREPRENEURS

Page 35: Top Trends in Indonesia

ABC 2012: Indonesian Gen Y ready for change. Available: http://ab.co/OyBbKw

AirlineLeader 2013: Indonesian growth skyrockets amidst a highly fragmented market. Available: http://bit.ly/1fnbIyu

AnataraNews 2012: Demo Jakarta. Available: http://bit.ly/1cjU5db

ASEAN 2013: ASEAN Economic Community Factbook. Available: http://bit.ly/Nrqecx

ASEAN n/s: ASEAN Initiatives on Promoting Environmentally Sustainable Cities. Available: http://bit.ly/1mrrB7n

ATUC 2012: ASEANS rise as the next economic superpower. Available: http://bit.ly/1eawBLR

Bayu Syerli Rachmat 2013: Digital Marketing Landscape in Indonesia 2013. Available: http://bit.ly/1cHz53b

BBC 2011: Entrepreneurs face global challenges - Indonesia ‚top‘ for entrepreneurs. Available: http://bbc.in/1fNpsxi

Boston Consulting Group 2013: Indonesia’s rising middle-class and affluent consumers. Available: http://on.bcg.com/1dI9zLe

Chocolate & Mint 2014: Cheering Up. Available: http://bit.ly/1mw0Hvg

CNN 2012: Cell phone culture: How cultural differences affect mobile use. Available: http://bit.ly/1bJ3gJ6

Cyclonesia 2009: Night Riding and Roti Bakar. Available: http://bit.ly/1hlJoer

Deinla, Imelda 2013: Giving the ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Assembly a Voice in the ASEAN Community. Available: http://bit.ly/1hplPju

East Asia Forum 2012: Asia’s Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership. Available: http://bit.ly/1epxRX0

Eat and Treats 2014: Otterhound Jakarta. Available: http://bit.ly/1k7cHFd

eMarketer 2013a: In Indonesia, a New Digital Emerges. Available: http://bit.ly/NrqJTP

eMarketer 2013b: Smartphone Penetration Doubles in Indonesia. Available: http://bit.ly/NrqNmL

Euromonitor 2013: Travel and Tourism in Indonesia - Country Report. Available: http://bit.ly/1k3TZLp

Euromonitor 2013: Grocery Retailers in Indonesia. Available: http://bit.ly/1c1dXr0

Goethe Institut 2010: Values, Dreams, Ideas - Muslim Youth in Southeast Asia. Available: http://bit.ly/1dusqGG

ILO n/s: Informal economy in Indonesia Available: http://bit.ly/1cgbrHH

International Enterprise Singapore 2013: Indonesia’s Consumer Sector: Tapping the Consumer Dollar in Food and Retail. IE Insights Vol. 13. Available: http://bit.ly/1bF9UAa

investvine 2013: China-ASEAN trade forecast to hit $500b by 2015. Availabe: http://bit.ly/1fnctrn

International Markets Bureau 2012: Modern grocery retailing in major ASEAN markets. Available: http://bit.ly/1hhpqS4

Jakarta Globe 2012: Raising Legal Marriage Age to 21 in Indonesia will address Social Woes: BKKBN. Available: http://bit.ly/1fQIIKs

Jakarta Post 2013: Facebook has 64m active Indonesian users. Available: http://bit.ly/MoisPK

Knight Frank 2013: The Wealth Report 2013. Available: http://bit.ly/18CUwT6

Mandalika Resort n/s: Mandalika Resort Map. Available: http://bit.ly/1bFbdPi

McKinsey 2012a: The new Indonesian consumer. Available: http://bit.ly/1cLIHdt

McKinsey 2012b: The archipelago economy: Unleashing Indonesia’s potential. Available: http://bit.ly/1a9V8yJ

McKinsey 2013: Understanding the diversity of Indonesia’s consumers. Available: http://bit.ly/1eayb09

Property Magazine 2010: Lombok comes of age. October 2010. Available: http://bit.ly/MU2gGT

Property Report 2012: In depth: Lombok: Paradise found? Available: http://bit.ly/1fNqb1x

Redwing Asia 2012a: Indonesia’s Mobile-Driven Telecoms Market. Available: http://bit.ly/1cgcaZt

Redwing Asia 2012b: Which Segments Use the Internet in Indonesia? Available: http://bit.ly/MU2qhz

Redwing Asia 2012c: Indonesia’s Love Affair With Social Media. Available: http://bit.ly/1cgcdEA

Research and Markets 2012: Indonesia Information Technology Report Q1. Available: http://bit.ly/1eayAQr

Semiocast 2012: Geolocation analysis of twitter accounts and tweets. Available: http://bit.ly/1gEt2No

SOURCES

Page 36: Top Trends in Indonesia

SMERU Research Institute 2007: Impact of Supermarkets on Traditional Markets and Retailers in Indonesia’s Urban Centers. Available: http://bit.ly/1fxfeF2

statista 2014a: Number of Social Network Users in Indonesia. Available: http://bit.ly/1hhqhlA

statista 2014b: Online activities of mobile internet users in urban Indonesia. Available: http://bit.ly/1fhUDAb

TechinAsia 2014: Ayo Vote encourages Indonesia’s youngsters to cast their vote. Available: http://bit.ly/Otyny6

TechinAsia 2012: The Story and Future of Kaskus. Available: http://bit.ly/1etbZKk

The Development Advisor 2014: Lombok- Mandalika Resort Development. Available: http://bit.ly/1c1f0qJ

The Diplomat 2013: Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) issues and way forward. Available: http://bit.ly/1cgcF5V

The Next Web 2013: Chartered: 70 deals and exits from Indonesia’s fast-growing start-up scene. Available: http://tnw.co/1k5fOgQ

Timetric 2013: Indonesia Travel and Tourism Market 2017. Available: http://bit.ly/1c1f5Lb

USDA Foreign Agriculture Service 2010: GAIN Report - Indonesia Retail Food Sector. Available: http://1.usa.gov/1dp3yA8

We are Social 2011: Social, Digital and Mobile in Indonesia. Available: http://bit.ly/1epz3JH

World Bank 2013: World Development Indicators: Population dynamics. Available: http://bit.ly/1lj3VUT

Xinhuanet 2013: China, ASEAN aim to boost trade to 1tln USD by 2020. Available: http://bit.ly/1k3Wq0A

Youth Lab n/s: Youth Lab Indonesia - Presentation. Available: http://bit.ly/1c4G7RU !!!!!!!!!!!!!!

SOURCES

Page 37: Top Trends in Indonesia

TOP TRENDS IN INDONESIAT

[email protected]

…for additional information and/or inquiries, please contact…