We’re all for modernizing the funeral business around the O-Bits niche, but we’re skeptical about the “innovations” Ian Strang of Beyond outlines at Forbes. He’s determined to disrupt the industry, creating what he calls “a consumer brand for death.” Fresh of his success introducing fee-charging ATMs to the United Kingdom (how he missed out on the Nobel Prize for that, we don’t know), he’s looking to apply what he learned to the world of death. Among his ideas: contacting people who have recently attended funerals with funeral business emails. “The people who attend a funeral,” he says, “start thinking about their own mortality.” Because nothing makes event more dignified and caring than the knowledge that signing the guestbook is just like clicking “yes” on the “terms and conditions” page when you install new software. What’s next? A meter next to every grave charging mourners by the minute?
Why are millennial entrepreneurs looking at the funeral business? This report from Grand View Research gives you an idea. The worldwide mortuary equipment market is expected to reach nearly one-and-a-quarter billion dollars by 2025.
How does this work out for the consumer? If you said “not good,” you’re right! The average cost of a funeral in the United States is nearly $10,000.
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