VR & AR headsets need a shakeup in design. The answer could be by joining forces with makeup brands.
Amanda Johnstone
Founding CEO @ Transhuman. TIME Next Gen Leader. LinkedIn Top Voice in AI. International Keynote Speaker
I had some very interesting perspectives from a conversation that I had the other day with Ira Rothken , Justin Fredericks and LUIS M FERNANDEZ on virtual reality headsets. We were speaking about why VR and AR headsets can be quite difficult to use, and what the barriers to success are.
They are expensive, they're clunky, they're big, but we know that they're going to get cheaper and better over time.
Now, Ira, Justin and Luis, they're the kind of people that we learn from, and the people who fund the future of technology. We spoke about how brands like Snap Inc. and Oculus VR and Ray-Ban AR glasses, the types of made for types of models. We spoke about the different industries that are going to benefit from VR and AR headsets including health, gaming warfare, education, and of course, social interactions in the metaverse
One thing that really surprised me, is that I had a really, unique opinion.
I’ll be using US based statistics as an example. According to statistics based on United Nations data and the Siemens national data consumer survey over 106million women in the United States alone use foundation or concealer makeup.
Make up and VR hardware? Stay with me - I'm going somewhere with this.
As a woman when I put on a VR headset, not only does it ruin my makeup, it feels really disgusting against my false eyelashes. It wrecks havoc my mascara. Some of us, we've even painted on our eyebrows with an eyebrow putty and not to mention – those devices wreck my hair.
As you can see my picture above. I have fragile hair; it does damage and sometimes headsets pull it out (and my hair extensions when I have them in), and tugs on my earrings!
I'm actually not saying these things are problems at all. I’m completely the opposite. I'm being a bit of a protagonist here and I see this market ripe for disruption and this was a conversation I had with these three gentlemen.
领英推荐
When I think about brands I trust on my face, I look back at history and some of the age-old things I've been doing for the last two and a half decades. Now fellas, listen up because this might really interest you.
When I get ready in the morning. I put white eyeliner inside my waterline of my eyes inside my eyes, not on the outside. I don't know what chemicals are in them and you heard me right, I put chemicals inside of my eyes every day.
I've also used coloured contact lenses and, we all know the future of AR and VR could look like lenses that you put we put in eyes, which could also be cool.
Then of a morning, I add magnetic lashes by Ann McFarren and Glamnetic lashes. To my honest, I put magnets really close to my eyeballs, on my eyelashes. Then I add mascara glue and eyeshadow.
So, when I think at the brands that I trust that I might buy a retina device from for my eyes to view VR or AR experiences. I don't necessarily think about Snapchat or Oculus, I think about things that are being putting on my face for the two and a half decades and the brands that I already trust.
This got me thinking is Maybelline going to be the company that shouldn't be teaming up with Microsoft to release AR contact lenses? Does the future look like Meta (Formerly known as Facebook) would align with Ann McFerran the owner of GLAMNETIC and her female founded, proprietary magnetic eyelash extensions where the top and the bottom lashes project a hologram in front of my eyes.?
Is currently Kylie Jenner’s makeup company and her hundreds of millions of followers the key to AR adoption and VR adoption for women who love and trust her makeup??
I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Listen to the five minute thought leadership on Clubhouse here: https://www.clubhouse.com/room/Mwn0gLkb?utm_medium=ch_room_xrc&utm_campaign=Z4kBb9zzqtCIkqxkmTR-8g-316813