Which trend do you wish would die? That’s the question I posed to four speakers at Frontify’s Paradigms conference in Morocco a few weeks ago.

Answers varied wildly, and yes there was a mention of Comic Sans, but not in the way you might imagine…

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James Greenfield on stage at Paradigms 2025

James Greenfield (Image credit: Paradigms)

James Greenfield, founder of Koto, cited brands “letting social dictate how their brands exist”. He gave the example of UK brand Currys, which had a viral hit recently where its employees were using Gen Z language to talk about products. “It was a cool bit of content, but if you go into a Currys store, it’s an awful experience,” said James. “There’s absolutely no point in spending all that time and effort on social if people turn up at the store and it’s crap.”

Why are brands doing this? “People are too worried about what others are doing and copying,” James explained. “Everyone’s desperate for data. I get that. But that’s not brand building.” Brand building, he went on to say, is “almost impossible to measure”.

Bianca Berning on stage at Paradigms 2025 conference with a screen that says 'quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog'

Bianca Berning (Image credit: Paradigms)

When I asked Spotify’s staff typographer, Bianca Berning, what trend she wished would die, she pointed to a misconception that she’s heard going around at the moment, about one of the most controversial fonts around, Comic Sans.

The Blackpepper Studio, also argued that you can’t take one rule and apply it to everything. The trend he wanted to die was “neon greens that pop”. He explained that they can fit in some spaces and work for some brands, but they don’t work for everyone. “There’s also a lot of research that goes into what they’ve chosen,” he said, “and that’s not necessarily translated to your brand. It’s not just a case of copy paste.”

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The problem is, he says, when people think a trend works nicely for someone, so they think “let me put this in my work as well. Shiny doesn’t always mean better.”

Nkenna’s co-founder, Asmah Mansur-Williams, brought up “everyone using sans serifs… I think we need more characterful type.” But she caveated that “when it’s done right, it’s good”. It’s just when it’s not done right that’s the problem.

people on stage at a conference

Jonas Hegi (Image credit: Paradigms)

Rather than focusing on one specific trend, Jonas Hegi, co-founder and executive creative director of Builders Club, thinks we should look more closely at the things we don’t like.

“I think as a creator or someone who wants to be creative, it’s important to sometimes look further that what you like and get inspired by things you don’t like,” he said. And he suggests going one step further. “Try to understand why people like them.”

This is a particularly useful when you don’t like something everyone else loves. “I think understanding why something you don’t like is loved by millions is a really interesting exercise,” he said. “Like knowing your enemies… So I’m not genuinely against anything… Out of things I don’t like, I get inspiration to do something, maybe the absolute opposite.”

What trend do you wish would die? Let us know in the comments.

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