Access All Areas July/August 2018 | Page 11

JULY/AUGUST | THE COLUMNISTS Access’ regular columnists talk mega brands, historic venues and learning from retail... FANG-tastic Jonathan Emmins, founder, Amplify Eccentric events Josephine Burns, chair, Without Walls The tech-first marketplace Simeon Aldred, group creative director, Vibration Group There’s a new acronym doing the rounds: FANG brands. For the uninitiated, that’s Facebook, Amazon, Netfl ix and Google; a.k.a today’s mega brands. They exist purely in the digital world, but, with the experience economy driving a critical need for physical presence, how can these intangible brands be made more tangible? Defi ne your architectural direction. From design that ‘holds’ the audience and creates a sense of community, through to playgrounds and landscapes that invite individual exploration; architectural language and materials have a fundamental role in evoking key brand characteristics and sentiment. Ensure your style has substance. Detailing and styling that creates a movement towards behaving like a lifestyle brand can soften and humanise brand interaction. Although beautiful, aspirational Scandi-living has become a familiar go-to for tech brands and now runs the risk of becoming experiential wallpaper. Instead, create spaces that overtly trigger audiences’ emotional responses and let them project their own memories. Shape the narrative. Experience design weaves a narrative out of the environment to craft a truly engaging story. beyond the space. More at accessaa.co.uk Much of our work is urban, but there is a new and growing demand in out-of-town spaces - the focus here on parklands and landscape gardens, the great eighteenth century English vision that melded art and nature. There are around 3,000 of these attached to country houses, castles, palaces, and stately homes across the UK. Many run activities to generate income from golf courses, weddings, and of course festivals. These sites often have a strong local identity and wider appeal where celebration – mirth and madness in the forest - is a quintessential English trope: think A Midsummer’s Night Dream or Robin Hood. Festivals and events help balance the books but our sector’s contribution lies in how our artists make magical these spaces – illuminating their specialness, melding the work into the particularity of the landscape or simply being crazy in the woods! Rode Hall Estate, the site of Just So Festival and Portmeirion, Wales (Festival N°6) are striking examples of just how well this works. Heritage properties are eager to increase their profi le. Without Walls is looking to grow strategic partnerships, using outdoor arts to draw upon their geographies, their histories, and their people to share their incredible stories. One of Vibration Group’s founding brands is Xcite, an events agency specialising in the design and delivery of retail events. Retail is a challenging marketplace now more than ever, and we couldn’t have predicted the way the market would shift so fundamentally so quickly. This shift is no secret - the high street is shrinking, large retailers are closing stores and growing online, and shopping has moved on. Our challenge is to stay relevant and deliver innovative campaigns for bricks and mortar destinations. The key is owning and accepting the changes, and making sure we’re leading the charge with new ways to engage shopping centre audiences, who as consumers are exposed to a world of choices and experiences more sophisticated than ever before. The twice yearly ‘build it, they will come’ fashion shows that we delivered when we set up Xcite 15 years ago have had to become part of a much more tactical annual events strategy. We have to move swiftly, identify micro-trends and design and deliver events that can be activated in-centre, online, and on social media. Creating offl ine activations that form part of a fully formed campaign that exists online too, is the only way to swim rather than sink in a digital ocean. 11