Access All Areas September 2018 | Page 11

SEPTEMBER | THE COLUMNISTS Access’ regular columnists talk innovation, risks and ‘place-making’... Crafting brilliant B2B conversations Jonathan Emmins, founder, Amplify Our ECD, Jeavon Smith, has trawled Mobile World Congress, and came back with some conclusions. In a world of innovation, the core skill of crafting a product explanation is stagnating. Why? Too often we use novelties, like robotic arms and kinetic screens, to create publishable moments at the expense of product stories. So let’s remember the power of simplicity. Let’s put audiences at the heart and craft narratives that can be explored and shared on their own terms. At MWC, the show floor was saturated with messages and gimmicks, but the experience that resonated the most (a 60-second Sony product demo) had a simple idea: convey product capabilities in a real-world context that’s simply explained, easy to explore and has a clear reason to believe. And let’s make conversation great again. Expos are driven by the conversations and deals often struck behind closed doors. But is a meeting room - however much Scandi furniture therein - enough to catalyse great conversation? We should aim for less meeting room, more restaurant. Brilliant expo conversations will be reinstated only when we place the same level of care around the experience design of stands as we do with the UX of products. Top to bottom Josephine Burns, chair, Without Walls Trend watch Simeon Aldred, group creative director, Vibration Group The final episode in this season’s The Bottom Line was on festivals. The Radio 4 programme covers business from all angles, presented by (the excellent) Evan Davis. Three guests represented Bradford Literature Festival, the Bath Festivals, and the End of the Road. We learnt there‘s been a massive increase in festivals of all kinds, across every landscape, and there are complicated and varying business models, and high-risk factors, like weather, always loom. But audiences love festivals! There’s good evidence that it’s how people want to spend their money and time. The way festivals ‘cluster’, experiences – watching and listening along with, eating, drinking, participating, learning etc - offers a cocktail that stretches over time, place and generations. All 18 Without Walls festivals are committed to new work and mostly free access - both risky. The sector manages risk and knows it’s integral to our work. Towards the end, something struck me, and Evan - you must be mad to do this! Or, rather, possessed by a passionate commitment to artists and audiences, to weave magic through t