Exhibition News June 2019 | Page 58

Julian Agostini Leaders not followers Julian Agostini, MD of Mash Media, on having the foresight to stay ahead of the curve W “If something is at its most popular, by definition, it’s at the start of its own decline” 58 — June hen out in the car with my young nephew the other day, I asked him to put something in the glove compartment. He knew where that was in the car but then asked me why is it called that? Sounds like the clue’s in the title but, actually, it’s a fair question. Having explained its origins and the fact that driving gloves were still a legitimate if not regular present up to and including the 1970s (I might have even wrapped a pair for dad or an uncle and been quite satisfied with my gift, back in the day), I wondered if manufacturers of driving gloves had foreseen their demise. It’s a tricky business operating as a camp follower although, if you choose the right camp, simple solutions can be very rewarding…but for how long? The fact that every car was fitted with a glove compartment tells you what a good business driving gloves would have been at one point. Yet these have now become virtually obsolete and here’s a few others that may have reasonably thought they were set for generations to come but instead have fallen off a cliff: Manufacturers of postage stamps, cd holders and stackers (remember those stylised shaped ones that all trendies had in their houses for a while), video tape or head cleaners etc. We live in a world which seems to revolve around our mobile phones. You can do everything and anything on these devices. We’re told that our whole life is our phone – there are many camp followers that serve this market – but how long before the mobile phone, itself, becomes defunct? Not too long ago, a van driver was considered an irritating nobody, if not a carbuncle on the landscape of society; well, our road network, at least. Now, some are millionaires…seriously. The explosion of online shopping and companies like Amazon have created huge opportunities for the delivery van camp following community. You can see how many franchises are offered online, Amazon can’t recruit quickly enough and if you can grab a contract, then all you need is to recruit van drivers; you don’t even need to supply the vans. Run 100 at a time and you’re a millionaire. Sounds easy doesn’t it? Camp following can be a very sweet and lucrative business, but the problem is, you’re never in control and your business could drop off a cliff without you having a say. So where do exhibitions sit on this particular map? Are they camp followers or the very camp themselves? You could make an argument for both. Certainly, the most successful and long running exhibitions have to set themselves up as the camp, the innovators, helping to create and shape the industry it serves. That requires a foresight to stay ahead of the curve, making sure you are always a step ahead, which in turn will require some brave and maybe irrational decisions. Sound familiar? If something is at its most popular, by definition, it’s at the start of its own decline. Depressing in a way but that’s the challenge that faces all organisers. Keeping it fresh and not allowing success to become stale; the timing of change is tricky but those that keep re-inventing themselves will always keep their followers. I’m currently in the midst of that quandary right now. The EN Awards was much acclaimed this year, so I’ve said to change it but I’m meeting resistance…equally this column has more following and feedback than ever and that’s why I’m signing off. I will re-appear in a different guise in the not too distant future, a la Ziggy Stardust (in my dreams) but for now, thanks for reading.