Thursday, 10 April 2014

How people are creating 'Memories to Cherish'.


It’s a great thing to live a long and happy life but it’s equally important to have great memories.

At Sensation Creative we help create and sustain business which in turn helps to provide employment, new roles, new opportunities – new dreams.

Those that know me or read these blogs will also know that I’m a great believer in the power of dreams. I believe we should all try to reach, not just for the stars, but beyond them and that we should help each other to get there together, regardless of ability, race or gender. After all, the role of business is to make the world a better place – and it’s up to business leaders to make this difference.

The Trewan Sans Children’s Trust (TSC Trust) is a small charity that I have supported with small donations in the past and continue to do so with Sensation Creative. The UK based charity helps to create ‘memories to cherish’ – they help make dreams come true. This is right in line with my way of thinking and I try to replicate through Sensation Creative both by supporting charities like TSC Trust and in our work.

The people that created TSC Trust are inspired:

“Our inspiration to form the charity came when the son of personal friends developed a terminal illness; he was given only months to live so both his parents gave up work to spend precious time with him. Their dream was to have one last holiday together and their wish was to go to Florida. We got involved in fundraising for them and decided to do a sponsored cycle ride Atlantic to the Mediterranean across France. We cycled Bordeaux to Narbonne on a tandem and with our help the family got their dream. We realised that many families with poorly children can’t afford holidays and this planted the idea, we decided that if we sent children on holiday in the UK we could help a lot more children and families.”

There are some people more fortunate than us and there are some less fortunate. If we have the chance to make a difference then I think we should – it’s a good thing. And as I said; the role of business is to make the world a better place.


Regardless of who we are, we only have limited time. Make a difference today and start helping to create “Memories to Cherish” for people – start with the ones that touch your heart and go from there.


Simon Bell
Director
Sensation Creative


Friday, 14 March 2014

4D is the real deal.


Cinemas are always fighting piracy. They do a great job with sight and sound but this can be replicated well enough at home. This is especially true now screens are getting ever bigger and better with sound to match.


It's time to get the 4D experience really going in cinemas.

If you aren't aware of 4D films, they address the senses of smell of touch.

3D is seen to increase user experience (and a sort of quick fix for piracy) but 4D is the real deal. The sensual power of smell alone is immense and it’s a fact that different scents can shape our emotions.

Using air flow technology, scents and temperature can be quickly changed to suit different scenes. Placing this is cinemas creates a new world of sensory emotions for consumers to experience adding greater meaning and value to the movie. This is 4D at it’s best.

Imagine a supernatural style film where the temperature drops and you suddenly feel a cold chill in the air or a warm beach scene where you can smell the sea air. How about a car chase with the smell of burning rubber – wind flowing through your hair (the moment the window is turned down!) - fantastic! Not to mention traditional romantic scenes in a restaurant with the smell of food or wine as the glass sits purposely under the nose.

What do different cities, even planets smell like? Are they hot or cold? What does it smell like on the bridge of the USS Enterprise in Star Trek? What does Angelina Jolie's perfume or Brand Pitts' aftershave smell like as the character they are playing in the scene of that movie?

The list is endless.

And it’s personal: Imagine being able to fragrance your home or car with your favourite smell from your favourite movie. I know people who would want there car to smell like Star Trek’s Enterprise! 

The licencing and copyright options for different smells are massive. Alone, they would have huge commercial value for brands.

You get the picture.

Intertwine airflow with scents and temperature with sight and sound and it helps deliver experiences that add an extra dimension of mystery, sensuality and intimacy to everything. This leaves one sense left untouched but I think the enjoyment of cola and popcorn could well fill this gap – it’s the movies after all!

By working together, movie companies and cinemas could introduce this technology to the mainstream quite rapidly. This would create a new world of experience for the cinema goer in the most dramatic way, giving new life and adding huge value to a industry that needs to find a new ways of interacting with the everyday consumer. 

The thought of being able to work in new dimensions must be hugely appealing to film directors too.

If the film industry is serious about delivering an unforgettable experience for consumers that far exceeds where where things currently sit today (and create new premiums), they really need to look no further than getting the 4D up to a commercially viable level quickly and adding to our sensual experience.

The technology is available but are the business people ready to deliver for the consumer at a commercial level yet?

The consumer is in charge. When he or she demands, business inevitably supplies. Is the consumer ready to experience this? I think so but for now we’ll have to wait and see. 

Personally I think 4D is very exciting and I’m really looking forward to seeing the impact it has sooner rather than later for everyone.


Simon Bell
Director, Sensation Creative Limited.
www.SensationCreative.com

Tuesday, 11 February 2014

A couple of ideas from Saatchi & Saatchi worldwide CEO Kevin Roberts.


I was at Saatchi & Saatchi London yesterday listening to a masterclass from their worldwide CEO Kevin Roberts. This is the man responsible for reviving Saatchi & Saatchi as a global company which employs over 6000 creative people. He also created Lovemarks which Saatchi & Saatchi call their ‘billion dollar idea’. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg.


I've studied Kevin’s work intensively for a few years now and I have learned a great deal. Here are three points that bought new focus to key areas from yesterday’s speech which I have elaborated on in my own words.

REVELATION not insight. Insights are past tense, they’re old news. In the age of now we need to inspire movements not tell people what they already know – that’s boring. Empathy is key so dig deeper and visualise what it’s like to be in the consumers shoes. From here you’ll be able to gain a better understanding of where the future points.

LOVES not likes. Liking something isn't the same as loving something – your time could be better spent elsewhere. As Kevin Roberts reminds us - ‘You don’t marry someone you like, you marry someone you love’. Here’s a brand example: You decide to make a new phone purchase. You might like a Nokia phone – they’re okay, but you LOVE the iPhone! Which one do you want to take home – the one you like or the one you love?

STORY SHARERS not story tellers. Create and provide stories that inspire people in to action. Don’t try to force them in to taking part in something they don’t want to – this will lose you respect in the long run (and even short). No respect – no love, bad news for brands and people. Always inspire – if you can’t do this yet start finding ways in which you can.

Remember, no one wants to be branded as a consumer. Of course we’re all consumers but we want more, we all want to feel special – like we’re getting something that’s tailored just for us. It reminds us that we’re human, that we’re loved and not just cash machines for brands (which I'm sure some fools like to think). Doing this helps to create loyalty not for a reason, but loyalty beyond reason where you’ll win in the hearts and minds of the consumer, AKA real people that love lots of things.


Be the one to reveal stuff that people love. In turn they’ll share your stories and you’ll be a success in ‘the age of now’.

www.SensationCreative.com

Special thanks to the kind Editor of Lovemarks Sarah Tan who made it possible for me to attend the event.

Thursday, 16 January 2014

Brand communication for 2014.

It’s the start of a new year and everyone’s sharing creative ideas around the globe. Here are some of the biggest findings plus a few ideas on how to go about working with them.

Authenticity in globalisation. To start with we need to infuse authenticity into the globalisation effect we are experiencing if we are to fulfill engagement potential with consumers who are clearly stimulated by both areas.

As creative people, we will be providing major focus on this to bring tangible qualities to the digital age.

Increasingly mindful of life style and substance, authenticity will become increasingly sought after by people in all walks of life as they seek to create their own strategies and ideas to deal with circumstances. Mixing traditional values with new thinking and consideration on a global level is a hot topic - ask any religious leaders.


Instant gratification isn't as effective anymore. Brands need to develop means of pre-gratification. I see this as a way to incorporate a more authentic and humanistic approach to overall brand communication and strategy rather than something to hit on in the short term.

At the heart of everything for me is love – it always will be. We're humans, not robots.

However, as markets become more aware of this and so more immune to this style of approach. Brands will need to convince the consumer of their empathy if they want to create and maintain meaningful connections that enable a continuous dialog of engagement.

Celebrating imperfections. Perfectly imperfect will prove to be bigger than ever this year. This creates a more authentic feel to brands and brings the type of tangible qualities needed for business, especially online, to thrive in the digital age. Check out our work for Stilton Butchers over the past few years to see this in effect. Our work has helped to create back to back record years for the company in several areas including the bottom line.

Two second communication; the world in pictures. I’m sure you don’t need to me to point out the we are communicating more than ever with pictures. A high level of creativity and understanding of this quick and direct form of communication is key. Consumers get things much faster using this strategy but be careful; they will dislike as quickly as like.

To summarise: Applying harmony and authenticity to creativity that is skilfully integrated in to our complex, globalised environment will help to provide the nourishment we crave as humans.

Brands that do this will win in 2014 - and way beyond.


Simon Bell.
Director at Sensation Creative.
www.SensationCreative.com

Tuesday, 7 January 2014

Screenager Love


Mobile, Mini Tablet, Tablet, Laptop, Desktop, TV, The Big Screen.
Welcome to the 'Screen Age' where we are all ‘screenagers’, virtually immune to distraction away from our interest onscreen.

In this world, advertising for business has become all but a brand awareness exercise for many. Ads fail to connect, people are disengaged and harder to reach. Anyone that tells you anything different is not speaking the truth.

Consider how many ads you were subject to yesterday. Depending on your environment it could be 100, 200, 300 even more.

Now ask yourself this: How many adverts do you remember from yesterday?
Think of just three.

Struggling? Have you become immune to most types of advertising - have you switched off? You're not alone.

Now think about your adverts wherever they may appear, online in print it doesn't matter. 

Take Facebook as an example. You might have 10 thousand, 50 thousand or 100 thousand likes on your page but what is the real engagement with your brand’s adverts in a business sense - to actually make money - be honest with yourself, this is where the journey begins.

The fact is money to the tune of billions each year is wasted on ads that fail to engage with their own potential let alone potential with the consumer mainly because business assumes that it's safe in the middle.

Brands that seek to address the issue of real engagement, not statistics that point out the quantity of traffic or where it's pushed from, will find value in creating truly meaningful connections with consumers. These are the brands that will create the highest revenue both now and in the future.

There is a real need to move beyond, 'Oh that's the new ad for X,Y or Z' to 'Wow, I need this in my life!' Brands need to create a movement.

Businesses that want to understand this will find loyalty and even love for their brands that goes beyond price point, beyond attribute, beyond reason. And this is the most powerful position for any brand. This change will not come from the safety of the middle where everything is average – it will come from the edge where all great ideas come from, just like natural evolution.

This is part of the future beyond brands.

It will takes guts, a leap of faith, call it what you will, but it will work and will get your brand in a better position in the heart and mind of the consumer than it currently occupies today. If you have kept up with Sensation Creative you will know our client’s are proof of this.

In 2014, stop being a slave of the ordinary. Start creating meaningful consumer-brand connections and start experiencing some screenage love for your brand in the era of now. 

www.SensationCreative.com


Monday, 16 December 2013

A Case Story: Stilton Butchers - Christmas Past, Present & Future



Case Story: The Special Editions
#1 Stilton Butchers, Christmas Past, Present and...

Christmas 2013 marks the third Christmas that Stilton Butchers have been a client of Sensation Creative. So what has happened in that time and how has our work helped?

We take a look at Christmas Past, Present and...

Our work began in September 2011. We took on an award winning business with the simple task of “making it even better”. 

Since this time we have completely re-branded the company which has included; creating the new logo, re-designed the website to provide a more welcoming feeling, created vehicle graphics and designed online social media content, in addition to originating very successful advertising campaigns across printed and digital media.



 The website prior to Sensation Creative (Left) and (Right) after.


During the period 2012 to 2013 despite the uncertain economic climate and massive supermarket competition our work helped to double the company's turnover.

Our 2012 Christmas advertising campaign which featured the poem entitled 'At Christmas Time' proved to be Stilton Butchers' most successful to date adding to the company's increasingly growing and loyal customers base.

Then this year after an incredibly summer,  in late November 2013, Stilton Butchers recorded there busiest, day-month-year since the online side of the business was set up 5 years ago. 



Stilton Butchers' new fleet livery is clean, adaptable and features
a simple, clever play on words 'Let's meat online'.

Stilton Butchers has become one of the iconic butcher brands which is respected and loved through out the UK by its customers. Many of these customers can often be found on the social networking site discussing their purchases and also sharing images of what they have achieved with the produce and their culinary skills!

This evidence supports the ultimate position for any brand: super evolving beyond trust to find love where it can really flourish and generate a type of loyalty that goes beyond rational thoughts and reason. 

Business seeks to grow and become more profitable. To our way of thinking this is achieved by creating more respect which hopefully leads to the ultimate for any brand; consumer love. This is the true measure of becoming ‘better’.

Understanding this and making it happen; this is the Sensation effect.


So that's Christmas past and present. And as for the future, well that’s still to be decided but it's looking pretty good...



If you like the sound of this case story and would like to see more of our favourite projects just like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter.

www.SensationCreative.com



Thursday, 5 December 2013

And then there's Google+


You can Google just about everything you want to find out in terms of research. You can blog from Blogger, a Google product, have a Gmail account. There's more - Google this, Google that.

And then there's Google+.

You know about it but how many people really use it. I've looked over this a few times and like many just can't get to grips with it. Technically it's brilliant and offers so much choice and integration and maybe that's the problem. Google deals with data and they're brilliant at dealing with it.

Big data helps them provide the brilliant search engine that we all love. The thing that makes the Google search engine so good and so attractive is the fact that it provides quick and easy access to just about everything you could ever want to know and more besides that you probably didn't. This is presented in a brilliantly simple way: A white screen with a Google logo and a search box.

More information than you can learn in one lifetime made irresistibly attractive by simplicity of interaction that the Google search page offers.

Surely Google should look at who, not what, they are designing Google+ for. Humans aren't programs that can be set up to harvest huge amounts of data in one go - this is stressful. Naturally we want to read between the lines and get to the point - we're curious, irrational beings after all. 

For most, great functional design for humans is the simplest way to fix a complex problem so to my mind Google+ could do with a massive simplify button. Get rid of everything that's in the way of close human interaction. Maybe this will help by letting people engage with each other a little easier online.

That was the original idea right?

www.SensationCreative.com