Creating rich, immersive and scalable experiences is the biggest opportunity in marketing today, and “experience artists” are going to play a large, rich role in marketing going forward.

The evolution of a thought is a funny thing. I’ve long obsessed over the idea of context, inspired and shaped by Umair Haque’s line of thinking about user generated context, markets, networks and communities and many of his other principles.

Later, I picked up the idea of culturematics from Grant McCracken, a concept I’ve applied in thinking about communities, the power of “doing cool (meaningful) stuff”", and creating relevant, shareable events and experiences as participatory “marketing” campaigns.

About “doing cool (meaningful) stuff”:

“Cool stuff” grows only if it resonates, if it’s meaningful, if people care. “Cool stuff” are the small-scale, human examples of the power of focusing on creating rather than capturing, of focusing on product instead of marketing. Demonstrations of the power of living a life too cool to ignore.

“Doing cool (meaningful) stuff” is powerful because it’s the foundation behind turning relevant, shareable events and experiences into participatory “marketing” campaigns:

I believe there is a huge opportunity for people to follow their passion and evil plans to create relatable experiences and culturematics as “marketing campaigns.” Because these experiences are inherently human, they can invade niches and propagate through communities cheaper, better and faster than traditional marketing efforts.

… What are the keys? Passion, meaningfully directed. Transparency. Authority. A unique point of view. An ability to connect discrete actions to a meaningful cause. Resonance with a community. An obvious, transparent business model that “fits” the product, service, experience and community.

In my recent post, “Instead of focusing on the image, focus on everything around the image”, I applied the continuation of these thoughts to the photography industry.

But it’s a concept that applies to all forms of marketing.

Creating rich, immersive and scalable experiences is the biggest opportunity in marketing today, and “experience artists” are going to play a large, rich role in marketing going forward.

Why? To repeat (and add to) my recent post,

  • Content is far easier to copy than context.
  • Content is cheap to create and distribute, but context is (still) expensive.
  • Content creation is an evolutionary process. The evolution builds valuable, immersive, rich context for leaders and shapers to create and guide the markets, networks and communities behind the evolution.

    How? The path taken to create content impacts the final product, but the path to create context is *part of the final product*. Remember, paths are more valuable than destinations.

  • The economics of the web have increased the competition between content creators, flattened the experience advantage and upended supply and demand for content. But at the same time, it’s expanded the opportunity to create context, made context easier, cheaper and more accessible to create than ever before. People that recognize how context is created, what type of context they can create, and why context is important will create economically meaningful, valuable and sustainable products, services and experiences. And more than anything, that’s what we need.
  • Marketers and business strategists today are fond of giving the advice “join the conversation.” While I agree, it’s only a step towards the larger goal: “create shared experiences”. First: join, listen, learn and understand the best practices, cores and edges in your markets, communities and networks, because it’s step one towards building the knowledge and confidence to take the next step: “create shared experiences”.
  • Experiences are more powerful than conversations in creating the rich, immersive context, social objects and shareable, participatory media necessary for marketing campaigns. David Cushman and Jamie Burke asked “Can you buy space in conversations?” in their recent presentation about The Death of Advertising; to extend the thought, my question is “can you buy space in experiences?” Conversations, no; but experiences, yes.

Lest one think of this as idle thought, the examples are being created by bleeding edge practitioners today.

If you’d like to discuss examples and see how you can apply these concepts to your business, drop me a line at tdavidson@taylordavidson.com or @tdavidson; hire me to consult and I’ll help you devise strategies and execute campaigns applying these principles.

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