1 year ago
Pushing the (brand) envelope at the Oscars®
This is the kind of detail we pour over - on a much smaller scale! - with our work for TidyTowns, so it’s fascinating to see what goes into the design of the winners’ envelope for the Academy Awards.
Amazingly, this is the first year they’ll have a branded envelope: For security and confidentiality reasons, they’ve had to make do with whatever was in the stationery cupboard at Pricewaterhouse Coopers until now.

Thanks to redesign:related for the find.
2 years ago
“There’s no doubt recycling is good, but in many cases, reusing is even better. Aiming to keep its share of reusable boxes out of the recycling bin, Columbia Sportswear recently launched an effort to let customers request that their orders be shipped in boxes that have been used before.
Consumers can already buy and sell their own used boxes on BoxCycle, which we covered about a year ago, and now Columbia Sportswear is bringing the concept into the corporate domain. When online shoppers reach checkout at Columbia.com, the website gives them the choice of shipping their order in a previously used cardboard box. Since the launch of the effort in August, more than 60 percent of online customers have selected the used box option, Columbia says. Perhaps even more interesting, however, is that Columbia places a sticker on the outside of each used box that includes a unique code and number. Entering that number or scanning the code via mobile phone into Columbia’s “A Box Life” community site reveals a wealth of information about where that box has been. Then, before sending their reused box on its next journey, consumers are encouraged to post pictures of their own to the A Box Life Flickr group and to tweet about their box’s journey by adding the hash tag #aboxlife to Twitter posts when they have something “box worthy” to share.”
via creativeinspiration
2 years ago
2 years ago
Disney's retail plan: Every store is a theme park «
“The world does not need another place to sell Disney merchandise — this only works if it’s an experience,” said Jim Fielding, president of Disney Stores Worldwide.
Great article from the NYT on Disney’s ambitious plans for their retail business: With a little help from Steve Jobs, they’re reinventing what a “store” should feel like.
Their aim is to create an immersive Disney brand experience - entertaining, engaging and interactive. Their customers will come to play, but stay to shop.
(Thanks to Evan for the find.)
How could your retail brand create this kind of connection with your customers?
2 years ago




