World Media Summit

Branding, design, art direction, experiential design, events.

Sometimes you just have to rip it up and start again. This was a challenge, but we got such a great result out of it, you forget the bad times.

Creating an event for an organisation that has little or no visual identity is a great opportunity for a designer but full of ambiguity. We built an entire identity system and application guidelines began fabrication of stage and sets, produced marketing materials and participant packs for a three day event… and then the client changed their mind on the look.

Sometimes our best work is done in the toughest circumstances.

Incredibly, the World Media Summit (WMS) has no branding beyond one logo, no identity guidelines and little to no marketing and communications guidelines. They prefer to leave the host organisation/country to create all this on spec according to the location, subject and audience. From a designers view this is naturally both a blessing and a curse and the challenges came thick and fast: What do you call it? “The Third World Media Summit” (growth and use of media in developing nations perhaps?) is a very different event from “The 2015 World Media Summit”. And this was to set the tone for the rest of the project.

While this was going on, our fabrication workshop and environment team were preparing the interior for the event itself before the venue was even confirmed. All was set, sponsorship packs had gone out, the sign up and info sites were online and the client decided they no longer liked the concept (after a long flight and a short meeting I discovered a major sponsor had objected as the color and style was similar to one of their main competitors’ recent campaigns – impossible to predict). After some emergency sessions and meetings with the committee it was agreed to present a new option before any further work on the event and marketing.

Set and environment designs followed quickly and with digital and print offerings in place the WMS summit was ready to go.

The feedback from attendees and the Summit Committee confirmed that we had taken the quality of the event to a new level and turned around a dry, corporate and bureaucratic conference into an internationally recognised experiential media event.

Art Direction, Creative Branding, Concept Development, Project Management, Budget Allocation, Client Liaison Pitch Presentations.