Services / Practice 04 / Six · The motion layer
Customer, brand, and event experience designed against the strategy. Not against a mood board.
Strategic vs. aesthetic
Most "experience" work starts with a creative brief and a mood board. The result looks great. It moves nothing.
The mistake is structural. When experience design is briefed by a creative team to a creative team against an aesthetic ambition, the output is judged on aesthetic terms — was it beautiful, did it win awards, did it photograph well? Those are the wrong tests. The right test is whether the experience moved the business.
Experience that doesn't change behavior is decoration. Decoration is rarely worth what most brands pay for it.
A framework
Most customer journeys have four moments where experience design moves the business. We design those four. We don't over-design the rest.
The moment the customer decides whether you are worth their attention. The hardest one to do well; the costliest to do wrong.
The moment the customer commits — to a purchase, a contract, a reservation. Friction here is the most expensive friction in the journey.
The moments after the decision when the experience either earns the next interaction or loses it. Hospitality, after-sales, onboarding.
The moment the customer comes back. The single highest-leverage moment for compounding LTV. Almost universally under-designed.
What we won't do
We won't design an experience that wasn't briefed against a business outcome. If the brief is "make it beautiful," we are the wrong firm.
We won't deliver a brand book without an operating model behind it. Brand without operations is decoration.
We won't lead an event without a strategic role for the event. Sponsorships, parties, and "activations" without strategic role are budget burners.
We won't bring junior consultants.
Discuss experience design
FAQ