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February 9th, 2010 by Chris McCrudden

A passion for fashion

New York Fashion Week kicks off this Thursday and out there in the Big Apple right now, the tussle among fashionistas for catwalk show tickets probably makes a rugby scrum look like a corps de ballet.

Nowhere outside of the royal courts of 19th century Europe do seating plans matter more. The closer you are to the front, the closer you are to God. Or, more accurately, to the designer’s celebrity muse, who increasingly wears their most bankable new design because she gets more publicity than the clothes ever do.

Fashion blogger Bryanboy’s Twitter stream is probably the best introduction to the Byzantine intrigues required to bag a front row place at a show. Yet what’s most interesting about all this is why it should still matter when these supposedly exclusive shows are all over the internet.

Burberry Menswear 2010

Luxury fashion brands like Gucci and Dior might be latecomers to the online table (and even they’ll probably only eat a cube of cheese), but their YouTube channels do something very clever. They increase the visibility of products most of us will never touch without making them feel cheap or overexposed. Online video is cheaper than 20 pages of ads in Vogue, reaches more people and extends the lifespan of what are monstrously expensive half hour junkets.

But more important than all of this – it’s not the same as being there. This kind of online promotion doesn’t replace the experience, it whets your appetite for the real thing, and pushes up the demand for catwalk show tickets up to feverish levels.

High fashion still has a lot to learn about doing business, but it can teach businesses a lot of things about desire. And desire is what makes people confuse want with need and reach for their credit cards.

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February 2nd, 2010 by admin

Inspired ideas

Inspired Gaming Group (IGG) is one of our longest standing clients – we have worked with the executive team there from its early start-up days to today when it is perceived to be one of the most innovative companies in the industry.

Every year, we support IGG at IGE, The International Gaming Expo. The team is always busy chairing briefings with the key target media and on hand to support on the stand and beyond. This year we wanted to do something a bit different.

IGG is showing its virtual racing products this year  - incredibly life like horse races now to be available in independent bookies. Anyone who has been to IGE will know the audience is predominantly male and most stands have some poor girls dressed in bikinis freezing their poker chips off.

We knew we needed girls but we wanted something a bit more in line with Inspired Gaming Group’s image. So. We commissioned a fashion designer to create bespoke jockey tops made of silks with pussy bow collars and puffed sleeves. We hired six beautiful girls and had them dressed as classy, but sexy jockeys and had them distribute betting slips for half hourly races with prizes including champagne and iPod Touches.

The results so far have been fantastic – hundreds of visitors to the stand, real brand recognition for Inspired Gaming Group throughout the venue and memorable photos already admired by the Speed boys back at HQ!