.

New York, Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika

Kontaktinformationen

488 Madison Avenue
New York NY 10022
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika
Telefon: 212.463.9700
E-Mail:

David Saalfrank

David Saalfrank

Managing Director

Telefon: 917.606.8117

Amy Beth Stern

Amy Beth Stern

Vice President, Business Growth & Client Strategy

Telefon: 9176068117

Vanessa Bambina

Vanessa Bambina

Senior HR Manager

Telefon: 9176068130


Informationen

Hauptkompetenzen: Social Media Marketing, Marketing Services, VKF/Point of Sales, Experiential, Branded Content/Entertainment, Marktforschung/ Beratung, Marketing Technologies / Analytics, Events/Sponsoring, Strategy and Planning, Gesundheit, Finanzen, Business-to-Business, Vertrieb, Verbraucher

Gegründet in: 1993

Mitarbeiter: 40

Awards: 15

Kreative Projekte: 17

Kunden: 19

Hauptkompetenzen: Social Media Marketing, Marketing Services, VKF/Point of Sales, Experiential, Branded Content/Entertainment, Marktforschung/ Beratung, Marketing Technologies / Analytics, Events/Sponsoring, Strategy and Planning, Gesundheit, Finanzen, Business-to-Business, Vertrieb, Verbraucher

Gegründet in: 1993

Mitarbeiter: 40

Awards: 15

Kreative Projekte: 17

Kunden: 19

.

488 Madison Avenue
New York NY 10022
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika
Telefon: 212.463.9700
E-Mail:
David Saalfrank

David Saalfrank

Managing Director

Telefon: 917.606.8117

Amy Beth Stern

Amy Beth Stern

Vice President, Business Growth & Client Strategy

Telefon: 9176068117

Vanessa Bambina

Vanessa Bambina

Senior HR Manager

Telefon: 9176068130

Nowstalgia

Nowstalgia is the impulse to return to an imagined past by those who never experienced it in the first place. We’ve starting idolizing an exaggerated pre-COVID existence in a way which is likely to lead to dissonance in the future. Even before the pandemic, we’ve seen the phenomenon exploited.

Consider that #Nostalgia is one of the fastest growing hashtags, cluttered with images of curated past “existences” absent masks and social distancing. Large gatherings—concerts, sporting events, festivals—are not surprisingly over-represented.

So how can we make sure we help clients navigate through consumers’ Nowstalgia? By being sober: we must be reverent and referential to the past but realistic about the future of experiential. We’re not serving anyone well by pitching replicated expressions of “past glory.” The future of experiential will be bright enough without borrowing illumination from an unrealistic past.

The post Nowstalgia appeared first on Eventive Marketing.