Bombay Sapphire Archives - Chief Marketer https://www.chiefmarketer.com/topic/bombay-sapphire/ The Global Information Portal for Modern Marketers Wed, 30 Nov 2022 20:20:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 Marketers on Fire: Bombay Sapphire Global VP on Baz Luhrmann-Led Creative Campaign https://www.chiefmarketer.com/bombay-sapphire-global-vp-on-tapping-baz-luhrumann-for-saw-this-made-this-global-creative-campaign/ https://www.chiefmarketer.com/bombay-sapphire-global-vp-on-tapping-baz-luhrumann-for-saw-this-made-this-global-creative-campaign/#respond Fri, 28 Oct 2022 16:37:13 +0000 https://chiefmarketer.com/?p=274201 We spoke with Bombay Sapphire Global Vice President Natasha Curtin about how the campaign ties into the brand’s “stir creativity” mission.

The post Marketers on Fire: Bombay Sapphire Global VP on Baz Luhrmann-Led Creative Campaign appeared first on Chief Marketer.

]]>

Bombay Sapphire has tapped filmmaker Baz Luhrmann as creative director and star of its new global campaign “Saw This, Made This,” which invites consumers to view the world through a creative lens, capture what inspires them and then share their own works of art on social media with the hashtag #SawThisMadeThis. We spoke with Bombay Sapphire Global Vice President Natasha Curtin about how the campaign ties into the brand’s “stir creativity” mission, leverages local bartenders to help spread the word and how the company plans to illuminate the initiative’s best work.

Chief Marketer: What was the inspiration behind the campaign? How did you come to work with Baz Luhrmann?

Bombay Sapphire Global Vice President Natasha Curtin: It started from this shared belief that Bombay Sapphire and Baz have, this view that anyone can be creative. And in fact, anywhere and anything can be creative. It’s just about reframing how you look at the world around you. That’s the essence of the campaign. #SawThisMadeThis is about an encouragement, a call to arms, for people to go out into the world, see something that creatively inspires them and make something.

What we found so exciting was hearing Baz [talk about his] deep commitment to giving back to creative communities. He talked to us about how he’d come from very humble, small town beginnings in Australia and how he’d taken the everyday, the ordinary, and turned it into something extraordinary.

CM: What kinds of submissions are you expecting to get? Have you given people any creative direction?

NC: The campaign invites people to go out and capture and share what they’ve seen in the world that inspires them, and then what they’ve subsequently made, photographed, cooked, drank. We’re seeing this coming through in interesting forms–painting, architecture, makeup, cocktail, cookery. We’ve begun a call out to some of the world’s best bartenders that we’ve worked with who have taken this notion of “Saw This Made This” from the cities where they work. A U.S. example is Julia Momosé who works in Kumiko Bar in Chicago. She was inspired by a scene on her way to work and she’s made an exquisite structural cocktail, a spirit that’s inspired by that. And then also Valentino Longo of the ShoShin Arts Club in Miami. He’s played with a sunset over one of the beautiful art deco buildings in Miami South Beach and turned that into this exquisite cocktail.

CM: The campaign culminates with a showcase of people’s submissions in partnership with various museums. How will that selection process work?

NC: We wanted to make sure that we also had somewhere to celebrate all the creativity that we see, so there will be a creative gallery running on our social media channels. And Baz Lurhmann will help us create some selections. We’re also working with our partners, the Design Museum in London, who we’ve had a longstanding partnership with, to showcase some of the wonderful things. We’ve also got a partnership with the Academy of Arts in Berlin and a Design Museum in Milan to have a real-life showcase. We’re also in talks now in New York about having a cultural proofpoint of all of these demonstrations. And this is going to culminate our around World Creativity Day, which is April 21st, next year.

CM: How are you hoping the campaign will attract new consumers to your brand?

NC: With “Saw This Made This” we’ve been able to hand the cocktail creativity back to people who’ve been playing with our liquid for many years and making incredible creative cocktails and expressions of it. This is also a way that we’re able to talk about our sustainably-sourced botanicals and our vapor infusion gin, and then how it can be a canvas for cocktail creativity. It’s a platform for people to do what they’ve been doing with the brand for many years, whether it be a twist on a Negroni, or how they’re personalizing their gin and tonics. Or, take what you see in the world and then use our liquid for your own inspiration–and show what you do with it. I’m sure we’ll speak to many loyal Bombay Sapphire drinkers, but also bring some new people along with us.

The post Marketers on Fire: Bombay Sapphire Global VP on Baz Luhrmann-Led Creative Campaign appeared first on Chief Marketer.

]]>
https://www.chiefmarketer.com/bombay-sapphire-global-vp-on-tapping-baz-luhrumann-for-saw-this-made-this-global-creative-campaign/feed/ 0
Brands on Fire: Bombay Sapphire https://www.chiefmarketer.com/brands-on-fire-bombay-sapphire/ https://www.chiefmarketer.com/brands-on-fire-bombay-sapphire/#respond Fri, 29 Oct 2021 14:55:05 +0000 https://www.chiefmarketer.com/?p=269652 A look at the inspiration behind the brand's sensory auction, its larger “Senses Stirred” campaign and its new focus on intimate experiences.

The post Brands on Fire: Bombay Sapphire appeared first on Chief Marketer.

]]>

It’s not every day that you can take home an artwork valued at $30,000 simply because you enjoyed it more than everyone else did. But thanks to an unusual art experience designed by Bombay Sapphire earlier this month, the only currency accepted at this particular auction was a bidder’s emotional connection to it.

The experience, which measured bidders’ reactions to the artwork using neuroaesthetic technology, highlighted the brand’s efforts to help democratize the art world by making art more accessible, regardless of financial means. “For the first time, we are creating an opportunity for art lovers to be able to bid on an original piece of art using their emotional connection and their senses rather than money,” says Jamie Keller, Brand Director, North America, at Bombay Sapphire.

We spoke with Keller about the inspiration behind the auction, the brand’s larger “Senses Stirred” campaign and its new focus on intimate experiences that hero emerging and underrepresented artists. And for a deep dive into the event itself, check out this case study from CM sister pub Event Marketer.

Chief Marketer: How did the idea of the sensory auction first come about?

Jamie Keller: The sensory auction is a continuation of our new brand campaign, “Senses Stirred.” The focus of the campaign is centered around the gin and tonic and how, when done well, it is so much more than just a cocktail. It’s actually an experience for the senses. The sensory auction was designed to bring that surreal experience of enjoying Bombay and tonic to life.

What’s super exciting is that it’s never been done before. For the first time, we are creating an opportunity for art lovers to be able to bid on an original piece of art using their emotional connection and their senses rather than money, which is the traditional way in which you would bid on art. The press preview was about showcasing the concept and also showcasing how the sensorial auction actually works from a technology standpoint. We partnered with Dan Lam, an emerging artist. She’s got this great visual language in terms of how she creates these 3D sculptures through her creative lens. Her artwork is so exciting and it brings a lot of emotions. It’s really fun and playful.

CM: How is the brand itself reflected in her work?

JK: She’s able to spotlight the elevated and balanced profiles of a Bombay and tonic because of how she uses her art. She’s doing it through layers and complexities of colors and textures, which for her emulated what a Bombay and tonic is all about. [At the press event] we did a representation with one of the models to showcase the technology that is being utilized to measure the artwork. We unveiled the piece of art and we were able to watch the model, live, register for a sensorial bid. We also featured the cocktail that was inspired by Dan, called the “Dan and Tonic,” which was a creative evolution of a traditional Bombay and tonic.

CM: How does the technology that measures bidders’ emotional responses actually work?

JK: The bidders are able to sit down individually with the artwork. So when you’re bidding you’re the only one that is in the room, ensuring it’s quiet and you’re able to focus on the piece. The reactions to the artwork are measured through a unique combination of emotional readings that are able to be recorded, which essentially discovers the piece’s most impassioned owner.

We use something called neuroaesthetic technology. It’s a measure of three specific components. One is the ability to measure brainwave readings with electrodes. Then there is skin galvanic response technology, which is placed on your fingertips. That’s capable of detecting the most minutia of sweat drops. Then lastly, there’s an eye tracking technology, which is sitting in front of them. That measures their focus, engagement and intensity from the depth of their eyes. The scientists are able to take the combination of those three elements and tabulate a single score. And at the end of the auction, the person that has the highest score will actually earn the right to take the piece of art work home with them.

CM: Did you target a typical art crowd for this or did you expand your reach?

JK: This was pushed out through our own channels and some event listings. It was slightly more general market. For us, it was about being able to tap into and find those that appreciate and enjoy art and give them the opportunity to not necessarily be pushed aside, as they may have before in these types of auctions, because price alone may have pushed them away. This actually gives them the opportunity to bid and take home an amazing piece of art because of their emotional connection rather than a dollar value.

CM: Talk about the strategic marketing goals of the activation.

JK: We launched “Stir Creativity” as a brand platform for Bombay back in 2018, and the mission is to inspire creativity within everyone. That is the lens for when do any sort of experience or activation for the brand, whether it’s through our communications or experiences themselves. Now more than ever, leading with purpose is really important to the brand, and this is something where we have the opportunity to participate in a conversation around the democratization of the art world. This event focuses on passion and conviction as a route to collecting your pieces of art instead of access to money. So, when we think about that conversation of the democratization of art, it’s how do we create these more inclusive spaces and make creativity accessible to everybody? Because we do believe that creativity is essential.

Artist Dan Lam stands beside her 3D sculpture which was inspired by a Bombay Sapphire and tonic.

CM: Has the pandemic shifted your experiential strategy?

JK: We’re focusing more on intimate art experiences that hero emerging and underrepresented artists who need support now more than ever. I can give you an example. For a new brand launch that we had called Bramble, we partnered with chef Marcus Samuelsson to spotlight rising talent within the art world, [including] local artists Cey Adams and Dianne Smith. Marcus is a world-renowned chef, but also he’s done a lot for the Harlem community here in New York. At a time where there were a lot of empty billboards, we allowed them the opportunity to find their expression of what Bombay Bramble meant to them. They used their art identities and visuals to take the space of billboards in Harlem. It’s another example of supporting artists during a difficult time.

CM: Shifting gears a bit… could you talk about how you’re tapping social media platforms to reach consumers?

JK: For the sensory auction in particular, we use social media to get the word out about the events. We’ll also tap into partnerships with some influencers to help us communicate the story of the sensory auction—and, if they feel appropriate, the conversation we’re having around being more accessible and being inclusive. We partnered with seven influencers for the event to help spread that story. Also, we’re going to be capturing the content not only from the event but also the auction. We’ll be sharing the recap video of everything that we did through our own channels and through paid media to tell the story.

CM: The pandemic forced many spirits brands to double down on ecommerce. How has Bombay experienced this?

JK: There’s no doubt that the ecommerce platform—specifically within spirits—has grown significantly since the pandemic. It was a segment that was growing, but the pandemic definitely catapulted it to another level. We look at partnering with pure-play partners, like Drizzly, Instacart and Retailer.com. So, retailers that have a dotcom that are a source of sales. We definitely think about the role that they play in all of our marketing activities. Specifically when we think about social media, how can we make consumers aware of our brand and create desire to try our brands? We think about the role that ecommerce plays and whether or not we drive consumers to those platforms to be able to purchase, to create a seamless consumer experience.

The post Brands on Fire: Bombay Sapphire appeared first on Chief Marketer.

]]>
https://www.chiefmarketer.com/brands-on-fire-bombay-sapphire/feed/ 0