Design for Better. Design for Local.

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Episode 34 on Brigadoon Radio: A recorded conversation on Tuesday, February 24, 2021, between Jonathan Meade and Marc A. Ross.

The episode explores:

  • How to develop a brand and engage the market

  • What is a brand?

  • Where does a brand come from?

  • Building brands with higher value and more local connection

  • Taking steps to design for better

  • North America being over-retailed

  • How we are asking retail space to do more

  • The rise of the 15-minute city

  • Hybrid workplaces providing multiple experiences for business needs

Subject Matter Expert: Jonathan Meade is passionate about connecting customers and clients with brand-focused environments, creating emotional responses that engage and inspire diverse design sectors.

With the pandemic taking its hold across the world in 2020, Jon took some time to reflect on his career and how it could evolve to meet the global community's needs and challenges. And this was just it – community.

It seemed like the very notion of community, and a more local experience had been swallowed up in a desire to keep things big and bold.

There is a golden moment for the locality to shine, more so than in many years. Currently looking to collaborate with local councils and business associations, Jon believes that as we invest in 'local,' our sense of belonging may also change into a slower pace with a more significant connection to people and place.

Host: Marc Ross is a communications strategist working at the intersection of globalization, disruption, and politics. Ross specializes in communications for economic diplomacy and global commerce.

He has extensive experience in thought leadership, public affairs, and global communications for trade associations and leading the advocacy operations, fundraising programs, and marketing efforts for corporates, nonprofits, and political campaigns, many for the highest offices in the United States and the United Kingdom.

Ross is the founder of Brigadoon.

Editing + Production: Brendan Kownacki is an experienced and innovative producer working daily to push the boundaries of content utilization in public communication.

Plus, he serves on as an advisory board member of the DC-based Artists and Athletes Alliance, and since 2011 has served as the Senior Contributor for Hollywood on the Potomac, a Washington DC lifestyle website that looks at the intersection of power, politics, advocacy, and celebrity culture in the Nation's Capital.

Good pod this: Katja Seim speaks with Knowledge@Wharton

The pod covers much ground, including:

How Amazon's real "core product" is convenience...

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How quickly Amazon can get an order from customers' virtual shopping carts to their real-life doorsteps...

How Amazon's expanding distribution center network has been key to the company's growth strategy....

Katja Seim is an economics professor at Yale University with joint appointments in the School of Management and the Department of Economics.

Her research focuses on topics of industrial organization and applied microeconomics.

She studies how firms respond to public policies, including entry and technology deployment regulations, competition policy, and tax policy in their entry, product positioning, and pricing choices. Her work also evaluates market power's role in affecting efficiency and distributional outcomes of government auctions to procure goods and services and sell assets.

Seim spoke to Knowledge@Wharton about her paper, "Economies of Density in E-Commerce: A Study of Amazon's Fulfillment Center Network," co-authored with Cornell's Jean-Francois Houde and Penn State's Peter Newberry.

In short, she is an expert in analytics, big data, and antitrust + competition policy.

Good pod this.

Listen here.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

Online education at a tipping point

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This Friday @ 4:00 pm ET | Special Guest: Adam Penenberg + Online Education

The Brigadoon Whiteboard Call on Friday, February 26 will feature Adam Penenberg - Director, American Journalism Online Master's Program @ NYU

Adam is a journalism professor at New York University (NYU). He is the founder and director of the American Journalism Online Master's program at NYU and is the director of undergraduate studies.

Previously, Adam wrote for Forbes, Fast Company, The New York Times, Wired News, and Playboy.

While with Forbes, Penenberg gained national attention in 1998 to reveal that The New Republic reporter Stephen Glass had been fabricating his stories.

Adam will be discussing the future of online education and his belief that it has reached a tipping point and is poised to take off.

Sign up here

The Beatles in Hamburg | Brigadoon Weekend

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Brigadoon Weekend = Global Street Smarts
February 20, 2021


Where is your Hamburg?

The Beatles might have hailed from Liverpool, but the band got its big break in Hamburg. 

The band had secured a bid to play the Indra, a seedy strip joint complete with a neon-lighted elephant beckoning the passersby in Hamburg's infamous red-light boulevard.

On August 17th, 1960, The Beatles, who then used the stage name used the stage name Silver Beatles, played their first gig in the Indra Club in Hamburg. A 48-night stint at this "musical venue."

The band's contract required the five of them - John, Paul, George, drummer Pete Best, and bassist Stuart Sutcliffe - to perform for 30 hours a week. Each one received a generous weekly sum of about fifty-one bucks in those days.

Indra's owner was generous; he did provide the group free lodging. 

The Beatles slept behind the stage in two dark, dank, cramped storage rooms with small beds, folding cots, and a couch. The nearby men's room, where broken toilets often overflowed into their rooms, served the group's personal hygiene needs. 

The days of Hamburg are a far cry from Paul McCartney's concert riders of today.

McCartney now has an amusing list of plant demands - yes, plant demands: "No trees please! We want plants that are just as full on the bottom as the top, such as palm, bamboo, peace lilies, etc. No tree trunks!" 

Also, of course, the McCartney rider requires a pre-show sweep by some bomb-sniffing dogs.

Paul has come a long way from a pre-show neon-lighted elephant.

However, playing Hamburg was essential to the band's success.

After two months of incessant playing, Indra's owner Bruno Koschmider promoted The Beatles to his flagship club, the Kaiserkeller.

"We had to learn millions of songs because we'd be on for hours," George Harrison later said. "Hamburg was really like our apprenticeship, learning how to play in front of people."

This apprenticeship, learning millions of songs, and properly playing in front of people was essential.

Hamburg is where The Beatles celebrated their first successes, dropped the word "silver" from the band's name, and devised their infamous mop-top haircuts.

Where is your Hamburg?

Where is the place you can work on your craft, build your skills, and harness your talents regardless of the environment?

THE BEATLES IN HAMBURG DEEP DIVE

How The Beatles found their sound in Hamburg, 60 years ago: DW reports, The Beatles' unique career took off in Hamburg in 1960 — it's where the band from Liverpool became the magical Fab Four.

Forget Liverpool. Hamburg, Germany, made the Beatles into the band they became: Dean Owen writes, on a business trip to Germany, I spent three days in St. Pauli, the Hamburg district where The Beatles became really good before they became really, really famous. My expert guide: Peter Paetzold, a bearded 68-year-old with the street cred of a chain-smoking rock drummer, well versed about St. Pauli’s music scene of the 1960s.

61 years ago: The Beatles play their first Hamburg: UCR reports, the stints the Beatles did in Hamburg, Germany, are widely credited with turning them from just another teenage band in Liverpool into a tight rock 'n’ roll combo.

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Dreams Traveled: The Beatles in Hamburg

Ophelia Belleu: The Beatles in Hamburg

Eliodue: The Beatles sites in Hamburg

BeatlesArchivesHQ: Tony Sheridan talks about Hamburg and The Beatles


BRIGADOON READS | BOOKS ON THE BEATLES IN HAMBURG

The Beatles in Hamburg: The Stories, the Scene and How It All Began by Spencer Leigh

The Beatles in Hamburg by Ian Inglis

Harry Benson. The Beatles by Harry Benson

The Beatles Anthology by The Beatles


BRIGADOON EVENTS

Brigadoon Whiteboard Call | February 26, 2021

Brigadoon Whiteboard Call | March 5, 2021

Brigadoon Whiteboard Call | March 12, 2021

Brigadoon March Call | Customers are the Disruptors
Dr. Leigh George | CEO @ Freedom
March 17, 2021

Brigadoon April Call | Less Logic. More Magic.
Rory Sutherland - Vice Chairman @ Ogilvy UK
April 21, 2021

Brigadoon May Call | The Poetry of Leadership
Fateme Banishoeib | heARTist + Founder @ ReNewBusiness
May 19, 2021

Brigadoon June Call | Adventures with Fiat Pandas + Autogrills + Negronis
Matt Hranek | Founder + Editor @ Wm Brown Magazine
June 16, 2021

More details and passes - click here.

Thanks for supporting Brigadoon. See you next week.

-Marc

Curation + commentary by Marc A. Ross | Founder + Chief Curator @ Brigadoon

Brigadoon is always powerpoint free and conversation-driven for better insights and connections.

More @ 
thebrigadoon.com

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+ You'd be a great addition

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