A brand experience is more than an event with your logo on it. It is a total brand experience in which everything (from the space to the sound, from the scent to the interaction) tells your brand story. Every second a visitor spends reinforces the association with your brand.

Where traditional marketing shows your brand, a brand experience makes your brand felt. And that is precisely why it is so powerful. People remember what they experience, not what they read on a poster or see in a commercial. A well-organised brand experience creates emotional connections that linger for months, sometimes years.

Picture a space fully transformed into your brand world. Visitors literally step inside your brand. They smell it, taste it, hear it and live it. That is the power of organising a brand experience with impact.

The difference between brand experience and brand activation

Brand experience and brand activation are often used interchangeably, but there is an important difference between them. A brand activation is aimed at a specific action: trying a product, taking home a sample, signing up. It is interactive, but the goal is conversion.

A brand experience goes deeper. The goal is not a single action, but total immersion in your brand world. You want visitors to experience your brand values, not just understand them. It is about the emotion, the atmosphere, the feeling that lingers long after the event is over.

An example: at a brand activation you let people try your new product at a festival. At a brand experience you invite them into a fully styled space where every detail (light, sound, materials, catering) tells your brand story. The difference? The activation generates leads. The brand experience generates fans.

At Live Impact we combine the two. We design brand experiences with strategic touchpoints that also deliver commercial results. Experience and results: that is our approach.

The five senses as the foundation of your brand experience

The most powerful brand experiences work through all five senses. The more senses you activate, the stronger the memory. That is not a marketing trick — it is neurology.

Sight: the visual identity has to be right down to the smallest detail. Colours, materials, lighting design, video content: everything breathes your brand. Skip the generic trade-show walls and go for a fully bespoke environment.

Sound: music and sound shape the emotion. A bespoke soundtrack that fits your brand personality makes the difference.

Scent: the most underrated sense at events. A subtle scent that matches your brand (fresh, warm, adventurous) literally anchors your brand in visitors' memories.

Taste: catering is not an afterthought. It is a brand expression. Every dish, every cocktail, every bite can tell your brand story.

Touch: the materials visitors handle (from the invitation pack to the furniture) communicate quality, innovation or warmth. Choose deliberately.

How do you develop a brand experience concept?

A strong brand experience does not begin with the venue or the technology. It begins with your brand strategy. What are your core values? What feeling do you want to evoke? What message should stick?

At Live Impact we start every brand experience project with a concept development session. We dive into your brand DNA, analyse the audience and translate that into a creative concept that works on the floor.

The first step is the brand DNA session: we unpack your brand values, tone of voice, visual identity and positioning. The second step is the audience analysis: who are the visitors and what do they expect? The third step is the concept translation: we turn the brand DNA into a spatial and programmatic concept. In the fourth step we design the touchpoints: every contact moment is worked out, from invitation to arrival and from interactive installations to the farewell.

Venue and production: building the brand world

The venue is the canvas of your brand experience. You have two options: transform an external venue or rebuild your own location into a brand world.

An external venue offers a blank canvas. An industrial hall, a museum, an unexpected space — you can make anything of it. The upside: the wow factor is high. The downside: higher production costs because you have to build everything.

Your own location has a different upside: authenticity. You invite guests into your world. With the right décor and production you can transform an office or factory hall into a fully fledged brand experience.

Production makes the difference. Lighting design, sound engineering, video content, décor, furniture — everything has to fit. One detail that doesn't, breaks the illusion. At Live Impact we work with a fixed team of designers, technicians and producers who know how to build a brand world that holds up down to the last detail.

What does organising a brand experience cost?

A compact brand experience for 50 to 100 people costs €15,000 to €40,000: a small-scale brand experience with strong styling, bespoke content and a considered programme. A mid-sized brand experience for 100 to 300 people costs €40,000 to €100,000. Think full venue transformation, bespoke-built elements, professional AV production and multiple experience zones. A large-scale brand experience for 300 or more people costs €100,000 or more: multiple days, complex builds, interactive technology and a fully bespoke show production.

A brand experience is an investment in brand perception. You measure the ROI in brand preference, customer loyalty, media value and the emotional connection visitors take with them. At Live Impact we always work with a transparent budget.

Frequently asked questions

Can Live Impact help organise a corporate event?

Yes. Live Impact is a concept agency for corporate events. We help with the complete process: from first brainstorm and concept development to venue selection, programming and production.

Whether you're planning a staff party, conference, kick-off, anniversary or client event: we think along. We ask sharp questions and make sure the result stays with people.

Get in touch via hello@live-impact.nl or call +31 85 401 40 14.

Read our full article on organising a corporate event →

How much time do you need to organise a corporate event?

Start at least three months ahead. For large events (300+ guests, complex production), six months is more realistic.

The organisation runs in four phases. First lay the foundation (12 to 10 weeks before the date), then concept and partners (10 to 6 weeks). Then the detailed work (6 to 3 weeks) and finally execution plus aftercare in the last 3 weeks. Popular venues and artists are quickly booked up in autumn.

See the full phasing in our article →

How do you write a good brief for a corporate event?

A good brief contains at least six elements. They are: the objective, the target audience, the number of guests, the preferred date, the budget and prerequisites (venue, dietary requirements, travel time).

Write it on a single A4. Share it with your project team and your agency. Without a brief, everyone works from assumptions. That delivers a messy result.

Read the full article with all brief elements →

What is the difference between a corporate event and a staff party?

A staff party is specifically for staff: internal, familiar, and the mood is looser. A corporate event is broader and can be a staff party, but also a conference, kick-off, anniversary or client event.

The difference lies in the approach: a staff party is about celebrating and connecting. A corporate event can also serve strategic goals, such as knowledge sharing, brand positioning or culture change.

More on organising a corporate event →

What does it cost to organise a corporate event?

A corporate event costs around €200 to €500+ per person ex. VAT for 250 to 500 guests. For 500 to 1,000 guests, expect around €150 to €400+ per person. For 1,000 to 2,000 guests, expect around €125 to €350+ per person. For more than 2,000 guests, expect around €100 to €300+ per person. All amounts excluding VAT, including venue, catering, entertainment and production.

The exact budget depends on the type, the venue and the programme. The brackets above indicate the range for an average corporate event.

Read our full article on organising a corporate event →

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