Geplaatst op: 21-01-2025
Auteur: Fabiën Vlems & James Wallman
WXO.
Publicatie: UNCOVER08

Why global and cross-sector connections are essential for the experience economy

With WXO towards the experience revolution

Why global and cross-sector connections are essential for the experience economy

History illustrates that idea exchange is a catalyst for societal progress. The Pax Romana, Mongolica, and Americana facilitated this exchange, uniting diverse people across the Mediterranean, Eurasia, and the world. This convergence of ideas within a civilisation sparks innovation that benefits all. As people with different thought processes interact, their ideas give birth to new ones. While not all ideas succeed, a few emerge victorious from the multitude of experiments, symbolising progress and innovation. The safety of the Pax Mongolica, for instance, opened up a vast superhighway for people, ideas, and goods to flow from East to West and West to East. As caravans brought horses, porcelain, jewels, silk, paper, and gunpowder along the Silk Route, they also brought new ways of thinking and doing. From the Far East came brilliant ideas like paper-making and printing. From the Islamic world came unheard-of approaches to maths, astronomy, and science. Thanks to today’s caravans and ships - emails, the internet, Zoom, and the planes and trains that connect us in real-life meetings and conferences - we are able to flit around the globe and make the sort of connections that will lead to ever richer innovation. Where will this innovation lead us in the 2020s? That is the magic of innovation; you never really know where exactly it will lead. But since we know that it leads to progress that has been unprecedented and was hard to imagine in the past, it is easy to believe (if not picture!) how it will lead to improvements in the future.

Fabiën Vlems did the Master of Science Leisure and Tourism Studies at BUas and now works as operations & marketing executive for the WXO.
James Wallman is CEO and founder of the WXO. He studied at Oxford (MA, Classics), Cambridge (Diploma, Business), and London (MA, Journalism).

Evolution of living standards

Materialism and the Consumer Revolution, which gathered pace after the Industrial Revolutions from the 1920s on, lit a fuse that led to an unprecedented increase in standards of living. As creators of radios, cars, shoes harnessed the magic of the industrial revolutions, and turned them into meaningful products and services for humans, sharing ideas across sectors, they produced better stuff. All that stuff added up to lots of better stuff - and that is the vertiginous rise in standards of living. That is what many believe is happening in the 21st century, particularly in the realm of experiences. You can see it in the rise of experiences, and the early flowering of the Experience Economy.

Influenced by macrotrends such as social media, ‘stuffocation’, post-materialism, environmental concern, and economic progression, many posit that today’s innovators are harnessing the Fourth Industrial Revolution’s magic for human progress. To carpe this diem, we must emulate our predecessors: connect and share across sectors and geographies. This is occurring rapidly and extensively.

The experience industry is at an inflection point and how we are building towards a more sustainable and financially viable future is top of everyone’s mind.

World Experience Organization

Many immersive and experiential events and organisations have launched in recent years. The Experience Research Society (EXPRESSO) and the UK’s Immersive Experience Network (IEN) were both founded in 2021. The Denver Immersive Group (DIG) has been operating since 2018. The VR/AR Association, since 2015. Singapore’s first-ever Immersive Summit was held in 2023. And then there is the World Experience Organization (WXO), founded in 2020. While many of these are local - oriented around a city or a country - or focused on a vertical market, such as immersive industry events - what makes the WXO different - not necessarily better - is that it is deliberately global and cross-sector.


This brings tension. Can a customer experience expert really learn from a themed attraction operator? Is it worthwhile for a sound designer for events to connect with a brand activation expert? Would it not be better to focus on their specific markets and challenges? We should all learn from people in our own sector, but you might like to think of this as fishing. If you fish in the same water as your peers, you will catch the same fish. And the fish (ideas! You get the analogy?) will soon run out. For fresh, wild, or different fish, you have to fish in different waters. Innovation works like this too: in order to design, build, stage, operate better experiences in your sector, the best idea is to look in adjacent and even opposite experience sectors (see Edward de Bono’s concept of ‘rivers of thinking’).

And that is exactly what the WXO does. Weekly, we bring experts from various sectors to share and encourage conversation and connection around those ‘tent pole’ ideas - and for the experience experts to think about how to apply this to their own world. We do this online, in Zoom calls we call ‘campfires’ - because experience design involves expectation, and sitting around the campfire is not only ancient and quintessentially human, but we have all done it, we all know how informal campfires are. They are also levelling and anti-hierarchy: we believe deeply in expertise, but we also know that hierarchy can stifle creativity.

World Experience Summit

Once a year, we bring experts together at our World Experience Summit (WXS). After successful events in 2023 and 2024 we are running WXS 2025 in London. These events enable us to showcase brilliant, strange, useful ideas. Wim Strijbosch from BUas shared insights based on his PhD research into a specific dark ride that challenged the arc of the hero’s journey. Moniek Hover and Licia Calvi from BUas shared research on how the use of singular hero and ensemble heroes impact the design of vacation design. And we have hosted creators like Christopher Morrison and Stephanie Riggs arguing against the old hero’s journey. But this is not only about creativity: we believe in better experiences, and by better experiences, we mean the ones that: 1) make people feel more alive, 2) make more money, and 3) do good for society and the planet.

We also focus on the financial side and the business model canvas of your experience. If it does not turn a profit, it will not continue and cannot have an impact. In arts, culture, or non-profit sectors, success measures may differ. But as shown at Kronborg Castle, Peter Holst Beck’s work on Hamlet increased admission prices by 50% and tripled visitor numbers. Great experiences can support other work. The National Museum of Denmark’s Director Rane Willerslev has called this ‘the Museum’s golden egg’.

Bring the right people together, let them co-create, and the result is mesmerising.

Neat ideas, do they work?

With the support of key Experience Economy pioneers, including The Experience Economy author Joe Pine, Brigham Young University’s Mat Duerden, Burning Man’s Heather Gallagher, we have gone from a handful of people in 2020, via opening our doors to members in 2021, to around 750 members in June 2024 in 39 countries. Our members come from large and small brands, including Walt Disney Imagineering, Meow Wolf, Industrial Light & Magic, Deloitte, Excel, and Phantom Peak. Some reflections indicating the magic of when the network comes together:

"Such an amazing, talented, and fun crowd! We had genuine discussions on experience design from various angles - investment, gaming, design, production, transformation, and academia. Bring the right people together, let them co-create, and the result is mesmerizing.” (Jasmin Jodry)

"Experience design is a home for ‘misfit toys’. I always considered myself one of those - and I have recently been singing from the top of my lungs that the more varied perspectives and backgrounds we bring into the industry, the better. The WXS just reiterated to me that our different perspectives can come together to make beautiful experiences, and further...” (Mallory Schlossberg)

"The experience industry is at an inflection point and how we are building towards a more sustainable and financially viable future is top of everyone’s mind. There are some really interesting ideas buzzing around but we need to create systems and frameworks that allow us to create not just amazing experiences but successful business models as well.” (Nasya Kamrat)

Do your part

Be innovative by exploring unfamiliar territory. As an experience innovator, seek ideas from your sector, adjacent fields, and opposite experiences. Engage, connect, and share insights. Then enhance experiences that invigorate people, are financially viable, sustainable, and benefit both humanity and the planet. Let’s collaborate and contribute to the 21st-century experience revolution!

Dit artikel is eerder verschenen in Uncover, een uitgave van het domein Leisure & Events van de Breda University of Applied Sciences. Nieuwsgierig naar de andere artikelen uit Uncover? Stuur dan een mailtje naar ton@nrit.nl.
Topics:Leisure
Trefwoorden: innovatie, leisure, beleving

CELTH



||| Nieuws |||

18/07/25
Eerste 'surf-kas' zuivert Amsterdams kanaalwater
De Amsterdamse ontwerper Frederik van Os heeft een innovatieve manier bedacht om waterrecreatie te combineren met ecologisch herstel. Zijn project, de Surf Pill, is een drijvende ‘surf-kas’ die kanaalwater zuivert terwijl mensen erop kunnen surfen.
18/07/25
OECD prijst Nederlandse Landelijke Data Alliantie als inspirerend voorbeeld
De Organisatie voor Economische Samenwerking en Ontwikkeling (OECD) noemt de Nederlandse Landelijke Data Alliantie een inspirerend voorbeeld in haar recente rapport 'Using alternative data sources and tools to measure and monitor tourism.' De LDA wordt geprezen om haar innovatieve aanpak in het verzamelen, standaardiseren en delen van toerismedata.
18/07/25
Koelere bestemmingen populair bij last-minute zomervakanties
Nederlandse vakantiegangers die deze zomer nog snel een reis boeken, kiezen opvallend vaak voor koelere bestemmingen. Uit recente boekingsdata van reisorganisatie Riksja Travel blijkt dat 15% van de last-minuteaanvragen gericht is op landen als IJsland, Noorwegen, Schotland, Canada en de Azoren.
18/07/25
Hein Pasman wordt directeur Landschap Erfgoed Utrecht
Hein Pasman is met ingang van 1 juli jl. benoemd tot algemeen directeur van Landschap Erfgoed Utrecht. Pasman nam deze positie al enige maanden waar na het vertrek van de vorige directeur. De tijdelijke invulling is nu door de Raad van Toezicht omgezet in een permanente aanstelling.
17/07/25
Exclusief voor leden
Kom je in aanmerking voor regeling Kunst Erfgoed Festival?
Organiseer je een festival, biënnale/triënnale of vergelijkbaar evenement gericht op beeldende kunst en/of erfgoed? Of wil je beeldende kunst en/of erfgoed tonen binnen een andersoortige context, zoals een pop- of theaterfestival? Misschien kom je in aanmerking voor een bijdrage Kunst Erfgoed Festival van Mondriaan Fonds.
17/07/25
easyJet boekt sterke winstgroei in derde kwartaal 2025 en blijft optimistisch over toekomst
Luchtvaartmaatschappij easyJet heeft in het derde kwartaal achter de rug met meer winst, capaciteit en bezetting.
16/07/25
Ga mee op inspiratiereis naar Montpellier – beleef de Europese recreatiesector van binnenuit
Van 3 t/m 6 november 2025 organiseert HISWA-RECRON samen met France-Compagnie opnieuw een unieke inspiratiereis voor recreatieprofessionals. Inmiddels hebben 23 ondernemers en managers uit de Nederlandse recreatiesector zich aangemeld voor deze exclusieve reis. Wil jij er ook bij zijn? Er zijn nog enkele plaatsen beschikbaar.
16/07/25
Eerste podhotel van Nederland opent in hartje Den Haag
In het centrum van Den Haag is De Lola Podshotel officieel geopend, het eerste volwaardige podhotel van Nederland. Gevestigd in de voormalige Foodhallen aan de Haagsche Bluf, introduceert het hotel een innovatief slaapconcept met 80 compacte slaapunits.

||| Agenda |||

27/08/25
27/08/25 t/m 27-08-25: CELTH Industry Day World Leisure Congress
Het World Leisure Congress (WLO) komt na 13 jaar weer terug in Europa en voor het eerst naar Nederla...
22/09/25
22/09/25 t/m 22-09-25: Toerisme Top 2025
De Toerisme Top wordt dit jaar op maandag 22 september in Noord-Holland georganiseerd. Het thema is ...
02/04/26
02/04/26 t/m 02-04-26: Trendcongres Toerisme 2026
Het Trendcongres Toerisme 2026 is op donderdag 2 april 2026 bij Saxion Hogeschool in Deventer. De ed...