Sparks and sawdust aren't the norm at most marketing firms.
Minneapolis-based Street Factory Media prides itself on being the agency to go to get things done, or more specifically, built.
Street Factory helped with the recent news launch of the Red Bull Flugtag event in St. Paul complete with homemade flying machines designed to look like a loon and a Vikings ship. The week before the group constructed 29 colorful basketball hoops that were installed in downtown Chicago to mark the Big Ten basketball tournament. The firm is also in talks to help promote the X Games when it returns to Minneapolis this summer.
Street Factory is one example of the growth of experiential marketing, which normally centers on one-time events or experiences that brands use to engage with potential customers.
Twin Cities residents have seen a plethora of experiential marketing recently in street activations from the giant Ferris wheel on Nicollet Mall during the NCAA Final Four college basketball tournament to the Instagram-ready, pop-up art installation during last year's Super Bowl.
"You're creating an experience," said Jim Audette, co-founder of Street Factory Media.
From banks to department stores, marketers over the last few years have harped about the importance of the customer experience and how consumers interact with their brands.
While consumers can experience a brand many ways, including digitally, experiential marketing has mainly focused on tangible, in-person interactions that consumers "just have to be there" to experience.