Since co-founding design consultancy Checkland Kindleysides in 1979, Jeff Kindleysides has created hundreds of fashion and sports stores. Levi’s, Wrangler, Hunter, Nixon, Jigsaw and Ugg are some of the names on the client-list. The art of brand storytelling is one of the UK-based creative’s most potent tools – and one he embraced long before it became the buzzword it is today. An early example: the first Levi’s store in London’s Regent Street, which swung open its doors in1995. A key part of this concept was a fit-center that functioned almost like a library, in which you could find every style of Levi’s placed in separate drawers, each jean presented with its own story. It was quite revolutionary at the time. “The store was the first of its kind, focusing on different ways in which stories can be told,” says Kindelysides.
So how is storytelling best applied today? “I always like to describe storytelling as the art of the shopkeeper. A brand or retailer can tell stories by delving into its own history, as well as looking at the craft behind the product. Work out the hierarchy of the stories you want to communicate – is it more about the particular people who’ve crafted the products or the overarching history of the brand and its roots?”
The offline/online convergence
The digitalization of retail is partly to blame for the death of the highstreet, but the offline and online worlds are suitable bedfellows. To make the physical shopping experience as convenient and inspiring as possible, the best bits from its online equivalent can be brought in-store – but don’t add screens for the sake of it. “Each digital element added to a store has to be truly relevant, bringing the choice associated with online shopping into physical retail, for instance. I believe the one huge benefit the merging of online and offline brings, is a greater ability for retailers to fulfill consumers’ need for products – offering them what they want exactly when they need it,” says Kindleysides.