NYTimes.com Article: Designing an Identity to Make a Brand Fly

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Designing an Identity to Make a Brand Fly

November 6, 2003
 By MOTOKO RICH





ALL-LEATHER seats. Extra legroom. Live satellite television
at your seat. Minimalist, whimsical flourishes on the sides
of the planes, and oh yeah, low fares.

If you are thinking that sounds like JetBlue, the
three-year-old upstart airline, who could blame you? But
Song, the new low-fare service Delta Air Lines rolled out
in April, is also trying to capture a youthful market by
selling style as much as service.

Officials at Song insist, of course, that their airline is
not simply a JetBlue knockoff. They have added an extra
inch of legroom and will offer amenities like video games,
MP3 playlists and pay-per-view movies. In an effort at
one-upmanship, they will sell entrees like "rock and roll
veggie sushi" and "shaved turkey on focaccia," for about
$8.

So, aside from the traditional billboards and print ads,
how to communicate the message? Taking a page from Prada
and Apple Computer, the airline is opening a store in SoHo
for six weeks starting tomorrow.

Featuring sleek electronics and installation art, Song,
whose biggest market is New York, with 35 daily flights, is
clearly courting what they hope will be a glamorous
following. "We want people to say, `An airline is doing
that? I thought it was a clothing store' or `I thought it
was a gallery,' " said Stacy Geagan, Song's communications
director.

The airline is giving an invitation-only party at the store
tonight, where, publicists promised, Grace Jones would
serve as D.J. and Moby, Drew Barrymore and her boyfriend,
Fabrizio Moretti of the Strokes, would drop by.

Those not lucky enough to make it tonight can stop in
Thursdays through Sundays (98 Prince Street, between Mercer
and Greene; 646-613-0203). The store will display airline
seats, X-Box game systems, a Microsoft 2004 flight
simulator and airplane windows stocked with retail items
from Kate Spade (who is designing uniforms for the flight
attendants) and Flight 001, a boutique travel store.
Customers can also make flight reservations at the store.

Michael Rock, a partner at 2x4, a firm that helped design
the Prada store in SoHo, said Song was just following the
current trend of using retail space to sell an image. "You
don't really change the function of the thing itself," Mr.
Rock said, "but you change the perception of the function
of the thing and you differentiate the surface of it."

He added that by placing the store within a block of the
Prada and Apple stores, the airline is "equating the value
of Song with these other things nearby and the kind of
people you expect to find in SoHo."

The store has a cafe that offers a sampling of the nouveau
airline food, created by Michel Nischan, a consultant who
is the author of "Taste Pure and Simple: Irresistible
Recipes for Good Food and Good Health."

Alex Calderwood, a creative director at Neverstop, which
designed the store, said, "You are serving airline food in
SoHo. That communicates a sense of confidence and spirit."

Julie Lasky, the editor in chief of I.D. magazine, said
that Song was trying to evoke a range of emotions, rather
than simply selling its product. "It's taking people out of
the notion of an airplane and linking them to a sense of
adventure, comfort and things that have become a general
experience," she said. Design features like the Kate Spade
uniforms, she said, would help Song to establish itself as
"simple and minimal and modern."

In an attempt to associate itself with the SoHo art scene,
the airline commissioned Howard Goldkrand, an
electronic-media artist, to produce streaming video of
skies running continuously past a panel that looks like the
side of a plane.

And in what is perhaps a rather odd choice for an airline,
the store's designers had Ed Tannenbaum, an artist, develop
an interactive display in which visitors see their
likenesses projected onto a stack of video screens with
watery imagery. If you wave your arm, for example, the
screens ripple and bubble.

While that might bring to mind emergency water landings,
Mr. Calderwood said it is meant to represent something more
metaphorical. "It reflects the purity of flying," he said.

Fundamentally, the store is about using stylish design and
entertainment to introduce the airline to people who might
not have heard of it.

"You don't have to know about Song, you can happen upon
Song," Ms. Geagan said.

Officials at JetBlue said they question whether people
would go out of their way to investigate a new brand. With
Apple's store, for example, "people already have a fondness
for Apple," said Gareth Edmondson-Jones, a spokesman for
JetBlue. "It was such an icon of its time. I don't know
that Song is a) known enough or b) desirable enough to
attract people. I think it's just putting the cart before
the horse."

JetBlue's success may be part of the reason Song is so
eager to copy the airline. JetBlue recently reported
third-quarter earnings that were double the year-earlier
period's.

Masamichi Udagawa, a principal of Antenna Design, a
Manhattan-based firm that created check-in kiosks for
JetBlue, said he preferred JetBlue's recent plan to build a
modern terminal behind the historic Eero Saarinen Trans
World Airlines terminal at Kennedy Airport, in which it
will install electronic kiosks. He said the move showed
JetBlue "merging the brand with that established image of
glorious air travel of the past," which would add more heft
to JetBlue's design consciousness than would a store in
SoHo.

The Song store, Mr. Udagawa said, is unlikely to conceal
the fact that the airline is less original than it might
like people to think. "In general, it's great that
companies are more design-conscious," he said. "But copying
other people's design is an absolute no-no," he said.

"I know it's a competitive business," he added, "but the
strength of design is to come up with an original idea, not
just copy someone else's good idea."

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/06/garden/06SONG.html?ex=1069667056&ei=1&en=7db13d57e2ad557e


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