Designing an experience is now the retail arms race. A store’s success, once defined by conversion rate, is now measured by how many enter simply to feel something. From luxury pop-ups in car parks to coffee vans at sunrise, retail is mutating into theatre, part lifestyle, part content engine and almost entirely emotion-driven. This month, Nespresso took its iced coffee culture on the road with NespressoGo, a mobile, multi-city campaign designed to reimagine Australia’s morning coffee ritual
rituals.
Nespresso’s marketing success has always rested on the idea that coffee is a performance rather than solely a product. From its boutique design to packaging and advertised storytelling, the brand has turned everyday habits into a premium lifestyle experience.
Nespresso rolled its silver van onto Bennelong Lawn this spring. The brand’s Happy Hour campaign, which comprised a series of sunrise run clubs backed by live DJs and iced lattes, was designed to meet a new generation where they thrive: outdoors, early and online.
“[The campaign] was inspired by the strong cultural shift among Gen Z and millennials toward embracing early mornings as a time for wellness, creativity and connection,” Burcu De La Cruz, Nespresso ANZ marketing manager for brand, communications and sustainability, told Inside Retail.
“Building on the success of earlier activations in Bondi and Collingwood, the new phase expanded the concept nationally with sunrise pop-ups in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, partnering with run clubs.”
She calls it a strategic extension of Nespresso’s retail experience that enabled the brand to engage consumers outside traditional retail environments.
“This approach aligns with our broader strategy to blend luxury with accessibility, creating immersive brand moments that reflect evolving consumer lifestyles,” she added.
Those lifestyles, De La Cruz notes, are shifting quickly. Sixty-two per cent of coffees are consumed in the morning, a clear indication that morning culture is at its peak, reinforced by the growing preference for iced coffee and digital-first engagement among young Australians.
For Nespresso, each activation was crafted to be “social-media friendly,” amplifying reach through influencer and user-generated content.
The return of presence
The “happy hour” model sits within a larger post-digital phenomenon: a craving for physical, sensory connection.
After a decade of direct-to-consumer dominance and frictionless transactions, consumers are rediscovering friction as luxury. Retailers are responding by staging experiences that linger longer than a click.
Mecca’s “beauty atelier” in Australia and Nike’s House of Innovation concept stores in the US, Asia and Europe exemplify this shift.
Experiential stores blend brand architecture and entertainment, inviting visitors to create content as they consume.
At Mecca, interactive fragrance bars and personalised make-up services turn routine shopping into performative self-expression. The sale is secondary, and participation is the main event.
Beneath the sensory allure lies a hard-headed commercial logic. Experiential retail is now a flourishing data strategy.
Pop-ups and events deliver live behavioural insights that e-commerce can’t replicate, including how long consumers linger, what they photograph and which cues spark curiosity.
Nespresso’s roaming van, for example, doubles as a research lab, capturing social metrics and demographic data while embedding itself in community rituals like run clubs.
This shift turns the old retail funnel upside down: connection comes before transaction, and brand immersion is prioritised over awareness.
For retailers competing for share of voice in an attention-starved economy, culture itself has become a distribution channel.
The through-line is authenticity. Consumers can smell artifice faster than any algorithm, which is why experiences must feel lived and not staged.
The most successful activations borrow from subcultures, including run clubs, yoga collectives and local DJs, rather than imposing brand messages from above.
The future of feeling
As AI personalisation and one-click checkout become standard, emotion becomes the new differentiator. The next decade of retail may reward brands that choreograph mood as meticulously as they manage inventory.
Brands like Nespresso are already thinking in seasons, creating experiences that “move” rather than simply market. The aim, as De La Cruz puts it, is to “blend luxury with accessibility” or to make the extraordinary feel everyday.
Retail, once defined by its shelves, is now defined by its stages where commerce, culture and community might meet for coffee at dawn.