Environment and people: two critical elements of experience

You can offer the best entertainment, but if the environment doesn't meet customers expectations, or if they feel uncomfortable among the other guests, their overall experience will be negative – and they won't be back. Find out how to make two critical components work for your business.

Offering a successful entertainment experience requires a lot more than just the physical components. Yes, the entertainment is important, whether it is rides, bowling, games or other attractions. But entertainment alone does not create an entertainment experience that generates a profit and makes consumers not only want to stay, but eager to return. The environment in which the entertainment takes place and the guests who attend are both critical elements of the overall experience. In today’s challenging economic climate, getting these two elements right is even more critical to business survival and success.

Environments can powerfully influence emotions and feelings, which affect a guest’s behavior, including whether they want to stay, leave or ever return. The environment, which includes the layout, finishes, colors, lighting, scale of the space, seating, ambiance, aromas, music acoustics, etc., has a impact often experienced at only a subconscious level, but nevertheless has an effect on behavior. A business wins when it consciously creates the right environment, one that matches the desired experience, as well as the values, tastes and preferences of the targeted niche of guests. White Hutchinson coined a term a number of years ago for the overall environmental qualities called quality-of-place. Create a mismatched quality-of-place, and roadkill can ensue.

Women perceive and react to environments differently than men do. Women are much more discriminating and pay closer attention to décor, colors, fabrics, aroma, cleanliness and lighting. Men respond to structural elements. Women like textures, softness and curves. Men like right angles, boxy designs and metallic finishes. Women like more intimate spaces with lower ceilings; men like cavernous spaces with high ceilings.

Some facilities target women very successfully through their quality-of-place. A good example is Panera Bread Co. It has a softer, more intimate feel and subdued colors that appeal to women. Most classic white-tablecloth steak houses with their heavy dark wood finishes and lower lighting levels appeal to men. The Cheesecake Factory is a good example of an environment with a balanced gender appeal. Women relate to its soft, warm colors, good lighting and fine finishes like marble. At the same time, men don’t feel out of place because of its strong architecture with large columns, beams and crown moldings. Dave & Buster’s, through its interior design, also has achieved a balanced gender appeal. 

Even the table setting can influence gender appeal. Women like table linen, unless they have young children with them. Men prefer solid surface table tops as they are messier eaters and don’t want to feel guilty about soiling a nice table linen. More gender neutral are tables covered from large rolls of craft or white paper. Women consider it fancier than a bare table top, and men don’t have to feel guilty if they make a mess because they know the paper will be thrown away. Paper table coverings also appeal to women with young children, because the surface is new and clean. They know their children can draw on it to stay occupied, and there is also no guilt when the kids get it dirty.

Not only is there a difference in genders perception of environments and quality-of-place, there is also a difference based upon people’s socio-economics/lifestyles (SELs). This is driven not only by upbringing, but also by education level. There is an old saying that holds enormous truth, “Birds of a feather flock together.” People like to hang out in environments with people like themselves. You have to design the nest for the particular variety of bird you want to attract.

SELs vary not only based upon income, but also based on needs, tastes, preferences, values, hopes and fears, which is important in customizing an appealing entertainment experience. Quite simply, Denny’s restaurant designs its environment to appeal to a much lower SEL than does Carrabba’s Italian Grill. Often, the SEL that loves one of those restaurants won’t be caught dead in the other; it doesn’t match their SEL and self-image. The same holds true for Walmart and Target. Target has a much higher level of finish than Walmart and therefore appeals to a higher SEL.

When it comes to children and the environment, it’s a whole different story. To learn more about how the environment impacts children, we suggest you read our article, Adults are from Earth; children are from the Moon: Designing for children, a complex challenge.

Having an experience solo is completely different than having an experience with a group of people. Group experiences are shared experiences and all about socialization. The dynamic of group validation is an important factor that differentiates a group experience. This is one of the main reasons bowling, billiards and miniature golf have stood the test of time. Group members validate the play of each other. One person plays while the others watch, comment on and review that person’s performance. Bowling, miniature golf and billiards played alone has little appeal except just for practice. Another example is a circular ride for children. Every time the ride goes around, the child gets validation from his or her parents who are watching (hopefully). Skeeball and other alley games often set up the same validation dynamics, as they typically are played in parallel, or with parents watching.

Bonding is an essential part of group social dynamics. Sitting and sharing food and drink is the oldest form of group bonding. It started when ancient man sat around the campfire, and now it’s encoded in our genes. This is why food and beverage greatly enhances an entertainment experience. Yes, entertainment alone can offer group validation, but it doesn’t offer the primal campfire bonding experience food and beverage bring to the table. That is why many pure entertainment venues have evolved into the more successful eatertainment concepts of today. Walking around from ride to ride or game to game doesn’t create the strong bonding that sharing food and drink together offers. Add bonding through food and drink, and the entertainment experience suddenly has far greater appeal (and higher per capita sales). Examples include FECs that have now morphed into pizza buffet/entertainment centers, children’s pay-for-play centers that have evolved into play cafés, and bowling alleys that have become bowling lounges (see The hybrids are coming, above).