Because the future of perfumery is not in products, but in experiences
For a long time, perfumery has reasoned by products.
A perfume for the person.
A fragrance for the environment.
A speaker for the car.
Each object designed as its own world, often with different fragrances, different identities, different languages.
This approach is not wrong. It is simply a child of another age.
An era when:
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the points of contact were few
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the channels were separated
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the brand lived mainly on the shelf
Oggi quello scenario non esiste più. Il consumatore non incontra un marchio in un solo luogo, né in un solo momento.
It meets him over time, through different, often overlapping experiences: online, offline, personal, shared, intimate, public.
In questo contesto, progettare fragranze come prodotti isolati non è più sufficiente. Serve un cambio di paradigma.
From product to experience
Un prodotto risponde a una funzione. Un’esperienza costruisce continuità. La differenza è sottile, ma decisiva.
When a fragrance is designed only for a specific use, its value is exhausted in that context.
Instead, when it becomes part of a broader experience, it begins to work on memory, identity, and brand recognition.
This is where perfumery stops being just “olfactory creation” and becomes sensory design.
It is not about multiplying products. It's about orchestrating the points of contact.
One fragrance, different contexts
Increasingly, we are seeing brands choosing to:
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Use the same fragrance for the person fragrance
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extend it to the environment
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adapt it to the automotive world
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Make it part of the retail experience
Not for lack of creativity. But for vision.
When a fragrance accompanies a person in different, personal, private, mobile moments, it stops being “a good fragrance” and becomes a signature.
A signature that:
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creates familiarity
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strengthens the identity
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Reduces brand dispersion
This is the point that is often misunderstood: it is not about copying a formula from one product to another.
Each context has specific technical constraints:
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mode of dissemination
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perceived intensity
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duration
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safety and regulatory
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materials and temperatures
The challenge is not to replicate. The challenge is consistently interpret.
Consistency does not mean uniformity
Una fragranza che funziona come esperienza multicanale non è identica ovunque. È recognizable everywhere.
This requires deep work, which is not only technical but strategic:
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Figure out what makes that fragrance “identity”
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Preserve its character in different contexts
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Adapting the rendering without betraying its meaning
Qui entra in gioco il vero valore di un approccio brand-first. Non si parte dal prodotto da sviluppare. Si parte dall’esperienza che il brand vuole costruire nel tempo.
Experiences beat products
A brand that thinks in terms of products:
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accumulates SKU
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fragments the message
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multiplies costs
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disperses identity
A brand that thinks by experience:
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builds consistency
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strengthens the recognition
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optimizes decisions
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creates cumulative value
Nel secondo caso, ogni nuovo punto di contatto non aggiunge complessità. Aggiunge profondità. Ed è questa profondità che oggi fa la differenza tra un marchio che viene notato e uno che viene ricordato.
The future of perfumery
The future of perfumery will not be defined by:
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how many fragrances a brand launches
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how many variations it proposes
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how creative the individual product is
It will be defined by:
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how much is consistent the overall experience
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How much is recognizable over time
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How well it is able to accompany people at different times in their lives
In this scenario, fragrance is no longer an object. It is a language. E come ogni linguaggio efficace, funziona solo quando è parte di un sistema.
Editorial Note - Insight Journal
This article was not created to describe a trend, but to clarify a shift in thinking that is already taking place.
Those who continue to design only products will be left behind.
Those who start designing experiences will build the brands that matter.
Credits
The image refers to a large market example: Water of Parma.