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Experience economy
Joe Pine

Experience platforms are one of the biggest growth opportunities in today’s experience economy, says author and thought leader Joe Pine. He explains how to approach them


Platforms – places where buyers and sellers come together to exchange money for offerings – are not a new phenomenon, at least not in the physical world. Commodities have been sold in farmers markets forever.

High streets and shopping centres have long provided platforms for tangible goods, while malls were more a place for services, such as shoe repair and dry cleaners.

Disneyland is itself a platform, bringing together numerous experiences in one place for guests to enjoy and remember (even if an operational platform, rather than one with offerings from many different suppliers.)

Digital technology has amped up the power and network effects of such transactional platforms, enabling millions and potentially billions of buyers to connect with a boundless number of sellers. Amazon and eBay were early pioneers of goods platforms on the Internet, while Royal FloraHolland switched its commodity flower auctions to digital decades ago. Digital service platforms proliferate across most industries, from Uber to Fiverr to Grubhub, Bumble, Venmo and on and on the list grows. 

And, increasingly, digital platforms offer experiences. Think of Airbnb, which originally sold access to a sofa, a room, a house, but in 2016 created Airbnb Experiences to enable those staying in Airbnb host properties to connect with local experience stagers, particularly those that made guests feel like a local in their visited locale.

Think of the value unleashed – consumers gained easier access to a better overarching experience; local experience stagers gained easier access to a set of consumers eager to experience the locale; and Airbnb got a piece of every transaction.

When the pandemic hit and the platform pivoted to digital experiences, this enabled Airbnb to continue garnering income, while saving many companies that would have gone under without visitors, and saving the sanity of many consumers. 

Operational Experience Platforms
Earlier I described Disneyland as a physical operational platform because it wasn’t multisided like all of the rest above: The Walt Disney Company is not the only experience stager with offerings in the space. It also was one of the first to offer a digital operational platform with its MyMagic+ system in 2013, enabling visitors to connect to, buy, and operate experiences (as well as many services on which the experiences were built, such as park admission and hotel room entry). Guests particularly interacted with it through the IoT device the company created, MagicBand. 

John Padgett, one of the original five members on the project, eventually left for Carnival Corp. where at the Consumer Electronics Show in 2017 he and CEO Arnold Donald announced the Ocean Medallion. This operational experience platform set a new bar for its incredible degree of customisation, enabling every crew member to greet and interact with every guest by name and act on their preferences.

The platform creates a mass customised itinerary for each guest and party and as it learns more – creating what Carnival calls a “guest genome” – it can send out personal experience invitations to enhance itineraries. The Ocean Medallion can even learn things such as when a guest is on the pool deck with his kids his favorite drink is iced tea with no lemon; in the bar with his buddies it’s a mojito; and in the restaurant with his spouse it’s a glass of Shiraz. 

Find your role to play in experience platforms
Many companies, such as Briq Bookings, accesso, and Holovis are now providing experience platforms that attractions can customise and deploy to their own operations. Every theme park, amusement, family entertainment centre, or attraction of any significant size should be looking at how it can embrace such platforms to enhance and customise operations to each individual guest. 

Don’t neglect your presence on the multisided transactional platforms such as Airbnb, Amazon Explore, Red Balloon and Virgin Experience Days – on and on that list goes. (I think there is at least one operating in nearly every country in the world.) They can be great ways to be discovered and booked by consumers, both local and global.

And despite the tremendous growth in all these kinds of platforms, there’s room for many more. The Experience Economy is set to grow tremendously, for the one thing we learned for sure from the pandemic is that, at least in the developed world, we don’t need more stuff. What gives life meaning is the shared experiences we have with our family, our loved ones, our friends, our colleagues, and even with complete strangers. 

Experience platforms can connect us to these meaningful experiences, and power, enhance, and customise them to our individual wants, needs, and desires.

More: www.attractionsmanagement.com/joepine

Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine

View contents of Spa Business 2022 issue 1
  • Editor's letter: Supersensory
    With our growing insight into how to engage visitors’ more complex senses, it’s time for a new approach, says Magali Robathan
  • People: Jakob Wahl
    IAAPA’s new executive VP and COO shares his plans
  • People: Philippe Chiwy
    De Pinxi’s founder on Choco-Story Bruges and the SpaceBakery project
  • People: Cassie Poland and Ollie Smith
    On taking over the attraction they grew up in – Drusillas
  • Immersive experiences: Joseph Wisne
    Truly ambitious attractions providers need to push the boundaries of immersive design by engaging visitors’ senses of pain, danger, balance, justice and more, argues Roto’s CEO
  • Interview: Esther Dugdale
    As the Burrell Collection relaunches and Eden Qingdao takes shape, Event’s creative director shares her tips for creating experiences that spark joy and curiosity
  • The arts: Room to grow
    Could the space age, ultra flexible design of the new Taipei Performing Arts Center provide a model for future attractions spaces?
  • Museums: Ones to watch
    From an AI museum built by robots to the long-awaited Grand Egyptian Museum, we take a look at some exciting 2022 openings
  • Research: All of history
    As demand for growing honesty in relation to links to slavery and colonialism grows, should attractions be open about their history? Jon Young investigates
  • Opinion: Vince Kadlubek
    Art engages and delights visitors. Kadlubek argues that attractions should embrace and support artists and look for shared initiatives
  • Waterparks: Waves of change
    As The Wave inland surf lake announces plans to open six more sites, we go along for a surf and a sit down with CEO Craig Stoddart
  • Experience economy: Joe Pine
    Experience platforms represent one of the biggest growth opportunities in today’s experience economy, argues Joe Pine. Here’s how to get them right
  • Interview: Cale Heit
    With new themed coasters open at Motiongate Dubai and some intruiging projects underway, Forrec is making the most of the pent up demand for shared experiences. CEO Cale Heit tells us more
Disney’s MagicBand+ debuts this year at Walt Disney World
Disney’s MagicBand+ debuts this year at Walt Disney World / Disneyland Resort
Disney’s MagicBand+ debuts this year at Walt Disney World
Disney’s MagicBand+ debuts this year at Walt Disney World / Disney
Carnival’s Ocean Medallion experience platform “set a new bar for its incredible degree of customisation,” says Pine
Carnival’s Ocean Medallion experience platform “set a new bar for its incredible degree of customisation,” says Pine / Carnival Corporation
/ Carnival Corporation
De Kartfabrique in the Netherlands uses Briq Bookings to customise its offer
De Kartfabrique in the Netherlands uses Briq Bookings to customise its offer / Courtesy of De Kartfabrique Utrecht
/ Courtesy of De Kartfabrique Utrecht
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World Bathing Day

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©Cybertrek 2026
Uniting the world of spa & wellness
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News   Products   Magazine   Subscribe
Experience economy
Joe Pine

Experience platforms are one of the biggest growth opportunities in today’s experience economy, says author and thought leader Joe Pine. He explains how to approach them


Platforms – places where buyers and sellers come together to exchange money for offerings – are not a new phenomenon, at least not in the physical world. Commodities have been sold in farmers markets forever.

High streets and shopping centres have long provided platforms for tangible goods, while malls were more a place for services, such as shoe repair and dry cleaners.

Disneyland is itself a platform, bringing together numerous experiences in one place for guests to enjoy and remember (even if an operational platform, rather than one with offerings from many different suppliers.)

Digital technology has amped up the power and network effects of such transactional platforms, enabling millions and potentially billions of buyers to connect with a boundless number of sellers. Amazon and eBay were early pioneers of goods platforms on the Internet, while Royal FloraHolland switched its commodity flower auctions to digital decades ago. Digital service platforms proliferate across most industries, from Uber to Fiverr to Grubhub, Bumble, Venmo and on and on the list grows. 

And, increasingly, digital platforms offer experiences. Think of Airbnb, which originally sold access to a sofa, a room, a house, but in 2016 created Airbnb Experiences to enable those staying in Airbnb host properties to connect with local experience stagers, particularly those that made guests feel like a local in their visited locale.

Think of the value unleashed – consumers gained easier access to a better overarching experience; local experience stagers gained easier access to a set of consumers eager to experience the locale; and Airbnb got a piece of every transaction.

When the pandemic hit and the platform pivoted to digital experiences, this enabled Airbnb to continue garnering income, while saving many companies that would have gone under without visitors, and saving the sanity of many consumers. 

Operational Experience Platforms
Earlier I described Disneyland as a physical operational platform because it wasn’t multisided like all of the rest above: The Walt Disney Company is not the only experience stager with offerings in the space. It also was one of the first to offer a digital operational platform with its MyMagic+ system in 2013, enabling visitors to connect to, buy, and operate experiences (as well as many services on which the experiences were built, such as park admission and hotel room entry). Guests particularly interacted with it through the IoT device the company created, MagicBand. 

John Padgett, one of the original five members on the project, eventually left for Carnival Corp. where at the Consumer Electronics Show in 2017 he and CEO Arnold Donald announced the Ocean Medallion. This operational experience platform set a new bar for its incredible degree of customisation, enabling every crew member to greet and interact with every guest by name and act on their preferences.

The platform creates a mass customised itinerary for each guest and party and as it learns more – creating what Carnival calls a “guest genome” – it can send out personal experience invitations to enhance itineraries. The Ocean Medallion can even learn things such as when a guest is on the pool deck with his kids his favorite drink is iced tea with no lemon; in the bar with his buddies it’s a mojito; and in the restaurant with his spouse it’s a glass of Shiraz. 

Find your role to play in experience platforms
Many companies, such as Briq Bookings, accesso, and Holovis are now providing experience platforms that attractions can customise and deploy to their own operations. Every theme park, amusement, family entertainment centre, or attraction of any significant size should be looking at how it can embrace such platforms to enhance and customise operations to each individual guest. 

Don’t neglect your presence on the multisided transactional platforms such as Airbnb, Amazon Explore, Red Balloon and Virgin Experience Days – on and on that list goes. (I think there is at least one operating in nearly every country in the world.) They can be great ways to be discovered and booked by consumers, both local and global.

And despite the tremendous growth in all these kinds of platforms, there’s room for many more. The Experience Economy is set to grow tremendously, for the one thing we learned for sure from the pandemic is that, at least in the developed world, we don’t need more stuff. What gives life meaning is the shared experiences we have with our family, our loved ones, our friends, our colleagues, and even with complete strangers. 

Experience platforms can connect us to these meaningful experiences, and power, enhance, and customise them to our individual wants, needs, and desires.

More: www.attractionsmanagement.com/joepine

Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine

View contents of Spa Business 2022 issue 1
  • Editor's letter: Supersensory
    With our growing insight into how to engage visitors’ more complex senses, it’s time for a new approach, says Magali Robathan
  • People: Jakob Wahl
    IAAPA’s new executive VP and COO shares his plans
  • People: Philippe Chiwy
    De Pinxi’s founder on Choco-Story Bruges and the SpaceBakery project
  • People: Cassie Poland and Ollie Smith
    On taking over the attraction they grew up in – Drusillas
  • Immersive experiences: Joseph Wisne
    Truly ambitious attractions providers need to push the boundaries of immersive design by engaging visitors’ senses of pain, danger, balance, justice and more, argues Roto’s CEO
  • Interview: Esther Dugdale
    As the Burrell Collection relaunches and Eden Qingdao takes shape, Event’s creative director shares her tips for creating experiences that spark joy and curiosity
  • The arts: Room to grow
    Could the space age, ultra flexible design of the new Taipei Performing Arts Center provide a model for future attractions spaces?
  • Museums: Ones to watch
    From an AI museum built by robots to the long-awaited Grand Egyptian Museum, we take a look at some exciting 2022 openings
  • Research: All of history
    As demand for growing honesty in relation to links to slavery and colonialism grows, should attractions be open about their history? Jon Young investigates
  • Opinion: Vince Kadlubek
    Art engages and delights visitors. Kadlubek argues that attractions should embrace and support artists and look for shared initiatives
  • Waterparks: Waves of change
    As The Wave inland surf lake announces plans to open six more sites, we go along for a surf and a sit down with CEO Craig Stoddart
  • Experience economy: Joe Pine
    Experience platforms represent one of the biggest growth opportunities in today’s experience economy, argues Joe Pine. Here’s how to get them right
  • Interview: Cale Heit
    With new themed coasters open at Motiongate Dubai and some intruiging projects underway, Forrec is making the most of the pent up demand for shared experiences. CEO Cale Heit tells us more
Disney’s MagicBand+ debuts this year at Walt Disney World
Disney’s MagicBand+ debuts this year at Walt Disney World / Disneyland Resort
Disney’s MagicBand+ debuts this year at Walt Disney World
Disney’s MagicBand+ debuts this year at Walt Disney World / Disney
Carnival’s Ocean Medallion experience platform “set a new bar for its incredible degree of customisation,” says Pine
Carnival’s Ocean Medallion experience platform “set a new bar for its incredible degree of customisation,” says Pine / Carnival Corporation
/ Carnival Corporation
De Kartfabrique in the Netherlands uses Briq Bookings to customise its offer
De Kartfabrique in the Netherlands uses Briq Bookings to customise its offer / Courtesy of De Kartfabrique Utrecht
/ Courtesy of De Kartfabrique Utrecht
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Rainforest immersion and mindfulness are on offer at The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, for Global Wellness Day
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Longevitix launches AI-powered platform to deliver longevity medicine at scale
Longevitix, a clinical platform for preventive and longevity medicine, has launched its AI- powered intelligence system to help physicians deliver continuous, personalised longevity- focused care at scale.
Atmantan Wellness Centre announces new wellness destination in Hyderabad
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The Retreat Costa Rica debuts Vida Mía Longevity Centre
Luxury wellness resort, The Retreat Costa Rica, has introduced its Vida Mía Longevity Centre at the property’s Vida Mía Healing Centre and Spa.
Almost half of spa survey respondents are unaware cancer is a disability and not adapting treatments is discrimination
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FEATURED SUPPLIERS

Endospheres' new protocols are designed to meet real client needs
Spa professionals see it every day: clients are arriving with more complex expectations. [more...]

Le Atelier by C.O.D.E. - bespoke means moving beyond the catalogue to delivering contextual design responses
Le Atelier by C.O.D.E. doesn't offer a standard bespoke service, it provides a highly customised approach to designing massage beds and loungers in high-end wellness environments. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
Comfort Zone

Comfort Zone’s comprehensive face and body professional and retail range allows clients to experien [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

21-23 Jun 2026

Spa Life International (UK)

Midlands (Venue TBA), Liphook, United Kingdom
22-22 Jun 2026

World Bathing Day

Worldwide,
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS