You’re the event
Hot Take
You’re the event.
BoomPop Team · 11/01/2025Little ways to apply experience design to your everyday life.
We plan a lot of events. Parties. Offsites. (“Strategic gatherings,” if you want to be corporate about it). So, we think a lot about vibes. About how dimming the lights after dinner changes the energy. How a surprise ice cream on a Tuesday can heal something in your soul. How one handwritten name card can make someone feel like the main character.
But here’s the thing: you don’t need a massive guest list or a balloon arch to create a moment worth remembering. You just need a little intention.
Does it look too pretty to eat? EAT IT.
Experience design—fancy phrase, simple idea—is about creating the conditions for something good to happen. Connection. Joy. A spark. The same stuff that makes a kickoff or company offsite feel alive works just as well on a random weekday.
When we plan events, we’re in the business of comfort and chemistry. We think about how to make people feel at ease enough to show up as themselves. We make sure everyone’s got what they need (without having to ask), and we always leave room for wandering, lingering, or saying yes to something unplanned.
We don’t lay in the grass and stare at the clouds enough.
You might not be passing out name tags today, but you can still design your own little moment.
Some small things to try:
Let chaos set your route home. Take the long way. Try the weird pastry. Learn a dog’s name (crucial).
Dress like you’ve got somewhere to be—even if it’s just the frozen aisle.
Light the “special occasion” candle. Pour the sparkling thing. Play the song that makes you feel cinematic.
Teach your friend that one oddly specific skill you’ve mastered (we see you, calligraphy savants and Bourdain-loving chefs).
Now that’s a Bourdain-inspired mussels dish.
None of this is about aesthetics—it’s about how you want to feel.
The details just set the tone.
A single bland moment won’t change your life. But the right one, in the right context? A pivotal film arc in your story.
So maybe the secret to designing a great event—or a great Wednesday—isn’t in the budget, the venue, or the big reveal.
Maybe it’s just noticing. And choosing, on purpose, to make the little things more worthwhile.
Why not sip juice out of a snifter like it’s fine wine?

