OKOIOS
Client relationship management, CRM/process work, commercial follow-up, and revenue/client growth references.
Additional work
Not every source deserves a full public case study yet. This page keeps the wider material visible without pretending it all has the same level of proof or maturity.
Client relationship management, CRM/process work, commercial follow-up, and revenue/client growth references.
Catalogue analysis, revenue/streaming context, MYOB/London learning through ATM Artists, and a more practical understanding of how music becomes a business asset.
Open supporting caseLuxury object storytelling, provenance, product families, atelier language, certificates of authenticity, watch research, hospitality, F1 partnership logic, and UHNW cultural codes.
Blueprints around provenance, access, celebrity archives, trust infrastructure, events, and high-touch service models.
Early material around documentary-style storytelling, cultural positioning, visual proof, and turning a human idea into a clearer project narrative.
Maison Royere
The Royere material is useful because it shows a very specific skill: translating design history, materials, provenance, and craft into product language that feels premium without becoming empty. The work touched descriptions for pieces such as the Ours-Polaire sofa and armchair, the Rouleaux sofa, the Liane wall light, Croisillon chairs, Ondulation pieces, and related product families.
The price context matters because the brand may be unknown to a hiring reader. Public auction and design-market reporting places important Royere works in six- and seven-figure territory, which explains why the tone has to balance scholarship, restraint, confidence, and sales clarity.
Market context from Architectural Digest Record-sale context from Architectural Digest
Copy direction around biomorphic form, deep-pile alpaca velvet, hand-sewn seams, solid wood construction, and the piece's place in post-war modernity.
Editorial tone around organic line, connoisseurship, sculptural lighting, and the shift from object description to desire.
Work across sofas, armchairs, chairs, consoles, lamps, and recognizable Royere vocabularies such as Croisillon and Ondulation.
At this level, product copy has to carry provenance, authenticity, craftsmanship, and market confidence without sounding inflated.
These boards keep the secondary chapters visible without overstating them. They show the worlds the research touched: client growth, catalogue IP, luxury codes, hospitality, and cultural-access concepts.
Supports the wider pattern: client follow-up, process thinking, and business-development habits outside the larger case studies.
The quieter chapter behind the artist work: rights, data, catalogues, and judgement.
Archival design research used to understand heritage, authorship, object value, and how a house explains its cultural legitimacy.
The Royere material included product families, provenance, authenticity language, and the translation of design history into buyer-facing copy.
Research touched the vocabulary of Ours-Polaire, Rouleaux, Liane, Croisillon, Ondulation, atelier craft, and certificate-led provenance.
Shows the cultural side of the profile: product meaning, heritage, scarcity, provenance, and the codes of high-end buying.
Relevant to roles where partnerships, status, guest experience, and brand environment need to work together.
Early thinking around celebrity archives, access, identity, and provenance as a service layer.
A public-facing example of how cultural material can become a clearer platform story.
A supporting chapter around emotional clarity, campaign language, and story structure.
Shows how place, atmosphere, and human stakes can carry a project narrative beyond a written brief.
Useful evidence for roles where ideas need to become pitchable, emotional, and visually legible.
A small but useful reminder that the wider story includes shoots, access, events, and practical coordination beyond the main case studies.