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Phil Pirkovic from Shinola:

How 127 Hotel Rooms Became a Daily Sales Channel

Phil Pirkovic

Director of Brand and Partnerships

Company

Shinola

Location

Detroit, Michigan, United States

Bio

Philip Pirkovic is a brand marketing leader with 13+ years of experience building cultural relevance and commercial growth for global giants, startups, and heritage brands. Most recently, he served as the first Director of Brand & Partnerships at Shinola, where he led brand strategy, GTM, and creative for one of America’s most design-driven companies, successfully pivoting the brand to reach a younger, modern demographic. He specializes in creating platforms, partnerships, and storytelling that move beyond campaigns and into moments people care about. From architecting Google’s flagship global brand experiences to leading integrated strategies for Zola, Bumble, Whoop, and Venmo, Philip has a proven track record of driving "brand heat" and long-term equity through high-impact cultural positioning. His work has been featured in Rolling Stone, GQ, Complex, Adweek, Business of Fashion, Highsnobiety, and more.

Philip Pirkovic is a brand marketing...

description

Born in Detroit, Shinola is a design brand with an unwavering commitment to crafting lasting products, from watches to leather goods and even a hotel. We celebrate timeless design and thoughtful craftsmanship with products and stories that inspire people to live well and be confident in a style that is uniquely their own.

Born in Detroit, Shinola is a...

Actionable Takeaways

Turn Your Brand's Physical Footprint Into a Demand Generation Engine:

Phil discovered that 70% of hotel guests had never purchased a Shinola product. Rather than leaving that opportunity on the table, the team created a watch lending program — guests could call the front desk, have a curated selection of watches delivered to their room, and wear one to dinner. The result was a daily pipeline of 127 warm prospects who could physically experience the product. For brands with any kind of physical presence, the lesson is clear: audit every touchpoint for untapped conversion potential before spending on new acquisition channels.

Lead With Emotional Memory, Not Product Features:

Early Shinola marketing leaned heavily on "made in America" and product craftsmanship. Phil's unlock was recognizing that customers weren't buying watches — they were anchoring memories to them. Graduation gifts, first raises, wedding milestones. Once the team started telling those stories, the brand gained a dimension no competitor could easily replicate. For brands in considered-purchase categories (anything $100+), map the emotional occasion behind the purchase before building creative briefs.

"Experienced by Few, Witnessed by Many" — The Framework for Experiential ROI:

Phil brought this principle from his time on Google's Brand Experience team and applied it directly at Shinola. The idea: design activations that are intimate and meaningful for the people inside them, then use content and social distribution to make the experience visible to a much larger audience. This reframes the ROI calculus for events and activations — the in-room experience doesn't need to scale, the content does. Before dismissing experiential as too expensive or too narrow, ask whether your content strategy is built to amplify it.

Make the Brand the Sidekick, Not the Hero:

At Google, Phil's team stopped making Google the center of their content. Instead, they built stories around real people — a picky eater, a comedian navigating a city — and let Google quietly solve their problem in the background. The same logic applies at Shinola: the watch isn't the story. The memory attached to it is. Brands that consistently center their customer's life, not their product, build the kind of emotional relevance that drives word-of-mouth.

Retail Is a Brand Medium, Not Just a Distribution Channel:

Phil worked closely with Shinola's retail team to ensure that the storytelling built in marketing carried through to the store floor — down to making sure every watch displayed was set to the correct time. At a price point of $1,000–$4,000, every detail signals whether the brand can be trusted. For any brand operating in physical retail, the question isn't just "how does the store look?" but "does this environment reflect the same story we're telling everywhere else?"

Craft Brand Identity Can Be a Strategic Moat Against AI Disruption:

When asked about AI adoption, Phil was direct: Shinola's designers still start every watch with pen on paper. The analog process — the foam-core boards covered in hand sketches, the human touch in Detroit assembly — isn't inefficiency. It's the brand. For consumer brands built on craft and authenticity, leaning into the human process isn't nostalgia. It's differentiation that algorithmic tools can't replicate.

Conversation Highlights

In this episode of The Future of Marketing, host Andres Figueira sits down with Phil Pirkovic, former Director of Brand and Partnerships at Shinola. Phil built the brand’s storytelling infrastructure from scratch — shifting Shinola from a product-and-factory narrative into a full lifestyle brand rooted in emotional memory. He shares how he engineered experiential touchpoints across 21 stores, a Detroit hotel, and a small but disciplined marketing team to compete in a $6 billion watch industry without a massive budget.

Topics Discussed:

  • Why “experience by few, witnessed by many” is the north star for physical brand activation
  • Turning a hotel into a 127-room-per-night sales and brand discovery channel
  • Shifting Shinola’s narrative from “made in America” to emotional memory and milestone moments
  • Managing brand consistency across retail, e-commerce, a factory, and a hotel with a team of 15
  • The difference between marketing a utility brand (Google) vs. a premium product brand (Shinola)
  • Why analog craft brands should be skeptical of AI adoption — and when it might eventually make sense
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