As the Executive Creative Director of EWI Worldwide, Chris Petit turns brand concepts into immersive experiences that captivate and inspire. With 18 years in experiential design, he has crafted everything from high-end automotive showcases and lifestyle pop-ups to trade shows and digital activations, blending creativity with precision to make every moment unforgettable.
I have a BFA in Interior Architectural Design and 18 years of experience in Experiential Design, from concept to execution, for a variety of brands—including traditional trade shows, high-end automotive, unique lifestyle pop-up events, and digital activations.
My passion for drawing, painting, and fashion has also brought me to customizing footwear allowing yet another outlet for my creative expression to showcase my true commitment to the precision of details.
Every project is obviously different. However, the one thing that stays consistent is developing an overall and creative strategy based on the objectives given.
Everything that follows – development of architecture, graphics, media content, customer journey, etc. - is vetted out in a variety of ways that all point back to the initial reasoning and tie harmoniously into the brand.
I think one’s country/cultural heritage could have some impact on the human ego, personality traits, and one’s own willingness to consider multiple solutions, which in turn I suppose could have an impact on the creative process - especially when the creative process involves a larger team.
That is, as a leader I believe you have to be confident in your own right, command respect by lifting others, navigate multiple viewpoints and personalities, all while steering a large ship with unforeseen obstacles and tight timelines. And on top of all that, as a leader you need to acknowledge that the creative process can be an emotional and vulnerable one - where your work, big or small, will be subject to opinions and scrutiny.
It is at this point that one’s creative process and leadership, whether impacted by country or cultural heritage or not, will reveal itself.
1) Seeing your work get built will always reign supreme at the top of the list.
2) Blessed with a great team and leadership makes the process fun.
3) Having the opportunity to travel around the world.
AI will undoubtedly be fully woven into our industry and will completely commoditize creative writing, visual aid, and media content (if it hasn’t already). The line between trained creatives and novices who have access to AI will be blurred, thus disrupting the industry in ways that yield a convincingly false reality accepted to be true by the majority.
That said, as this industry evolves with more and more integration of AI, my hope is that human discernment for authenticity and the need for human emotional connections will never succumb to prompts.
When I was a professor at Long Beach State University teaching an advanced 3D Studio Max class (and graduating from the same design program as my students), I would always tell them that dedication and passion is everything.
You are either all in or not at all. Like all creative fields, the training, research, and countless hours of work will consume you – but remember to balance this dedication with other interests or hobbies.
As the Executive Creative Director of EWI Worldwide, Chris Petit turns brand concepts into immersive experiences that captivate and inspire. With 18 years in experiential design, he has crafted everything from high-end automotive showcases and lifestyle pop-ups to trade shows and digital activations, blending creativity with precision to make every moment unforgettable.
Explore the journey of the Scott Mansfield, the Platinum Winner of the 2024 MUSE Creative Awards. He is a Retail Creative Director at EWI Worldwide with 16 years of experience leading designers and engineers to develop innovative retail solutions. A hands-on leader, he thrives on collaboration to create exceptional client experiences.