Homegrown Resonate Pictures cultivates corporate market through creative risks

July 25, 2018  |  Austin Barnes

Resonate Pictures

The same creative energy reverberating through cities like Los Angeles, New York City and Portland can be found in Kansas City, said Marc Havener, the filmmaker behind Lawrence-based Resonate Pictures.

His message for fellow creatives: “We can make this back home.”

Marc Havener, Resonate Pictures

Marc Havener, Resonate Pictures

After 10 years on the sets of blockbuster movies like “Pirates of the Caribbean,” “Legally Blonde,” and “Confessions of a Dangerous Mind,” Havener traded life in Los Angeles for rural roots in Lawrence.

“I wanted to be in a position where I could direct my own projects,” the production company CEO said.

Dozens of boxes and a moving truck later, Havener found himself traveling down a new road one void of yellow bricks; paved instead with opportunity.  

Resonate Pictures began to take shape 11 years ago, under the belief “people don’t want to be told, they want to be moved,” he said. Turning common, corporate video themes on their head quickly became the company’s strategy.

“Story is the tried and true method of how human beings are inspired,” Havener said.

Under that philosophy, he and his contemporaries believed Resonate Pictures could shatter industry barriers by offering clients heartfelt, dramatic, training videos with cinematic flair.

But how does a startup production company cut through the noise of an oversaturated industry? Personal relationships make a difference, Havener said.

“Be good to everyone,” he advised. “People you hire now will (someday) be hiring you.”

Enter Spotify.

Stan Herd, crop circles artist

The music streaming service employed the talents of Nashville-based artist Stan Herd — a former colleague of Havener — in June and early July to create crop circles in fields outside of Lawrence. The images formed were promotional art for the company’s “Hot Country” playlist.

“I came in as a drone photographer,” Havener recalled as he detailed a “tissue session” with Spotify and Herd. After staring at storyboards and absorbing the company’s vision for a TV commercial, Havener thought, “How can we find the magic?” he said.

The filmmaker got to work.

“At this point I wasn’t invited to the table … all I could do was speculate and get creative,” he said.

Doing so resulted in a pitch for three separate commercials, advertising the “Hot Country” playlist — featuring artists Luke Bryan, Kelsea Ballerini and Jason Aldean.

Hopeful Resonate Pictures would be given a chance, Havener sent his ideas to Spotify and fell asleep. He awoke 15 minutes later to dozens of e-mails and messages praising his pitch.

“We had a legitimate shot,” Havener said, beaming.

Excitement, however, soon turned to disappointment. Despite loving Havener’s pitch, Spotify chose an L.A.-based production company to lead their project — a decision Havener said he understood.

Crop circle art of Luke Bryan, country music artist

Resonate Pictures

Crop circle art of Jason Aldean, country music artist

Although it seemed Spotify had closed a door, a window opened. The company was granted the opportunity to direct a web spot for the streaming service.  

This was a direct-to-brand project,” Havener explained. It was rare air for a company of Resonate Pictures’ size, much less a local production house.

“The lesson learned is to focus on the creative,” he said Spotify saw that.

Not only did Spotify respond to Resonate Pictures’ creative thinking, so did the project’s celebrity subjects, Havener said.

“Jason Aldean loved it and wanted his own version of the video to put on his social streams,” the filmmaker said proudly.

Moving forward, Havener’s company plans to use its experience with Spotify to build momentum and bring in new business — proving to clients that the seemingly impossible can be achieved with limited resources, he said.

Check out Resonate Pictures’ web commercial for Spotify below.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Austin Wilcox and Wondabeka Ashenafi, SERV Nutrition

        Major Kansas City grocery chains stock SERV Nutrition less than a year into business

        By Tommy Felts | July 25, 2019

        Doing good is more than just a motto for SERV Nutrition — it’s the state of the startup’s operation seven months into business, Isaac Collins said as the company’s patented protein pods hit shelves at Price Chopper and Hen House stores across the metro.  “Online sales have been going well, but we saw a great…

        2018 LaunchKC winners

        KCMO turns to entrepreneurs for new ideas on budget support; Advocates to rally at work sessions

        By Tommy Felts | July 25, 2019

        Raised voices and a commitment to civic engagement earned entrepreneurs an additional $350,000 in city support for the 2019 budget year and a second attempt is about to begin, explained Rick Usher.  “It really goes back to when the resident work sessions started in 2018,” Usher, KCMO assistant city manager for entrepreneurship and small business,…

        Tammie Wahaus, ELIAS Animal Health

        Biotech firms: Health innovation can’t grow in KC with wet lab space in such short supply

        By Tommy Felts | July 25, 2019

        ELIAS Animal Health is advancing a technology that can fundamentally change how cancer is treated in both humans and animals, said CEO Tammie Wahaus, yet finding lab space in the metro has been one of the biotech startup’s biggest tests.   “We’re doing a lot of cell culture work, which requires wet lab space, but there…