In 2002, Morgan Stanley described Lightscape Networks as having “the finest converged product” in the metro optical transport market. What the Israeli-based ECI Telecom company lacked was a US market presence — and a trade show debut that would announce its arrival loudly enough to be heard over Cisco, Nortel, and a crowded field of surviving optical networking startups all competing for a finite pool of carrier capital spending.
The Bloom Agency was engaged to create the launch campaign for Lightscape’s XDM platform — a next-generation multi-service optical switch that combined SONET/SDH, DWDM, data switching, and digital cross-connect functionality into a single compact shelf — at the Optical Fiber Conference, one of the industry’s most significant annual gatherings. The strategic challenge was considerable: introduce a foreign manufacturer’s flagship product to a US audience already deeply invested in incumbent solutions, make it impossible to ignore at the show floor, and do it with the kind of creative confidence that signals a company ready to compete at the highest level.
The concept The Bloom Agency developed was “One Singular Sensation” — a deliberate Broadway reference that reframed Lightscape’s US debut as a theatrical opening night. The XDM’s core value proposition — one platform combining the functionality of multiple network layers — mapped perfectly onto the campaign line, which we carried across every touchpoint with consistent wit and visual energy. The concept was not just a headline. It was a fully produced campaign.
The video component was conceived and scripted entirely by The Bloom Agency. The production staged the XDM hardware as the sole performer on an auditorium stage — a wide-eyed director discovering its capabilities during a callback audition as the scene unfolds around it. Four booth attendant models dressed in authentic Broadway production costumes rented from a Los Angeles theatrical costume house completed the theatrical environment, presenting the hardware live against a booth backdrop featuring the production playing on continuous loop. The concept was fully committed: the XDM was the singular sensation, the trade show floor was opening night, and every engineer who stopped at booth 3912 was the audience.
The campaign extended across trade show booth graphics, print advertising, direct mail, conference collateral, and interactive display elements — all carrying the orange, navy, and black palette and the theatrical energy of the opening concept. The booth number — 3912 — became a recurring graphic element woven through the campaign, turning a logistical detail into a destination marker.
Lightscape’s XDM was, by most technical assessments, an exceptional product. The campaign we built for its US debut gave it an entrance worthy of that assessment. That the broader market battle ultimately went to entrenched incumbents is a story about timing and capital, not about the quality of the work — or the product.
Creative Direction, Campaign Concept, Art Direction, Trade Show Design, Print Advertising, Direct Mail, Video Production, Collateral Design

