Everyone on the panel has been briefed. The questions from the audience are curated. The networking coffee break produces business card exchanges that result, in the vast majority of cases, in nothing. The post-event LinkedIn coverage celebrates attendance at something that, for the people who actually matter in any given industry, is increasingly not worth attending.
The ultra-wealthy figured this out years ago. And their response was not to stop convening. It was to stop attending other people’s conventions and start creating their own.
The private dinner. The invitation-only gathering at a property that was chosen for the intimacy it creates. The conversation series that happens three times a year with the same fifteen people who have been building trust with each other for long enough that the conversation can be genuinely substantive.
When you control the environment you control everything that matters: the guest list, the duration, the agenda, and the specific alchemy that happens when you put the right combination of people in the right room for long enough that the performance drops and the real conversation starts.
The events that produced more value for me than anything I’ve attended were all private. All small. All designed by someone who had thought carefully about what the combination of people would produce — and created the conditions for it to happen.
At Hype Luxury, we are increasingly in the business of enabling exactly this.
The superyacht that becomes the venue. The private flight that becomes the meeting room. The villa that becomes the setting for the conversation that could not happen in a hotel conference room.
The best gathering you will attend this year will not be announced.
You will be invited by someone who thought specifically about whether you should be there.



