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Joy

Joy On Your Way: A Conversation with Sarah Jane Lynch, Global Head of Marketing

ARI Picture Conor McCabe Photography.

26 Jun 2026

Three years after its introduction, Joy On Your Way continues to shape how ARI connects with colleagues, partners and travellers around the world. What began as a brand platform has evolved into a shared mindset, influencing everything from customer experiences and marketing campaigns to local activations and everyday interactions.

Its success lies in the way it balances a clear global idea with authentic local expression, creating meaningful connections across diverse markets while remaining relevant to the people it serves.

 

As ARI celebrates Joy Day 2026, Sarah Jane reflects on the impact of Joy On Your Way, the lessons learned, and why human connection remains one of the most powerful drivers of lasting experiences.

What does Joy Day reveal about ARI as a business that people might not see from the outside?

“I think what surprises people most is how deliberately we invest in culture as a business capability.

From the outside, people see stores, products, campaigns and commercial performance. What they don’t always see is the strength of connection that sits behind them. Joy Day gives us a visible expression of that.

As marketers, we often talk about brand promises, but those promises only become meaningful when they are consistently delivered by people. Joy Day demonstrates how seriously we take that responsibility. It shows that Joy On Your Way isn’t simply a customer-facing idea. It shapes how we engage with colleagues, partners and travellers across our entire business.

For me, that’s one of ARI’s genuine differentiators. We have built a global brand expression that connects people across different countries, cultures and markets while still feeling authentic at a local level.”

Looking back over the last three years, where have you seen Joy On Your Way make the biggest difference to the business?

“The biggest impact has been creating a shared sense of purpose across our global business.

Three years ago, Joy On Your Way gave us a common language and a belief that colleagues, partners and leadership teams could rally behind. What has struck me most is how naturally people have embraced it. Whether you’re in Montreal, Cyprus, Portugal, Muscat or Dublin, teams understand what it means and what it looks like in practice.

It has helped connect colleagues and partners across different markets while creating a more consistent experience for travellers, all without losing the local personality that makes each location unique.

From a marketing perspective, it has fundamentally changed how we build campaigns and experiences. Whether we’re developing a Christmas campaign, an in-store activation, a digital experience or a partner collaboration, we start by asking how we can create meaningful moments for people.

That shift has strengthened both our brand and our commercial performance because customers increasingly remember experiences, not just transactions. Joy On Your Way helps us focus on creating experiences that people remember.”

How do you keep Joy Day feeling genuinely local and personal in every market?

“One of the biggest mistakes global brands can make is confusing consistency with uniformity. We don’t want every location doing exactly the same thing. We want every location expressing the same idea in a way that feels authentic to its own people and community.

Our role at a global level is to create the framework, the tools and the inspiration. Local teams then bring it to life in a way that reflects their culture, personalities and market dynamics.

One of the things I’ve enjoyed most over the last three years is seeing how differently teams interpret the same idea. The expressions are often completely different, but the spirit behind them is remarkably consistent.

This year’s Joy Wall is a great example. The platform is shared globally, but the stories being uploaded are deeply personal and locally relevant. What brings joy to a colleague in Cyprus may look different from what brings joy to a colleague in Montreal or Abu Dhabi, but the underlying emotion is universal.

That’s what makes the programme work globally.”

Has there been a market, idea or activation this year that made you stop and think, “I wish I’d thought of that myself”?

“One activation that immediately comes to mind is what the Muscat Duty Free team created for Valentine’s Day earlier this year.”

“What impressed me wasn’t just the execution itself, but the thinking behind it. The team transformed what could have been a traditional retail promotion into a genuinely memorable passenger experience through live music, personalised gifting and thoughtful moments of surprise and delight.

As marketers, we’re always trying to find the sweet spot between emotional engagement and commercial impact, and I thought the team achieved that brilliantly. They created an experience that encouraged passengers to pause, interact and connect with the moment, while also supporting gifting occasions and driving engagement across key categories.

The activation felt authentic to the market, relevant to the audience and completely aligned with Joy On Your Way. It demonstrated that some of the most powerful retail experiences don’t come from the biggest budgets or the most complex technology. They come from understanding people and creating moments that make them feel something.”

 

When Joy Week comes to an end, what do you hope colleagues, partners and travellers take away from it?

“I hope they take away a reminder that relationships still matter.

We’re operating in a world that is becoming increasingly digital, automated and transactional. While those advances bring many benefits, people still remember how they were treated and how they felt. Great products, world-class brands and beautiful stores all matter, but very often what people remember most is the experience itself.

That’s one of the reasons Joy On Your Way continues to resonate. It reminds us that human connection remains one of the most powerful ways to differentiate in travel retail.

For colleagues, I hope Joy Week reinforces a sense of pride and belonging.

For partners, I hope it demonstrates the culture that sits behind our business and why relationships remain central to how we work.

For travellers, I hope it translates into small but meaningful moments that make their journey a little more enjoyable.

Ultimately, Joy Week is not really about a single day or even a single week. It’s about reinforcing the behaviours, connections and experiences that create value throughout the year. If people leave with a stronger sense of connection, then we’ve achieved exactly what we set out to do.”

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