Tuesday, 12 April 2011

My SWOT analysis

My strengths - I have developed a great understanding in my digital skills and have been able to apply this to my creative work. I have seen a difference in quality of my work since learning the new skills, this will also help in my portfolio work.
I have better knowledge of agencies and their clients around the North East and London. My knowledge  has improved because of the contact we have be exposed to by our new course leader Neil. He has aloud us to meet people within industry, by having them come in to visit and give us guidance or we would go out to there work place. I feel this has helped me greatly to understand how the business works.

My weaknesses - I Still do not feel prepared to go into industry because I know I still need to find a new creative partner now that my current partner wants to go back home to Wales to work. This may set me back from getting a job for a while as agency's prefer to hire teams. So I am going to have to take some time to build a new portfolio with another creative partner before I am able to start applying for jobs.

Opportunities - Many doors have been opened for me this year, and I now know what kind of direction I would like to take my career. I have been able to visit agency's in both Newcastle and London. The difference in agency's are really big and it has made me realise I would like to work down in London. Without these opportunities I maybe still wouldn't know where I would like to go after my degree.
The facilities I have access to at Newcastle College are a great help too, I have been able to learn all the correct digital skills I will need to have, ready for when I go into industry.

Threats - I know the industry is a very tough place to get into, and I know it is also very competitive. This will be a really big threat to me because I know it is not nice to not be able to get a job. Another big threat will be that there is people around who will be better than me and maybe have more experience than me. I am going to try and not let these problems bother me as I am very passionate about this business and I will work very hard to get into the industry.



London - Saatchi&Saatchi

Saatchi&Saatchi was the last visit we made in London. Susan Hails was the creative who we were presenting our San Miguel campaign too. The agency was very striking and smart, I was really attracted to it from the out side. Susan took us through the agency and out the back to the company's bar which is were we presented as the room which she originally had planned was out of use. I didn't mind though because the bar was beautiful and had some catching advertisements on the walls.
My idea was based around the strap like Hannah and I came up with, 'Sip. Savour. San Miguel.' I really like it but we did struggle with the art direction. We ended up going with places where you would most like to spend your time enjoying a cold beer like by the beach or in a park with beautiful scenery.
When I presented my idea, she really liked the thought behind it but she admitted it wasn't quite there yet, which Hannah and I knew. She suggested using my thoughts but applying it to a interactive online kind of advertisement. So we are going to take this advice and develop our idea so we are able to use it for our portfolio.

London - Ogilvy

We went on a visit to Ogilvy to visit there digital lab and have a tour around there building. Ogilvy was nothing like I had expected, it was totally different to any other agency I have visited or researched about. It was very corporate, although it was creatively decorated and clean cut. There was an open passage way which was filled with all of the awards Ogilvy have won in the past.



I found the digital lab very interesting. There was all sorts of creations which you could interact with. A lot of the things they were still in the process of completing though but you were still able to see what they would do. My favourite was the interactive table although it does cost £3000!! It was like a giant iPad but on a table. When we first went in it was an image of the bottom of the sea, with sand and stones with the water slightly moving with the fan that was on next to it. When I touched it it made water circles like real water would. It was very impressive, we then started to play on it and opened up lots of different games and apps.

Monday, 11 April 2011

London - Advertising Standards Athority (ASA)

When I first found out that we would be visiting the ASA I wasn't really looking forward to it, thinking that it would be a typical 'boring, sitting in a room while somebody talks' lecture.
How wrong was I!
I really enjoyed the visit, I found it really intresting and could have sat there for a few more hours listening about banned adverts, and the complaints they have recieved.
The ASA deal with all the complaints about any advertisments, whether is its a TV ad, billboard or print ad. They are the ones which set the rules which all advertisers must obide by.

One advert by Bacardi, which we were shown from a few year ago would not be aloud to be shown now because it is suggestive in the way that you are going to have a good time when alcohol is used and good things happen to you. It is a good advert though I really like it.



This Bacardi advert is again funny and I really like it. It gives off the same impression but it isn't breaking any rules which the ASA have.

London - RKCR/Y&R

This was the second visit I have had to Y&R, I loved it just as much as the first time. The difference this time was we got the chance to present our work to the placement team there.
We were set a brief for Interflora and the proposition was 'Get Flowers Delivered'. I struggled to think of an idea which wasn't so obvious. So Hannah and I started to think of strap lines instead. We usually leave those till last because its neither of our strong points but I was quite happy with the one we chose, it was simple but effective. Deliver a smile. We thought that it suited the brand and no matter what reason you receive flowers, whether is a happy or sad situation you always get a warm feeling and smile.
When I presented our idea the creative team liked the line but was a bit unsure about the art direction as we used a characterised smile which went into a lady's office and then dispersed into a big bunch of flowers. So me and Hannah have decided we will look back into the brief and see what other direction we could go down.

Thursday, 7 April 2011

London - Mother

Mother was the first agency we visited when we arrived in London. Both the first year and second year's were going to Mother but it was only my year, the second year, who was presenting work we had produced from the brief they had set us.

When I walked up towards the agency it looked really good, it was in some kind of back street and it was painted all black with lovely graffiti down the side. Inside it was like a converted warehouse, it was all concrete and metal poles, but decorated with extravagant red colours and gold frames. The reception area wall had photos of everybody mothers in old fashioned gold frames which I think is a brilliant idea.





This brief was for www.moneysupermarket.com, and if I'm honest, it was very hard. All that was going through my head was 'the meerkats'! As you know that is the biggest competitor for money supermarket. So many ideas went through mine and my creative partners mind, but everything that was coming out seemed 'obvious'.
In the end I suggested doing something with a family where the kids always out smarted the adults, Hannah then asked if I had ever seen the programme 'Outnumbered'. I hadn't, but for most of the afternoon we sat watching clips on YouTube. It was the way I had thought about the advert in my head. This is the idea we went for in the end, we would have it as a TV advert and had different scenarios for the different products you could get on the website.

When it came to actually presenting I was really nervous as my partner Hannah wasn't there and it was my first time presenting without her. Plus it was such a good agency which i would love the opportunity to work in one day. My presentation went well, but they were not over fussed on the idea. They didn't really seem to like anyone's really, well not to a standard which could be used. Everyone needed more development and work.

Friday, 18 March 2011

Today we had a talk with Dave MacDonald from Infinite Design. Dave is a local Geordie, he actually studied at Newcastle College like me. He was a lovely guy, really friendly. I felt comfortable listening to him and didn't grow bored or fidgety, I was really taking in everything he said. He had some good things to say, which actually made me feel better in myself after having a slightly down week.

Here is the tips he thought would be helpful. This is what he looks for in a creative, in this order too:

Personality - Be yourself
Portfolio - As long as the work is good and the ideas are there
Passion - Must have passion in the business


He then went on to go into more detail about each of these points:

Personality - Be relaxed
                     Professional - be on time
                     Be honest - always be yourself, the way you dress/speak etc

Portfolio - Genuine - only show your own work! (he said it is true that people take other work and                
                                                                               pretend it's their own!)
                 Confidence - Everyones different, some people will like your work, other people wont.
                                      Make sure you believe in your work and big it up.
                 Receptive - Take notes of what people say about your work, and make changes where you
                                    see fit.

Passion - Brave - Show your work, even if you are slightly unsure of it. Let them decide if they like it,
                            take advice.
                Committed - If you believe in it then stick with it.
                Positive - Be Confident and be relaxed.

Dave then went on to show us his journey from where he started and how he ended up where he is today. I found it to be an interesting one, it was clear it isn't easy to get into the business. To cut a long story short, he went down to London to work for two big company's, found it wasn't for him so he moved back up North for a job but ended up being on the dole for a year till he managed to get into a few agencies up here, to then end up in his current position at Infinite Design.

Some of his work is very well produced, in particular I really liked his work which he done for Dance City. He used the coloured windows from the building within the brochures, it acted like a branding for the company, I thought it was really successful.

Here is a link to the companys website http://www.infinitedesign.com/recent.asp