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    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    Junior Event // 19

    Junior last Wednesday was pretty rad. We had Jason Ross – the Executive Creative Director of CHE (http://www NULL.che NULL.com NULL.au/) give us 8 tips in 8 minutes, at the grand ol’ time of 8pm. According to the Chinese, the number 8 (http://www NULL.beijingmadeeasy NULL.com/beijing-society/china-lucky-numbers) is as lucky as it gets. So if you happened to find yourself there, be sure to think of yourself as one of the lucky ones.

    It’s also pretty darn lucky we filmed the whole thing just in case you missed it.


    ADVERTISING, DRINKS | Also tagged CHE, DRINKS, JASON ROSS

    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    The Monday Morning WHIP // 74

    Opportunities for a job, internship, new love or random cool thing are around all the time. But, as Stan (http://branddna NULL.blogspot NULL.com/) sees in you all, would you know what to do if you saw one?

    Last Wednesday I joined a selection of Melbourne Creative Directors for Portfolio Night. For those of you who are not familiar with it, it’s like a cross between speed dating and showing your folio.

    Without wanting to overstate it, the night is pretty much a chance in a lifetime for aspiring creatives, as it allows juniors to hawk their wares to around a dozen CDs over the course of a single night.

    Notice how I said hawk their wares, not show their folio? Well sadly many of the kids that I saw came simply to show their folio.

    I’d say I saw around a dozen kids on the night. And all of them had at least one interesting piece in their folios.

    But very few of them came prepared to make the most of the opportunity.

    I asked every person I saw if they had a business card. Two people gave me a card and one gave me a cd of their folio. But the others didn’t have anything for me to put on my pinboard or keep in my drawer.

    Which is an opportunity missed.

    WHIP | Also tagged FOLIO, PORTFOLIO NIGHT, WHIP

    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    The Interview Series // 31


    Meet David Klein. He’s the Associate Creative Director in charge of BMF (http://www NULL.bmf NULL.com NULL.au/)’s new Melbourne office. It’s easy to see why BMF (one of Australia’s better ad agencies) put this hokey-faced bro in charge. You’ve probably seen his work for Nestle Drumstick (http://www NULL.youtube NULL.com/watch?v=PqyiFtLnKkc) or that shining beacon of football advertising, Toyota AFL ‘Footy Moments’ (http://www NULL.youtube NULL.com/watch?v=zqjDS9ksbRk). It’s all gold! And you know why? Cause Dave just gets it. He knows his shit. We’ve done our fair share of these interviews with advertising bros and this one takes the cake. It’s all here: How to get a job, coming up with good ideas, what to do with award annuals, how the fuck to figure this whole game out. If advertising is something you’re thinking about, then don’t just read the highlighted bits like you normally do. Read it all slacker, sheeeeeesh.

    Junior: Ok Dave, give us the low-down. What do you think the main challenges are facing juniors today…

    David Klein: It’s probably exactly the same as when I started. To know what to do? Who to listen to? How to get into a good agency? How to crack the brief? All that sort of stuff. One of the tricky things is to work out who you want to listen to. You have to work out who you want to take advice from because if you take everyone’s advice – you’ll go mad.

    And always thinking, I have to be in a good agency to do good work. You can do good work anywhere. It sometimes is easier in a good agency but then there are other challenges. Like the fact there’s probably a whole lot of really talented people competing with you to crack the brief. At the end of the day if you’re driven to do well, you will.

    Jr: So go back to the beginning – Where did you start? Did you have a career strategy when you went out and got your first job?

    D: I don’t think I had any idea what a strategy was back then. I did graphic design at Swinburne University, and I had some sort of vague idea advertising could be fun. I managed to get a job just before I left Uni, at a place that did a bit of mainstream advertising, but a lot more direct marketing. It was a pretty good learning, but wasn’t quite what I was into—I wanted to be in a mainstream agency. I didn’t like coupons and reply paid envelopes that much. I worked on my folio day and night and finally cracked a job at Grey Melbourne working on the TAC. It was a great, I really felt like I’d found where I wanted to be, and importantly what I wanted to do.

    I spent two years at Grey and then went to London for a couple of years. It was a good learning curve, and very different, it made me realise that Australia is a great place to make ads. There aren’t as many barriers, and things just don’t take as long. Obviously it depends on what agency you’re at, who your clients are and how much money is involved – but generally, in Australia, you can get stuff done cheaply.

    Jr: Tell us your thoughts on going overseas – I think we speak from all juniors out there when I say we all want to do it at some point. But what’s the best way to go about it?

    D: I don’t think there’s a right or wrong way to do it. I know people who have had hardly any experience who have done really well and people who have been really great who haven’t. I think it’s often about your attitude. You have to be really, really hungry. Don’t expect anyone to help you, especially in London. To most Londoners you’re just another Aussie. And don’t be surprised if you’re asked to work for free. It’s pretty weird, if your folio is good enough they’ll ask you to do a placement and then if you can prove that your any good then they’ll pay you.

    I reckon going over as a team is an advantage too. It means you’re easier to employ. And you’ve got someone to hang out with when it gets tough. And trust me, it will be tough.

    Jr: Speaking of working for free – It seems like non-paid placements in Australian agencies are becoming common. Our parents think we’re crazy, but do you think it’s becoming more of a way in? At the same time, how do we make sure we’re not getting fucked over?

    D: I think you need to recognise when you are being taken for a ride, and when you aren’t. If it is somewhere that you really want to work then you should go for it, because just getting in the door is awesome. I think over here we are less inclined to rip people off and it’s more of a test to see if you are any good and that you can fit in the work environment. As much as your folio is key for getting a job, it’s also who you are as a person and if you can work with people around you. The only way you can know is to get in an agency and test that out. If it’s where you want to go, then do it.

    Jr: Do you think it’s as hard, or harder now to get a job in the industry than it was when you started?

    D: It’s hard to answer that one because I’m not trying to get a job. I think it’s probably different because there are so many options now. When I started you went to a mainstream agency, or direct marketing. Now you can go into digital, sales promotion, mainstream, activation etc. But in that time one thing hasn’t changed – a good idea is still a good idea. If you have good ideas, you will get a job.

    Jr: The people coming out of Uni now are the Gen Y whizzes of the internet. Do you think the folios of today should steer away from your traditional print folio?

    D: If you’ve got a skill—for example, if you’re the hottest digital guy around, then use that. There’s not one mould to get a job in advertising. If you’ve got a strength, then use that to your advantage. Show those things in your book—it’s what will set you apart from others.

    Jr: Because of the ad courses that are around now, Art Directors don’t necessarily come from a straight design background. What advice would you give to up and coming junior art directors that want to build their craft?

    D: I was really lucky because I had four years of hard-core design behind me so I can make things look good pretty quickly. You’ve probably heard it before, but be a sponge. Look at everything that you possibly can. But don’t just look at award annuals, that’s the worst thing you can do. Be aware of them, but you shouldn’t look at them for inspiration. All you’re going to do is end up trying to make last years winning ad, and what you want is to make is next years winning ad. Look at design magazines. Go to galleries. Every week find a new designer or illustrator or photographer and make a library. I’ve got about five million bookmarks on Safari. Photographers, animators, directors, production companies, etc. Unlike when I started about four thousand years ago, all we had was annuals. Now you can employ people from all over the world. Recently I did a campaign with a Japanese illustrator who didn’t speak any English—and bizarrely it was easier than using some English speaking people I’ve worked with.

    Jr: Was that something you found through one of your bookmarks?

    D: Yeah, his name is Dragon76 (http://www NULL.dragon76 NULL.net). I found him in this really random way through a MySpace link, I got in contact with him through that and then discovered his agent was in London. I showed his work to the client and they really loved it. It wasn’t a problem that he wasn’t in Oz. It just goes to show that once you’ve got your reference right and your brief is really clear, you can get anyone to work with you. Our location isn’t a barrier to employ anybody. There can be an issue with time differences because it takes longer, but you can use anyone in the world now, which is amazing.

    J: Do you have any recommended reading for us?

    D: There’s a book that I reckon everyone should read – Hey Whipple, Squeeze This (http://www NULL.amazon NULL.com/Hey-Whipple-Squeeze-This-Creating/dp/0471293393). I still look at it; it’s such a perfect way of looking at advertising and very motivating. You can be a junior, or a senior, and still take out stuff from Luke Sullivan (http://twitter NULL.com/heywhipple). Just even little tips or tricks on things—for example, the client always wanting the logo bigger, his tip is to make it smaller, so then when they ask it to be bigger, it’s the size you wanted it in the first place. It’s really helpful. The other guy is Lee Clow; some of his stuff is pretty awesome on his Twitter. The guy is a genius.

    Jr: Yes! ‘Lee Clow’s Beard (http://)’! Amazing! There’s some pretty inspirational stuff in there.

    D: Yeah! – Look, the key thing is, never give up. If a client gives you feedback and the idea you thought was going to give you a Cannes gold is dead, don’t throw shit around the room. Look at what is wrong with the idea, or if it’s something to do with the execution. Because if it’s the execution you might just change one thing and bingo you’re back in the game. Or maybe the timing’s not right. Maybe they need to set up the campaign idea before they can unleash your great idea. If that’s the case present it later in the year. But if it’s a bad idea, then just walk away from it. Clients know the business pretty well, that’s why they’re there. Sometimes they can make silly mistakes, and it’s not from them being stupid, it’s just not knowing about how to feed back information. They haven’t done advertising degrees. They say it how they see it, sometimes they’re wrong and unfortunately for us sometimes they’re right.

    Jr: It seems that getting in to the industry is one challenge, however staying in, is another. And, getting work made and getting work up is another challenge.

    D: It’s a daunting thing. Once you get in, you’ve got in, and you should congratulate yourself because a lot of people don’t and it’s really hard—you’ve done what you’ve set out to do. Once you’re in, then there’s no reason why the next brief you get can’t be the one that makes you famous.

    Potentially anything can win you an award but awards are a lottery. If you aren’t going to win an award then do a great job for the client’s business. Because if you do that then you get trust from the client, and the creative director, and account service, and soon things will kind of just go your way. And it’s not through doing anything different but by creating confidence in what you do and everyone else will respond to that. If you try to be bolshie and different just for the sake of it, it’s not cool. You want to be different in the work you present, but not argumentative and difficult. After a while people will get sick of you and you’ll be out of a job, or won’t get to work on the good briefs.

    Learning to sell your work is really important too. The faster you do that the quicker you’re going to get ahead. Always see your work from the point of view of an idea. Work out what your idea is, put it on a piece of paper, and put your work on a wall underneath it. I always put work on a wall, four or five different ideas, and write executions from those. Don’t be afraid to have other people comment on these. You can be sitting there thinking of one idea and get stuck on how to get something to work, and someone might come along say something and open a whole new world that makes it even better. Draw on the people around you; it doesn’t have to be creative people, even the account guy or a planner. Planners are really important people. Become good friends with a planner and he or she will write the briefs you want to work on.

    Jr: While we’re talking on ideas, what piece of advice would you give us as juniors to help make our work better?

    You need to really learn to work out what the idea is and what the execution is, because it’s easy to get confused between the two. I’ve seen people fight for executional stuff and suddenly the client cracks the shits and throws out the whole idea. When all that needed to happen was a slight change to the execution and the idea would still be on the table.

    Jr: Do you think selling in an execution-based idea is harder? How do you sell in those ideas like the Drumstick Summer Classic ad—do you just read the script or do you have to go to an extra length to sell it in?

    D: Reference is key to everything in this business. For Drumstick I studied North Korean mass games and film references from Busby Berkeley. Thinking back it’s a pretty strange combination of stuff when you’re selling ice cream. But it really helped shape the vision for the way the ad should look. I guess a script is just words on a page. Not everyone can imagine it, because they’re not always as visual as you are. If you can show people what’s inside your head it’ll be a lot easier for them and for you.

    Jr: You’ve just been made Associate Creative Director of BMF. Do you reckon it’s harder to do that as an Art Director?

    D: No way. If you think in ideas it doesn’t matter if you’re an art director or a writer.

    Jr: How did it all work out for you—has it all happened pretty organically?

    D: It happened organically; there’s no way you can plot it out. I think luck plays a big role in anyone’s career. I’ve had some lucky breaks and I’ve had some really unlucky breaks too, but at the end of the day I worked my ass off. And I still do.

    Jr: Any final words before the iPhone battery dies, and the sound recorder with it?

    D: Have as much fun as you can. It’s hard work but we’re lucky to be doing it. Making ads means you get to meet and work with some really, really talented people, which is awesome. Advertising isn’t really a job—it’s a lifestyle. If you see it as a 9-5 job, you’ve got it wrong. If you live and breathe it, you’ll get the most out of it.

    ADVERTISING, THE INTERVIEW SERIES | Also tagged BMF, DAVID KLEIN

    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    Dear Junior Series // 05


    Dear Junior: an attempt to ask industry leaders the pressing questions that us, the quarrelous and unfriendly youth of today, are interested to find answers to. In our fifth installment, we’re talking Women in Advertising. Rather than write an intro ourselves full of the male bravado you’ve come to know and love, we hired an intern to do the job for us. Here’s Crystal with her very best intro.

    Chaka Khan once sang, “I’m a woman in a man’s world”. She was chanting about the wonderful world of showbiz but it’s fair to say the wonderful world of advertising is only the far less glamorous sister. It’s a sausage-fest no matter where you go! And being part of that can be fairly difficult when you’re sausageless. As if the industry’s not tough enough. That’s why we asked our good ol’ female buddy, Mel Peters, digital creative director at Lowe Sydney (http://lowesydney NULL.com), to give us her best advice on being a lady in a man’s world.

    And girls, or boys for that matter, if you want to pick her brain some more, reach her at mel.peters@loweworldwide.com (mel NULL.peters null@null loweworldwide NULL.com). No spammy spam please.

    Junior: Do you personally find it tough to be a woman in this industry?

    Mel: No I love it! It’s all about standing out with great ideas and that’s something I’m passionate about. A lot of people have been comfortable with male creatives because that’s what they’re used too. However, good ideas will always cut through no matter who you are.

    Jr: Has there been a particular incident where you know your gender has worked against you? What about for you?

    M: It’s how you look at things. For example, working on car accounts, I was the only female creative on the team. In this situation I always added a valuable and different perspective to briefs. I was able to approach the brand with really powerful insights that led to award winning creative. Taking the car ‘beyond the metal’ was a big part of creating innovative campaigns that engaged and empowered their audience. Female creatives can do amazing work on even the most ‘blokiest’ of briefs. There really is no boundary to what you can work on.

    Jr: Why do you think it’s more difficult for women?

    M: I think there has been a limited number of role-models and Senior Female Creatives in the industry and for young female creatives on the rise, this can be daunting. I’ve worked with strong female Creatives like Fiona Davidson and Paula Keamy who are both fantastic role-models. It is important to find these role models and seek advice along the way. Women have a great opportunity to lead in senior creative roles today and I see more and more talented young women choosing ‘creative’ as a positive career path.

    Jr: Is there any other advice you have for women in or wanting to get into the industry?

    M: Understanding your audience is key, and women are the primary purchase decision-maker for many brands in Australia. Female buying power hasn’t fully been tapped into in Australia, and there is a great opportunity for female creatives to lead this. Women are also powerful communicators, and as we continue to move into the digital world with influence marketing and social networking changing our traditional communication habits, women in the industry will bring great insight and creative ideas to the table. Ultimately though, it’s all about great thinking and powerful ideas.

    And just cause she can, here’s Mel’s tips to success:

    01- Believe in your ideas. Gain confidence in your thinking by exploring your ideas thoroughly before you talk to others around you.

    02- Present, present, present your work. This is so important. Grab as many opportunities as you can to showcase your ideas yourself and get in front of clients, as often as you can.

    03- Look for female mentors, if not in your agency, outside it. Some may have blogs or twitter feeds that will give you insight and spur you on. You can follow me here (http://twitter NULL.com/its_mel).

    04- Hit the streets and do your own market research. Get to know your audience inside and out and become an expert in the briefs you get. If your agency celebrates big ideas based on powerful insights, you will shine.

    05- Don’t be afraid to think of yourself as a brand and sell yourself. Getting your voice and point of view out there is a great place to start. I see many juniors who have put their folio online and started a blog. It’s a great way to make sure you are heard and noticed.

    06- Have fun and enjoy what you do. If you love it, everyone will know.

    ADVERTISING, DEAR JUNIOR | Also tagged DEAR JUNIOR, SUCCESS

    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    The Monday Morning WHIP // 59

    Looking for a job can be a real drag, man. Heck, even thinking about looking for a job takes a lot of effort sometimes. And we should know–we’re slack just like the rest of you bananas. But you don’t have to make it that hard for yourselves, jeeeeeez. Listen to Stan (http://branddna NULL.blogspot NULL.com/) and give yourself a chance.

    Imagine you’ve heard about a job opportunity at an agency in town. You ring up, put on your best telephone voice, and snare yourself a chance to come in and show your folio.

    What next?

    Well from what I’ve seen of late, you probably wait until about an hour before your appointment, dig your dog-eared folio out of the cupboard and then head off to show it.

    And you wonder why you don’t have a job?

    Firstly, your folio needs to look as good as it possibly can. So think about which work goes where, how it’s positioned, etc.

    Next, make sure you and your folio have a point of difference. Yes that’s right, a point of difference.

    Something to help you stand out. Something to remember you by. Something that says this kid’s a little different to all the other young folio carrying wannabes.

    I can’t tell you what that point of difference should be. Only you can determine that. But to get one, you need to think of yourself as a product, then put together a brief to create your personal brand.

    And like all strong brands, you will have a clear point of difference. Because if you don’t, you’ll probably end up gathering dust on a shelf somewhere.

    WHIP | Also tagged DESIGN, JOB HUNTING, WHIP

    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    The Interview Series // 28

    Alright, alright. We know what you’re thinking, “Another ad-guy? When you kids gonna get over this ad-schmer-tising thing, huh?” Well you’re right. Evan Fry (http://evanfry NULL.com) is an ad-guy. But he ain’t just any ad-guy–he’s a true-blue award-winning ex-Creative Director of Crispin Porter & Bogusky (http://cpbgroup NULL.com/) style ad-guy, and he has some good shit to say, so chill out, bro. That sort of heritage makes him better than most ad-guys, who on the whole are a dime-a-dozen, and definitely don’t look this good with a head wrapped in ostrich feathers. He just left CP+B to start up the world’s first ad agency utilising the power of crowd-sourcing, named Victors & Spoils (http://victorsandspoils NULL.com/). That’s pretty cool-magool if you ask us. You know what else makes Evan cooler than most? He’s an old-school copywriter. Which tends to be rare these days. So if you’re one of the few who want to take up the lost art of copywriting, listen to what Evan has to say. You can actually use his advice–which is darn considerate of him, seeing as most of these so-called ‘ad-guys’ have a lot to say about nothing. In summation: Evan Fry ain’t just your average ad-guy, he’s a super-talented old-school copywriting mega-machine, and wants you to Be Fucking Awesome (http://befuckingawesome NULL.com/).

    Junior: We heard somewhere that you’ve got a crazy story about getting a job at Crispin Porter + Bogusky (http://cpbgroup NULL.com/). Apparently it’s a ‘doozy’. May as well tell us the whole thing!

    Evan Fry: Sure. But it’s a long one. It basically began with me having been fired from the job I had and sending my book to Crispin. At that point, this was the spring of 2002, I had been a writer/ACD for 8 years already, and I wanted to work for CP+B more than anywhere else–so I sent my book. About a month after I sent it in they returned it to me with a form letter, “signed” by Alex Bogusky (http://alexbogusky NULL.posterous NULL.com/) himself. It was encouraging, but standard. Very professional of them to be that on top of their shit, I thought. And then I forgot about it. About two months later, after becoming a bit bored of not getting much play from the shops I truly wanted to work for, I had an idea: what if I acted as though that letter really was a sincere letter from Alex to me, and started sending him weird notes from the stance of ‘jilted-lover-gone-psycho-at-not-getting-any-more-letters-from-Alex’?

    So I got some really precious stationery like a grandma might use, a super nice calligraphy pen, and went to it. My thought was keep them short, keep them anonymous, and keep them weird. And not think for a minute that Alex himself would ever even get them. I think the first one said, in really weird cursive, “It’s been two months since you last wrote me, Alex. Don’t you love me anymore, Alex?” Nothing else. A few days later I sent another one. And then another, after a few more days. For the fourth one, I reduced a photocopy of the original form letter he’d sent me, but used black permanent marker and inked out my name on it. I accompanied it with a psycho note on the psycho stationery that this time said, “Perhaps by now, Alex, you’re wondering who the hell I am? Well maybe I’m a lot like you, Alex.”

    Four days later as I was thinking about how to take it up a notch, I got a FedEx delivery. It was from Miami. When I opened it, it was clear something was weird. There was another envelope inside. And then inside that envelope was a Ziploc bag. It had the vibe of an evidence bag like in lawyer movies. I opened the Ziploc and there was a Photostat-camera blowup of the part of the form letter I’d sent where I’d inked out my name. But by blowing it up 10 times, its size had revealed the name under the ink. ‘Evan’, just huge. Stapled to it was a copy of my letter, and in red ink someone had circled “… who the hell I am.” And that was it. It was all just one big fucking “touché, motherfucker. We got you.”

    I was psyched beyond belief. Because all of a sudden I had concrete proof that not only had my letters been getting to him, but they’d been actually getting to him, you know? And he took some time and effort to play the game. So I immediately loved Alex. And the day after I got the envelope, Veronica Padilla, his assistant at the time, called for my book again. I thought I had a job in the bag, or at least a flight out. But it didn’t work like that. I didn’t hear anything for weeks.

    By then I’d started a whole other self promotion idea where I was mailing a weekly photo of myself to the top 30 or 40 creative directors around the world who I wanted to work with. Each one was literally just a 4×6 photo – showing how much time I had on my hands. Like, in one I was having a tea party with stuffed animals. In another I was drinking tallboys with bums on the street. On the back of each, every week, I wrote in pen something that went with it, like, “God I need some work,” and I’d include my phone number.

    So I had these going on, and was also sending them to Alex. But I still didn’t hear from him. However the photos were working, and I was getting a lot of great freelance so I didn’t care as much, although CP+B was still where I really wanted to be.

    About six weeks later Alex himself finally called and said, “I’ve been meaning to call you, why don’t you fly out.” I did, and had a great interview. Thought I had it in the bag for sure, and… didn’t. He didn’t have a slot for me. So I kept the weekly photos going, kept freelancing, and then four months later I was freelancing at Mad Dogs & Englishmen (http://www NULL.maddogsandenglishmen NULL.com/door NULL.html) in San Francisco and got a message on my answering machine. “Hey Evan, it’s Alex, call Veronica back and tell her the code word is pineapple.” I called her back and she said Alex wanted to offer me a job. It was literally one of the best days of my life. P-e-r-s-e-v-e-r-a-n-c-e.

    Jr: Wow. Ok. That definitely is a doozy. It’s nice to see someone with experience and good work struggle like the best of us. In fact, your website mentions that at twenty-six you “weren’t exactly setting the advertising world on fire”. How did you push through that? Did you ever want to give it up and go mountain biking for good?

    E: Oh man, you got that right. Actually, a few times. I got out of school from the University of Oregon and unlike my partner in school, Glenn Cole, I didn’t take a good job out of school. My book was shit and I spent a year working on it but the only job I could land was at the ‘third biggest place in Portland’ – which basically means nowhere you’ve ever heard of. And even though I only stayed there a year, it seemed my destiny was sort of set. I couldn’t get play in the Weidens (http://www NULL.wk NULL.com/) or the Goodbys (http://www NULL.goodbysilverstein NULL.com/) of the day, so I was just floating around at the mediocre places, like 95% of us.

    I moved to San Francisco in 1996 and experienced more of the same. But I moved to be in a bigger market with more chances. I kept at it, kept trying, and just didn’t give up. I guess that’s why I ended that last question by saying perseverance. That’s really the only answer when you feel like you’ve got what it takes, when you know that in your heart. If you know you’re good and you know you’re smart but can’t seem to get a break, you’ve got to prove how smart you are and make your own break. I’m 100% convinced of that.

    Jr: You’ve written your entire career. But a lot of young people aren’t taught hardcore writing anymore. From our experience, advertising education tends to be more ideas-focused. What advice would you give to young writers?

    E: I think this is true. I went to a School of Journalism program, and was lucky enough to be a decent writer just inherently, I dare say. And then in school at University of Oregon, I was also lucky to have two great ad professors who were classically trained. So the mix was pure writing and grammar, mixed with classic concepting classes, and barebones, fucking copywriting courses. It didn’t hurt to have Dan Weiden (http://danwiedensuperdad NULL.blogspot NULL.com/) himself teaching a couple of intensive seminars. But today, you’re right–ad programs stress concepts first, at best. Copywriters today, I swear to God, most of them shouldn’t call themselves “writers” at all. But it’s not really the game now, nor is it anyone’s fault really.

    The advice I would give is to read a lot. And to pick up the book Grammar for Journalists (http://www NULL.amazon NULL.com/Grammar-Journalists-E-L-Callihan/dp/0801968232) and study it like there’s going to be a quiz on it every day. I’d also say to use self-discipline. And read The Book of Gossage (http://www NULL.amazon NULL.com/Book-Gossage-Howard-Luck/dp/0962141534). Teach yourself. If you’re a copywriter who can actually write, you’re set for life. Love the headline, love long copy, do it all the time, get better at it, write hundreds of options for each headline idea. Treat it like a craft. That’s what it is. I still love to write ads.

    Jr: Do you get the urge/time to do any writing or other creative stuff outside of advertising?

    E: Nope. I really don’t, not writing. I get the urge to do other things besides advertising though. And I do those things. It’s why I started sharklove.com (http://sharklove NULL.com/) and also befuckingawesome.com (http://befuckingawesome NULL.com/). Be Fucking Awesome, especially, is just a labour of love. I kept having this idea where I would write a book that would be a sort of “guide for living.” I had this idea for a title and it was “How to Be Fucking Awesome.” This was while I was really cranking at CP+B, on the road producing all the time. So I didn’t really have the energy to do it, but I bought the URL befuckingawesome.com (http://befuckingawesome NULL.com/) and felt good enough about doing that. Then I just sat on it for a couple years.

    Finally I had John Parker, my partner at the time and now a CD at W+K New York, do up a branding identity for BFA. He rocked it. And it sat there again. Then I had the idea to tweak it into a social network of sorts where you could post your Fucking Awesome deeds, let the world vote on each one, and those votes would contribute to your Awesome Quotient. So then I fucking had to do it. And that’s what I did. I found another amazing designer to help with the design, a fantastically talented developer, and sunk a lot of my own money into paying him to develop it. It’s been live now since the end of September. It isn’t really taking off the way I’d hoped, but I am learning a whole lot from it and know what to try to make it take off more. It’s really satisfying, in some ways. But mostly, it’s just a massive learning experience.

    Jr: So, now that you’ve left CP+B to start your own agency, what can the world expect from Victors and Spoils (http://victorsandspoils NULL.com/)?

    E: Good question. I think the world can expect to see a viable new way of coming up with ideas for the advertising industry. A way where the clients feel like they get the service and attention that traditional agencies give, but ideas and work that is devised from a much broader base of amateurs and/or the users of their products and services–then directed and shaped to be on brand and on brief. So it’ll feel like an ad agency to the client, but engage the world to help solve their business problems. What we’re trying to do is show that there is a new way of doing things. A way that works and can let more people into the process. We’re all savvy critics of ads and marketing communications nowadays – because we’re exposed to it from birth. There are a lot of people out there who could be really good at it, and we want to give them a way of working on things just like those of us who went to school to become experts. There’s a shitload more to it than that, obviously. But the world can expect some really interesting briefs to work on for some really interesting clients. At least.

    Jr: The business model you guys described on launch, was anything but ‘more of the same’, but there’s going to be the inevitable detraction from folks not into the whole model. Are crowd-sourcing naysayers the new ‘30-seconds-of-TV-is-the-only-media-we-need’ dinosaurs?

    E: I don’t know; that’s a good question. There are naysayers out there. Basically what the internet gives people is a voice, and they love to use it to say how dumb everything is that isn’t their own idea. I learned pretty fast after we launched that I just had to turn it off, it was exhausting trying to answer or consider everyone’s points. Which we still care a lot about, but so many people were just being so aggressively mean and negative, so full of hate, that we realized very fast that no answer would satisfy the vocal minority. It’s one of the most loaded issues out there right now and because we consciously launched with as much hoopla as we could create, we became the brightest bull’s-eye. It’s cool though; we intend to just continue doing our thing and trying to get some good clients and craft briefs that let people play with brands if they want to. If they don’t want to, that’s cool too.

    Jr: How does a junior (or anyone for that matter) get a shot at working for a hot shop like CP+B or Victors & Spoils? Can you give us five awesome tips?

    E: What if I give you one tip and explain the shit out of it?

    Jr: Evan, you do what you feel…

    E: Good.

    1. Get really good at the craft of being a creative.

    - Write down everything. Take notes as you learn. Take notes as you concept.

    - Doodle as you think. Keep the pen moving.

    - Do lots of options for everything. Only through looking at it can you know if something is better or worse than what you already have. Look at it.

    - Take it seriously; don’t expect it to come easy. Focus on the brief. Do “concepting intervals” where you focus and write every idea down. Then have a break. Then get back to it.

    - Sketch everything. Go analog. Don’t fucking concept on your fucking laptop. Pad of paper. Pen or pencil. You alone, or you and your partner. Find somewhere to get in sync and focus and riff. When writing headlines, that’s when I think writing on your computer is good. But try using all caps, or two spaces between each headline. Treat it like art, and have some pride for how the words look. Do a bunch. Edit them a little. Do a bunch more. Edit a little. Repeat. If you’re building your book, keep the presentation simple. But don’t ignore the presentation.

    Jr: Is there life after advertising? Should advertising be a means to an end?

    E: For me, I think there has to be. For anyone, for sure there can be. Depends on how much a boner it gives you, I guess.

    Interview by: Pete Majarich (http://petermajarich NULL.com NULL.au/)

    ADVERTISING, THE INTERVIEW SERIES | Also tagged COMMITMENT, COPYWRITING, CP+B, CREATIVITY, FOLIO, JOB HUNTING, SUCCESS, THE INTERVIEW SERIES, WRITING

    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    The Monday Morning WHIP // 58

    What’s your excuse for not visiting every Creative Director, Senior Creative, Group Publisher, Studio Manager, Design Director and Big Wig With Advice to Give that you can guess the email of? It better be good, because if it’s not, you’ll meet someone like Stan (http://branddna NULL.blogspot NULL.com/) in the real world–and they might not be this helpful.

    Once upon a time a kid rang me to ask if I’d take a look at his folio. When I asked him what sort of folio it was he ummed and awed before replying that he wasn’t sure.

    When I asked him why, he said that his was just a black plastic one that he’d bought at Officeworks.

    As you can imagine, I pissed myself laughing.

    I then explained to him that what I actually wanted to know was whether he was a writer, an art director or a photographer.

    “I’m a writer,” he said.

    So I told him that whenever he rang people up to look at his folio he should always say up front that he was a writer.

    “But what if they’re not looking for a writer,” he said.

    My answer was the same piece of advice I have given many times over the years;

    Don’t show a folio with the expectation of getting a job. Show it with the aim of asking for advice on how to make it better. Because the better your folio gets, the better your chances of getting a job.

    ADVERTISING, WHIP | Also tagged FOLIO, HUNGER, JOB HUNTING, JOBS, WHIP

    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    The Monday Morning WHIP // 57

    Hey everybody! We’ve got ourselves organised for 2010. This year is gonna be great! Stan (http://branddna NULL.blogspot NULL.com/)‘s back with more weekly whip’s, we’ll be posting a new interview every week, and we’ve got a handful of new columns to surface over the next month. But enough of that hoo-hah–listen to Stan! Get to work! Do stuff!

    I thought I’d kick start the year with a little tale about how getting off your arse and simply creating stuff on a regular basis can help get you a foot in the door of whatever creative industry you aspire to be a part of.

    About 18 months ago I was at a brekky gathering in Sydney, where I met Annik Skelton (http://annikskelton NULL.com/). At the time she was doing some mundane job that she thought would involve creativity but didn’t.

    Like many of the people I meet nowadays we hooked up on Twitter.

    Over the course of last year she has kept me, and I’m sure many others, entertained with her surreal Twitterisms (http://twitter NULL.com/neekatron) and seriously off the wall blog posts. The girl can write, no doubt about it.

    Seems I wasn’t the only person who noticed, because late last year she was hired by new Sydney agency Tongue (http://www NULL.campaignbrief NULL.com/2009/12/tongue-lashes-out-on-hiring-an NULL.html).

    In the agency press release about the appointment they described Annik as, “a well-known Twitter personality, notorious for her tongue-in-cheek commentary and unique methods of story-telling.”

    So there you go kids. Next time I tell you to just go off and create something, do it. Because the more stuff you put out there, the better chance you have of getting to wherever it is you want to go.

    WHIP | Also tagged COMMITMENT, HUNGER, JOB HUNTING, JOBS, WHIP

    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    The Monday Morning WHIP // 55

    whip55

    Why do you keep trying? What’s the point of it all? We ask ourselves this all the time — so don’t worry, you’re not alone. Even Charles Saatchi, the famed advertising genius, was once asked, “What keeps you going?” But being the genius that he is, in his infinite wisdom he replied, “Well, what’s the alternative?” Need more answers? Don’t worry, Stan (http://branddna NULL.blogspot NULL.com/) has another…

    I went to the Melbourne Design Market yesterday. Made me feel genuinely proud, with so many young Melburnians following their dreams by getting out there and creating stuff.

    As I’ve said many times before, anyone can have an idea. But it requires real creativity to make that idea actually happen.

    I spoke to a few of the stallholders about their ideas, whether or not they required any kind of funding and, most importantly, any obstacles they had had to overcome.

    All of them told me stories about self-doubt and stress, of feeling insecure and wanting to give up.

    But they didn’t.

    They pushed on even though they felt they were on the verge of failing.

    Why?

    Because that’s what creative people do.

    ADVERTISING, WRITING | Also tagged CHARLES SAATCHI, COMMITMENT, HUNGER, MELBOURNE, MELBOURNE DESIGN MARKET

    Tag Archives: ADVERTISING

    The Monday Morning WHIP // 53

    whip53

    If there’s one thing we’ve learnt about Stan (http://branddna NULL.blogspot NULL.com) in over a year worth of WHIPS, it’s that he loves a football metaphor. See exhibit A, B, C and D. So when we saw that Frenchman playing european handball (http://www NULL.guardian NULL.co NULL.uk/football/blog/2009/nov/21/thierry-henry-handball-france-ireland) with a soccerball last week, we just knew Stan would find a way to write it into this week’s WHIP. So here you are kiddies. Learn a thing or two.

    Much fuss in the sporting media this week about French footballer Thierry Henry committing a professional foul to help get his team through to the World Cup in South Africa next year.

    For those of you who are not familiar with him, Henry is an exceptional talent. A creative genius on the football field. Yet he chose to cheat (http://i NULL.dailymail NULL.co NULL.uk/i/pix/2009/11/19/article-0-0746AED1000005DC-99_306x423 NULL.jpg) in order to help his team win.

    Now I do not wish to condone his behaviour, because he is a dirty cheating Frenchman, but in order to achieve the ultimate prize you need to follow the mantra of Malcolm X – By any means necessary.

    If you want a job, you need to be prepared to do what it takes.

    And if what it takes is a little bending of the rules, bend them. If what it takes is a bit of brown nosing, then go get brown. And if what it takes is to lie, then be prepared to be a little loose with the truth.

    Because if you don’t, somebody else surely will.

    ADVERTISING, WHIP | Also tagged FOLIO, FOOTBALL METAPHOR, JOB HUNTING
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