Archive for April, 2010

Extra-curricular creativity

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Being creative is both a blessing and a curse. Having a head full of ideas means there’s never a dull moment, but sometimes you just can’t switch it off. Any enthusiastic designer, art director or copywriter has always got some weird or wonderful creative idea hatching – that’s why most of us have dictaphones in the car and sleep with note pads next to the bed.

The other day, D&AD creative workshops cropped up in the studio banter. For the uninitiated, the basic idea is that young creatives are given briefs from top London advertising and design agencies and then have to present their creative concepts on a weekly basis. At each presentation, they are given the next week’s brief and they have 7 more days to crack it (down the pub, at 3.00 in the morning, at weekends… whenever they can fit it in between live client briefs). This set Jason off reminiscing with Sam (our junior creative) about how much fun it was “back in the day” to work on briefs where creative ingenuity was the only criteria. No existing brand guidelines, no budgetry constraints, just the chance to give the old creative noggin a massive work-out.

“Hey Sam, what if we conjured-up some briefs for you? Fancy an extra challenge?”

Funny, when you’re 23, you’ll say yes to anything. So we cooked up Sam’s first brief: coming up with brand names and top-line packaging ideas for a new biscuit, that no matter how much you dunk it, it won’t collapse into your tea.

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We loved the nifty stripes on the biscuits, perfect for gauging how deep to dunk and the ‘the unsinkable tea time treat’ is a winner. “Pass the Admirals”.

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Taking the nautical theme to the next level, Sam also came up with ‘U-Biscuits’, but we thought Submersibles was really quirky. A fun way of expressing their dunk-ability.

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The sign of a good creative. Take the brief, turn it inside-out and come up with something even better. Rather than a biscuit that won’t break, what about the most absorbent biscuit in the world?  Genius! A real USP, but because it will eventually collapse in your mug, there’s still a challenge – just how long dare you dunk? ‘Riskits’, now there’s a brand name waiting to happen.

In the spirit of the D&AD workshop, as soon as we’d reviewed Sam’s ideas, we gave him the next brief – a new logo and slogan for The Green Party. Watch this space.

By the way, just in case there are any biscuit technologists or marketeers reading this, the copyright stays with Remedy, but we’re open to offers.

Remedy goes back to college

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

When I left art college in ‘84, skin-tight jeans and big hair were in and everyone was talking about the latest gizmo from Apple. Turn the clock forward 26 years and it appears that not much has changed.

Then, as now, the creative industry was buzzing with the possibilities promised by new technology. But no matter how advanced the technology becomes, the foundations of good communication remains the same.

Recently I was invited to West Kent College as a guest lecturer to meet the students on their HND Graphic Design course. First I had a whistle-stop tour of their portfolios. Magazine design, information graphics, website design, illustration, photography, typography… and in amongst the 20 or so portfolios, it was the IDEAS that made the difference.

Ideas are gold dust in our industry. It doesn’t matter how pretty a brochure, ad, exhibition stand, website… looks - it needs to connect with its audience and spark the required reaction. To unearth these ideas the creative industry needs designers, copywriters and art directors who are fired-up by great ideas, people that love breaking moulds, making headlines and creating the stuff that makes everyone else say “I wish I’d thought of that”.

It’s easy to be hypnotised by shiny colours and slick design execution, but you need more than this to get tongues wagging and tills ringing. And I’m pleased to say, there are still designers coming through West Kent College that
‘get it’.

After looking through their portfolios, it was question time:

“What do you do when a client insists on running with an idea you don’t like?”
“Where do you get your creative inspiration?”
“Do you ever run out of ideas?”
“What do you look for when employing a graphic designer?”
“How do you make sure you don’t get ripped-off as a freelancer?”
“How important is it to work in London?”

After an hour and a half of intensive grilling, I had just enough energy left to chat with HND course leader, Sancha de Burca and BA course leader, Tim Bones about the challenges they faced. We all came to the same conclusion; that as exciting as advances in technology and design software can be, the students with inquisitive minds and a love for cracking briefs with intelligent ideas, are the ones that succeed.

Good luck to everyone at West Kent College who will be graduating this summer.

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West Kent College Graphic Design Course leaders,
Tim Bones and Sancha de Burca