andydidyk.com

Perspectives on advertising, marketing, branding, and consumerism

Archive for the 'creativity' Category

Launch of New HunterFan.com

May 22nd, 2008 by Andy Didyk

From:

Hunter Fan old

To:

Hunter Fan New

May 22nd has been a deadline that has been staring me in the face for the last 7 weeks, starting with the signing of a proposal I wrote. Today is the launch of the “reskinned” HunterFan.com. It has been an ambitious journey, reskinning an entire site, plus completely designing and building 3 micro-sites for the same customer, all in less than 2 months! I’m proud of the work our excellent creative team has done, and I truly get fulfilled watching a project go from conception to completion. It was also cool to witness some hardcore legerdemain (YES! I used that word in real life!) by our programming staff to resolve server-side issues I won’t even pretend to comprehend.

The new homepage is much, much cleaner than the old version, and it has a variety of ways that a customer can navigate to the same information. As you can see, our client is really making a move to embrace the new green color, which I think works very well on the live site.

All we had time to do in this phase is redesign the homepage, add a few features, and add a new look and feel to the interior pages - still a huge improvement over the previous site. Of course, now comes the real work: Phase 2. Phase 2 will bring this site up to a new standard. Stay tuned!

Sphere: Related Content

Category: communication, consumer products, creativity, design, marketing | 1 Comment »

“It is what it is”

April 14th, 2008 by Andy Didyk

It is what it is

Last minute changes, client “re-orgs”, agency reviews, new management, etc., it all happens to everyone involved in an agency on a regular basis. Those headaches, major as they are, will never go away. I think every creative person has spent immeasurable hours complaining about how non-ideal most situations are for developing great creative concepts. But that’s why I love this new phrase, which has been making its rounds throughout boardrooms and conference rooms all across America:

It is what it is

Loosely translated, it means “look, you creative and/or overly concerned person, I/you can’t change certain aspects about our situation - let’s focus on a solution rather than on the problem”. In the past few months, I’ve made quite a few comments on the business speak and buzzwords of our industry. Indeed, if you Google “marketing buzzwords” you’ll come up with hundreds of thousands of websites dedicated to tracking the somewhat ridiculous sayings that we creative people make up in order to add some spice to our everyday conversations. n-tara even made our holiday video from last year satirizing marketing-speak by parodying a 1970’s infomercial.

Generally speaking (pun, pathetically, intended), I have little use for most of this jargon, although I certainly am guilty of using it in a pinch with clients. One phrase, however, has been slowly gathering steam in our industry and I find it to be actually useful. It is what it is. Got difficulties? Get over them. Change what you can change, otherwise focus on creating a solution and getting the job done.

And because I like you folks, that motivational seminar is on the house.

Sphere: Related Content

Category: communication, creativity | 4 Comments »

I love snow.

February 27th, 2008 by Andy Didyk

Snowy Tire Tracks

Snowy Tire Tracks 2

This morning I thought I would stretch my weary creative soul and attempt to make beautiful what I’ve always felt was a bit ugly.  I grew up in northern Indiana, where lots of snow in the winter is still pretty common, so I love snow and what it does to a landscape.  However, the part of lots of snow that always got a little ugly was when the roads were salted and cars started driving over them, defiling the pristine blanket and turning it into a ruddy, grey, and sloppy urban slosh-fest.

So here you are…part abstract art, part creative exercise.  And I still love snow!

Sphere: Related Content

Category: creativity, misc., photography | No Comments »

Unleashing Your Inner 9-Year-Old

February 21st, 2008 by Andy Didyk

Andy Drives a Land RoverHere’s an interesting thought for all of you career-minded folks out there: if you went back in time as your current self and was able to meet your self at 9 years old, what would your younger self think of your current self?

I recently read an article in this month’s Popular Photography that said a key to creativity is “unleashing your inner 9-year-old”. In other words, allowing your unrestricted creative side to take center stage, ignoring aspects of practicality and the limitations of your current camera technology.

It made me wonder, “Would my 9-year-old self think my current self is cool?” And also, “Is this even remotely important to the world of advertising and interactive media?”

I’ll address the latter first: business of any kind without creativity is dead. And I’m not just talking about artistic creativity here, but creativity with finances (within legal limits), HR, infrastructure, sales, project management, IT, etc., is all critical to a properly functioning business. As a former project manager, I can often let my obsession with proper details ruthlessly crush the big idea of a dreamer, simply because the idea at the time seems impractical. But I digress. Indeed, we need to be at least as creative as a 9-year-old in order to be successful.

Now, the former: would my 9-year-old self think my current self is cool? After much debate, I think little Andy sure would, at least for the most part. The reason I can be confident about this is that I’ve been blessed to do now what I’ve always thought I’d do: have a career in advertising and in sales. So on the job front I think I’d think I was pretty cool (follow that?). Sure, my job isn’t as cool as GI Joe’s, but I wasn’t really allowed to have many of those anyway (thanks Mom).

Plus, I’ve done quite a few things to keep my 9-year-old dreams alive. Through luck, I was able to marry a wonderful woman who grew up in Kenya, and thus in 2005 I was able to drive in the African bush in a Land Rover, one of my childhood fantasies. I’ve also purchased several large kites, and thus fulfilled my childhood dream of regularly being dragged across the ground by a giant kite. I have a son, some incredible friends, and I get to do crazy stuff like stand in a freezing waterfall in January with my best friends pointing and laughing. I feel like these things would be cool to my 9-year-old self, because although I’m constantly creating new goals and priorities, I still come back to wanting to do something crazy every now and then. I think the day that stops is the day I stop being creative.

That doesn’t mean that I’m never constrained by the harsh realities of life; far from it. But I think my 9-year-old self would understand that in order to buy a new bike, you have to mow the neighbor’s lawn to make some coin. I just want to keep some dreams alive and parts of life ridiculously fun.

What things do you do to keep your inner 9-year-old satisfied?

Sphere: Related Content

Category: branding, creativity, design, photography | 2 Comments »