Showing posts with label art direction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art direction. Show all posts

Thursday, July 9, 2009

LEADERS OF THE NEW: Craig Brandon



Leaders of the New is an ongoing series at jettlandicho.com that will focus on the future talents of advertising.
Click here to check the archives.



Name: Craig Brandon

Career Path: Art Direction.

Education: Graphic Design 05-07 Creative Advertising 08-09

Advertising Experience: Design Internship at Smack Design (Winter 07) Advertising Internship at Soda&Tonic Advertising (Summer 09)

One Thing About You: I have four first names, Craig Normand Drew Brandon.

Contact: 416.791.0705 / cbrandon36@hotmail.com

Full interview after the break!


When did you know that advertising was for you?

I trace my roots to this industry back to a couple things. One, my “big present” one year for Christmas was a giant box of art supplies (which made me a very happy child). Two, my elementary school graduation ceremony presented me with the first ever art award. They felt the need to give this to me based on my level of enthusiasm for arts and crafts time (they also gave me the Science Award, and I’m far short of being a scientist!).

However, I would have never known that Advertising and Design was a career option had it not been for my cousin Adam who looked over my shoulder and said “you know you could be getting paid for that stuff” one day while I was screwing around on Microsoft Paint.


Do you think you could have pursued a career in advertising with just your Graphic Design experience?

I have friends that are currently trying to do that with little success, very talented friends. So not saying that it is impossible to succeed with just the graphic design background, but I would do school the exact same way if I had to do it all over again. At the end of the day having both Graphic Design and Creative Advertising makes me more well rounded and polished as an AD.


Describe your creative process. How do you brainstorm? How do you keep track of ideas? How do you know when one of your ideas is good? What do you do when you're creatively stumped?

Creative process-
Well, I feel every brief creates a unique problem. Therefore, every brief needs a new angle and therefore new creative process.

Brainstorming-
Ideally I have someone to bounce ideas off of. Whether I have someone or not, I generally try and get to the most basic idea and then add a twist of originality to it.
I don’t like using traditional ways of brainstorming like creating an idea web.

Keeping Track-
This varies from the traditional notepad, to a napkin, sometimes even the palm of my hand. I occasionally find myself trying to just remember the idea, like when it comes to me via laying in bed at 3:00 a.m. (I’m trying to break this habit because a lot of ideas have died in this process.) The best and most unique way I’ve ever kept track of an idea is drawing on the shower wall using the steam and glass as my canvas.

Good Idea/ Bad Idea-
This is subjective but I base an ideas effectiveness on the waiting game because if I can look at an idea a week or two later and still like it I generally don’t care what other people think of it. Someone will always hate an idea, but there is always someone who likes it.

Creative Slump-
The best way I have to get out of a creative slump is by looking at it in a new angle. A trick I find myself using a lot is trying to place the product at the centre of a joke where as I am the bully poking fun at it. This trick creates as unique of an idea as the product is. If you have a truly unique product this trick is almost always a winner.


How did you go from being a student to being an intern at Soda & Tonic Advertising?

That was a fun process, one day I’m stressing to find an internship the next I get an email from David Barbuto, a teacher of CAB, basically telling me that he would like to have me as his intern. I jumped at the opportunity and have been having a blast there since. I got the email around week 5/6 of semester 4 of CAB.


Describe a day in the life of Craig Brandon at Soda & Tonic.


I have a nice schedule, 9:30 - 5:30. On a day to day basis I hardly ever know what project I will be working on next. Sometimes its an ad campaign, sometimes its a design project. Regardless of what it is I am generally busy during my time at work. When I’m not and I have down time, I spend time doing spec ads that we later try to set up a meeting and pitch.


What have you learned so far from your experience at Soda & Tonic?

I’d say as a creative person, you never stop learning. I’ve learned new ways to approach things, I’ve learned how to handle client demands, I’ve learned that what a client and what your boss asks for are two very different things. Overall I’ve learned that I made the right decision by joining this industry.


Outside of advertising, how else do you express your creativity?


I constantly keep a notebook on me to scribble art into half of which has nothing to do with advertising. I like to draw/ illustrate on my computer whenever I get some spare time. But I would say my biggest creative hobby outside of design and advertising would be the 2 novels that I have on the go. Both of these novels are being co-written with people more polished in the ways of grammar. They both are fiction based stories, think Peter Pan, or Alice in Wonderland style writing.


Where do you want to be in 5 years?


I want to be as high up on the work latter as possible, at a well known industry. I don’t know the industry process well enough to properly estimate whether I’ll be a senior AD, a CD, a partner in a firm, or whether I’ll still be a Junior AD. I do know that the first 5 years of my career will be an uphill battle and I need to work as hard as possible to get wherever it is I will end up.


What do you do for fun?

Outside of work I spend a lot of time watching sports, mainly football and hockey. I like to roller blade, write, hang out with friends, rock climb, swim/diving.


E-Elevator Pitch: Sell yourself in 140 characters or less.

Passion in a career means you’d work for free. I currently do.

If you're an advertising student or are just starting out in the business and would like to be featured on Leaders of the New, send me an email at jettlandicho@gmail.com


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Thursday, April 16, 2009

LEADERS OF THE NEW: Ryan Dzur

Leaders of the New is an ongoing series at jettlandicho.com that will focus on the future talents of advertising. Click here to check the archives.


Name: Ryan Dzur

Career Path:
Advertising Art Direction

Education:
Seneca College – Graphic Design, Creative Advertising

Advertising Experience:

• 2 years of quality advertising education at Seneca College
• Graphic Design Education
• Has participated in real world projects
• One week internship at Cundari in Toronto
• Various other advertising events & exposure

One Thing About You: I can’t stand people who don’t understand the concept of a line up.

Contact: 647.802.6737 – ryan.dzign@gmail.com or silentd@ryandzur.com - ryandzur.com

Full interview after the cut!


When did you know that advertising was for you?

I was interested in advertising before I took the advertising program at Seneca but within the first semester I knew I was where I belonged. I guess when I realized that I LOVED going to school everyday was when I knew advertising was what I was meant to do. Then when I won the first semester IMC agency pitch to Cundari with a group that for the most part hadn’t made much of a contribution, was the moment that really solidified that I was doing what I was meant to do.


Do you think you could have pursued a career in advertising with just your Graphic Design experience?

Yes, but it would have been very difficult and the margin for failure would have been quite large. Taking an advertising program teaches you what is good and bad advertising, and how to think like an advertiser. Plus you learn a lot about the advertising industry as a whole, which is also very important. All that said, it isn’t impossible to get into advertising with just a design education… just ask Joe Piccolo, CD at Draft FCB Toronto or Anthony Chelvanathan, award winning AD at Leo Burnett Toronto. I have met both of them and they have both given me a lot of advice about art direction and getting into the industry, and they both got into advertising out of an education in graphic design.


Describe your creative process. How do you brainstorm? How do you keep track of ideas? How do you know when one of your ideas is good? What do you do when you're creatively stumped?

That’s a loaded question.

To be honest, I don’t have a set method of thinking/brainstorming. I feel that to be a creative thinker you need to be flexible in how, when, and where you brainstorm. Sometimes ideas hit you out of nowhere like lightning and other times you really have to wrestle with the problem to come up with a solution. Whenever I really have trouble coming up with something good I always go back to the “Lisa Atkins school of advertising.” I run through the target, sweet spots, problem etc. That often helps me a lot; I also look at the product and try to visualize it in different ways and the target interacting with it in different ways. That can be a useful exercise to come up with ideas.

Keeping track of my ideas isn’t too hard for me. I get an idea, I write or sketch it down in my Moleskine and there it is forever.

As far as knowing when an idea is good there are a couple stages that I think an idea should go through. First when you come up with it, you as the thinker should be very excited about the idea. Then you should have tons of visions of how the idea could be shown, this means it has legs and that you can use it in a variety of ways. After you’ve done that you should run it by a couple people to get their reactions, hopefully people respond positively. The last stage is to come back to your idea a couple days later and see how you feel; do you still feel excited? Yes? Then you probably have a great idea.

Well as I said before, when I get stumped I use the “Lisa” technique. If I’m really stumped and I can’t think of anything, I leave it alone. I take a break, watch a movie, play a game, or watch some stupid clips on YouTube. This helps my mind relax a bit and sometimes that’s when an idea comes.


You’ve competed in a few advertising competitions. What were those experiences like?

They’re fun! It’s cool to do these competitions like the OneShow College Competition or the Young Lions Competition. Your work competes against a lot of serious talent, so if you get any sort of recognition you know you have some serious talent yourself. I look forward to seeing the result of all the competitions I have and still will enter this year.


You have a website, http://ryandzur.com. There’s not much there at the moment. What do you plan on doing with the site?

Well my hope is to make it an online portfolio of my work; I’ll hopefully have it up and running by the end of April. I plan to have it done in flash and to be looking pretty slick, so stay tuned. For now if anyone wants to see my work I can send them a pdf version of my book.


What one campaign out right now makes you say, “Damn it, I wish I thought of that?”

For some reason I always have trouble answering questions like this. I don’t know if it’s because there’s so much work to choose from or because my memory never really serves me well when I have to answer.

I’d have to say something that’s somewhat recent that I really wish I were in on is the campaign that John St. advertising here in Toronto launched for Michelina's frozen entrĂ©es. It was a very smart campaign and their use of facebook was outstanding. John St. is an agency that is really producing some great work; I’ve had the pleasure of visiting the agency and meeting a lot of great people who work there.

The most recent thing I’ve seen that I found I really enjoyed was the new TV campaign “Living Notoriously Well” for Jose Cuervo by JWT. It’s not ground breaking work but the copy is clever and the subtle details in the art direction are fantastic, not to mention Jeremy Piven who plays Ari in Entourage is the narrator.

http://adsoftheworld.com/media/tv/jose_cuervo_negotiation

http://adsoftheworld.com/media/tv/jose_cuervo_check_roulette
http://adsoftheworld.com/media/tv/jose_cuervo_knowing_when
http://adsoftheworld.com/media/tv/jose_cuervo_be_yourself


What do you hope to achieve during your advertising career?

Ultimately I’d like to be a Creative Director in an agency, or open my own shop and be the Creative Director there. Before all that I just want to be known as an art director who really loves what he does and works very hard to make his work the best it can be. I want to produce work that both sells and entertains and gains the appreciation of the consumer as well as my peers in the industry. I would be lying if I said I don’t dream of winning some big awards for my work, but the most important thing to me is that I’m respected as a person and a professional, and that I always love what I’m doing.


E-Elevator Pitch: Sell yourself in 140 characters or less.

I’m currently trying to break into the very difficult to break into industry of advertising as a junior art director. My epic struggle to see you, the Creative Director of the agency I want to work for is my life. I have shown my book to many creatives in the industry, and with each piece of feedback I receive, I use it to improve my book with the hopes that the day my book comes across your desk is the day I hear you say you’re hired. I won’t give up, because I love advertising. (This is over 140 characters… so I guess I’d just have to hit the stop button so I can finish what I have to say.)


If you're an advertising student or are just starting out in the business and would like to be featured on Leaders of the New, send me an email at jettlandicho@gmail.com


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