Wednesday, July 05, 2006
Instruction Book
What’s your take on Process? Procedure? Here’s mine…
Process was once a word absent from creative endeavors. How could you possibly map the journey to an end product dependent upon muse, synapse, spontaneity and sheer inspiration? The very word process was redolent with cheap cheese and industrial-tasting meats….
If some clients' process charts were stretched across the width of our lobby, the box for creative would occupy about the space of a cigarette pack. It's tough enough when they see it that way. Worse when the agency does.
Posted by Mark Spector on 2006-07-05 20:53:14
Yes, process is all too often neglected. Yet it can produce brilliant results. In my experience, the best ideas are produced when creative and strategy - as well as account management - all sit together and work through a brief methodically. Good ideas seldom emerge by immaculate conception: you have to go through the process of grappling with the brief, weighing up different ideas, keeping what works and throwing out what doesn't. In the end, you're more confident about what you're presenting to the client, because you've tested your thinking.
Posted by Sarah Britten on 2006-07-06 09:14:05
Although often viewed as dirty word, process can actually be liberating. If we're not caught in endless cycles of debating what needs to be done, by whom, when -- and reinventing a process (explicitly or otherwise) every time we approach a new assignment, we can put more of our efforts into being creative, regardless of what discipline we represent. And process does not imply rigidity -- they can be designed to be flexible, and in doing so, guide us to the right decisions.
Posted by Jonathan Perloe on 2006-07-06 17:22:59
Monday, June 26, 2006
Canned
Can you really Cannes creative work? By that I mean: are there or can there ever be objective measurements of what makes one product inspired and another pedestrian? Or is it all subjective, as in “beauty is in the eyes of the beholder?”
Can we apply a metric to creativity and validate a dimensional scale? Or, by definition, do we diminish our thinking by creating linear judgments for a product that is produced by muse and synapse?
If some clients' process charts were stretched across the width of our lobby, the box for creative would occupy about the space of a cigarette packYoutube
Posted by units on 2008-06-11 11:44:17
Monday, June 19, 2006
Go For The Wine
Did you find a way to open the bottle of wine? Or did you drink water (see last week)? Based on your comments, I’d say Wunderpeople don’t give up so easily…
Which leads me to this week’s thought…
Theories are critical to new idea development; practice is critical to business success.
See the difference?
Hi, interesting post, that is what I am thinking about so much often going with initiative to my Client. For sure, I am a real wine lady in spite of I don't drink wine at all! :)
Posted by Natalia Tomilova on 2006-06-19 15:31:27
Thanks for the suggestion. ;) izlekop
Posted by izlekop on 2008-02-18 17:47:32
youtube thanks a lot
Posted by youtube on 2008-05-18 15:47:01
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