The Blog

Websites That Stink

What a stinking website. It’s funny how the RSS feed is taking in google ads of young Asian ladies looking for suitors! “Me drive a tractor?’





















There’s More Psychology In A Bogus Email Than You Care To Think.

How many of us have received messages from banks we don’t have accounts in claiming there is an security issue that needs to be addressed. Whereas this is disgraceful, it highlights something that we should all understand – brand legitimises trust.

Send out a bogus email as just text and the response would be nil. The minute it possesses an official logo then we respond. It’s a call to action. It says, ‘I’m serious’. There’s more psychology in this simplistic act of deception than you can ever imagine.

As a society we are so attuned to brand on a range of levels that you don’t have to be Coca Cola to understand how brand and branding presents you in the best light possible to the demographic you’re targeting. After all, adverts for BMWs are more likely to appear in a Sunday paper supplement than a Quilting magazine.

As consumers we have to learn a new healthy ‘cyber suspicion’ for those people wanting to deposit funds in our bank accounts from deposed African states. We have to learn a whole new set of rules in relation to our online behaviour. DON’T USE CAPITALS, it’s the equivalent of shouting. Don’t trust software updates – they could be viruses.

So Why Brand?

It’s by far the most common mistake any business can make. We know we need to get our message to the people, we know how to get it out there but we choose not to engage how it will be received. It’s remarkable to think that branding will bring you customers you never thought you could get. Why? Because the way in which you present yourself could be inconsistent or piecemeal. Good design will carry to tone, style and credibility, even in the previously mentioned bogus emails, and this is why design should be used strategically to further your goals – though legitimately of course.

D

Support NO!SPEC

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from the NO!SPEC website:

“Spec work and spec-based design contests are a growing concern. So in an effort to educate those working in the Visual Communication industry and the clients who use their services, a group of designers banded together to bring the NO!SPEC Campaign to the public.

With legitimate design opportunities turning into calls for spec work increasing, our purpose is to arm designers with the tools they need to take a stand against this trend. We also aim to provide businesses with information on why spec work harms our industry.

The NO!SPEC Campaign includes: interfacing with designers, educators, businesses and organizations; creating NO!SPEC promotional materials; sending protest letters; writing petitions and posts, and more.”


A short time ago I stumbled across an initiative known as NO!SPEC, which was in favour of educating people about the disadvantages of ‘speculative’ work.

Of course the website itself can explain the purpose better than I can, but as a design studio who have spent countless hours on tender applications and throwing ideas at the wall to see what sticks, this really struck a chord.

All we can hope for is that we can educate business and people about the harm working for free does to a creative and progressive industry.

Please follow the link if you are in business, you might better understand what creatives are trying to achieve. If you’re in the industry or studying design, join up!

www.no-spec.com


Quilting Matrix

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Billy’s working on Irish Quilt and Craft Magazine at present.  The patterns are sometimes quite complex. He swears he can see the quilting Matrix now. I keeping envisaging him in Keanue-esque moment on a rooftop bending backwards in slow motion with spools of thread whizzing past his face.

Wish List

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We’re currently working through a number of ideas to acquire new clients in 2011.  We’ve developed a wish list which we plan to harvest shortly. Great to hear Lauren Laverne back at 6 Music – not dissing the Huey Morgan ‘That’s how we roll.’

P.S. Let us know if you want to get on the wish list?

What do you mean, ‘That’s so cheesy!’

Design Symposium

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It was great to get out from behind the desk last week to attend a Design Symposium at the University of Ulster.

Stephen Moore from AV Browne offered some insight into how the company works with almost 1200 jobs a year. The movie buffs in us agreed that Greg Maguire, Professor of Animation at UU had a very impressive show reel of his work from his years at Disney, Industrial Light & Magic, Electronic Arts, Colossal Pictures, Wild Brain, Sullivan Bluth and Lucasfilm Animation: and finally his own company, Zoogloo LLC.

There were some fantastic speakers who spoke very passionately about how design is called upon to communicate, not just in advertising terms, but in a Social Economic context. Kenneth Kaplan talked at length about how design in agriculture could have a huge beneficial impact on how we ethically produce food that is significantly reduced carbon footprint.  He spoke of how some of the world’s most pressing large-scale challenges can be addressed using design including climate change, education, and caring for our aging populations.  Kenneth Kaplan was a fascinating speaker offering some illumination into where societies are heading unless we use social design for a better future. We’d highly recommend visiting Collaborative Initiatives [website].

Mark Nodder at Wright Bus showed their amazing design for the new London Red Double Decker.  The collaborative approach taken to design this bus is remarkable. The exterior lines of the design are ultra modern but the interior offers more than a nod to yesteryear with gold trim and wooden panels.  Great product and speaker.