Tuesday, 10 December 2013
Friday, 6 December 2013
Datashed - Brief Progress
I
have completed most of the work for this brief so far, and just need to
send off my progress to the client. I am really happy with how this has
gone and have found the brief really enjoyable, they have been a
pleasure to work with and have agreed with the majority of my design
decisions. There have been minor changes to make from the previous crit
but I feel I have addressed the issues and produced a consistent body of
work which represents the company well and illustrates the companies
product well. Hopefully there aren't too many changes to make from this
point on. I still have to make arrows etc on top of this but I will
speak to the client about there views on this.
The Main Data Shed Image
From
the last crit we decided it was a bit too orange so I added in a bright
yellow to give contrast to the image. This image works well to sum up
the company and illustrates simply what the software does. Basically
sorting out a big heap of data into a manageable format for companies.
Single Customer View
This
image illustrates the single customer view element to the software
which allows you to piece together bits of data which combines to make
one person. Ofter people have various different intereactions with
companies be it online or in store, this function allows the user to
piece together them interactions and build up a profile of that one
customer without risk of duplicates. The jigsaw man is made up of
various data, and the datashed solves these difficult problems.
Analysis Tools & Dashboard
Click to View
This
GIF explains the nature of the Dashboard and the analysis tools,
showing that when you add more data the information and stats change to
suit the new input, by showing multiple buttons adding information it
emphasizes the flexibility of the software. The GIF also shows the
userbility, and reorganization aspect of the dashboard showing how the
dashboard can be re aranged to suit the specif user.
Icons
The
other part of the brief involved creating a set of icons to use on the
website. After the crit I had with them last week we settled on the 8
icons we would use and work on, here you can see the development stages,
I had to make alterations so that they worked in series, this involved
playing with line strokes and spacing.
Here are some alternate icons I will show to the client but I am not that happy with them
Final Icons
Here are the final Icons, they work well in a series and follow the brand guideline colour scheme. Hopefully they will be happy with how they have turned out. I am happy with how they look and got good feedback from my peers so I am confident they will be happy with them.
Tuesday, 12 November 2013
DATA SHED - Initial Ideas
For
this brief I have the opportunity to incorporate my style and own
personal touches within the design. Initially the Data Shed is wanting 3
illustrations doing for the sliding feature as you can see below. They
are wanting illustrations that are a bit quirky and different. They are a
new start up company which is heavily tech based which can be quite
frightening to people who have no idea about technology etc. so the
illustrations have to bring some life and fun to the company. They need
to draw in the audience whilst also being informative and playful.
As
you can see the website looks pretty white and dull at the moment and
definitely needs some life bringing to it. They are wanting to get rid
of the stock imagery that is currently being used and replacing it with
something allot more visual exciting and 'quirky' as essentially it is
quite a crazy products.
The company offers various tools which help businesses analyze all their data. The data shed analyzes all
that
data and presents it to the customer in the form of charts, stats and
easy to understand figures. The point of the product is to help business
and point out what aspects are affecting their sales, revenue etc.
They
analyze all different types of data from how weather affects sales, to
customer duplications etc. The amount of data that is used is quite
impressive. I am really excited to work with data shed and have already
come up with a few ideas of routes I could go down.
I
have spoken with the Datashed this week and they will be emailing me a
propper brief out as soon as possible, but things a pretty chaotic at
Datashed at the moment so I should have it in the net few days. This
will give me some stronger guidelines to work with as allot of the
correspondence so far has been in person rather than in writing. I have a
rough idea of what they are wanting but until I get the real brief I
won't have strict rules to work to
INITIAL IDEAS
After
speaking with Ed about the brief I went away and drew up some quick
ideas which I think ties in well with company and also highlights the
companies product in a fun and creative way. I wanted to try think of
ways I could create visually interesting illustrations but also
highlight the concept. I really liked the idea of taking the company
name and working on this as the actual concept. I think the data shed is
a brilliant name, and in fairness the software analyzes a shed load of
data like a machine which then results in an easy to understand visual
format for companies. I thought that creating some kind machine like
shed would be perfect. I thought it would be great to have some kind of
input output feature with the shed which shows the mass of data go in
and a simple format for the output. As you can see above, these were my
first ideas, I think using the shed for the imagery makes the product
accessible to a wider audience, techy computer stuff sometimes puts
people off so having something like shed gives a more human link.
I also came up with several other ideas. I wanted to think of imagery which I could work with. My concept for the company is that essentially there is a problem to solve and datashed put all the right pieces together, they do the hard the work and present it to the customer in a form they can understand. So with this in mind I thought of products and puzzles where essentially there is messy data to start with and then a finished resolved solution.
Here are some concepts I came up with:
The Rubix Cube : Hard to solve problem - could experiment with this object further?
Jigsaw
- This could be a good bit of imagery to work with each puzzle piece
could have symbols for different types of information on. This could be
shown being put together in a way that the viewer can make sense of the
bigger picture.
Data shed pieces : Could create the shed using different aspects of charts etc.
Data Cake : Ingredients - different information out come data chart cake
These were all playful ideas which I need to pitch to the company.
Digital Design
After
having a vision of what I wanted to produce for one of the
illustrations I sat down and bashed out my idea. I went with a subtle
orange brown colour scheme as the Datasheds logo is quite a bold bright
orange so the imagery was quite intense.
Here are the colours I have used for the design
Initial Shed Design
I added the conveyer belt for an input output element to the design
which shows the data going in and a resolved outcome.
I wanted the Shed to look like an actual machine. I added cogs etc to make it look
more mechanical this represents the hard work and heavy lifiting of the data.
I struggled to think of what I could use to the represent data which they process.
I decided to go with a stream of numbers. And a charted outcome. I was not overly keen on
the data but it was a good start to work with.
FEEDBACK
I
was pretty happy with the style of illustration and the general concept
of the design. I sent the design over to Ed at the Datashed to see what
he thought of my initial idea for one of the illustrations and I was
really pleased with what he had to say about the design. But did have a
few corrections for me.
Email from Datashed
Feedback Overview
I've shown the two images to
Anna, and we both like the initial interpretation a lot. You've got it
right, in that the datashed essentially takes in pretty much any data,
does some heavy lifting, and turns the data
into more than the sum of the original parts. From my perspective, I
like the idea of a shed, because an engineer is usually much more
pragmatic and down to earth, compared with typical IT people who never
actually get anything useful done. We build things
that last, and don't just talk about it.
A couple of initial thoughts on the 'shed':'
1. Data is generally hard to
get at, and pretty dirty.. so perhaps the input isn't quite as clean as a
single stream. To be honest, its usually a big dump of cr@p!
2.
The outputs are generally
analytics (basically forecasting an outcome, predicting something), data
visualization (so charts, or interactive reporting tools, like http://thedatashed.azurewebsites.net/dashboard or customer selections (so taking a load
of categorized customer by sales performance, or likelihood to purchase
something).
3. Not sure if this could fit
in the same image; but I think soemthing that's important is being able
to give decent visual examples of how two or more sets of data could be
combined to bring something valuable.....
so bringing your sales figures together with your purchase and costs
information gives you your profit, combining weather information with
sales in your stores can help show why sales were so bad on a snowy day,
facebook and twitter data can be combined with
your information relating to a customer which gives you a much broader
view of a customers likes and dislikes
Ed Thewlis
Director - Technology
Alterations
After
taking on board Eds feedback I got rid of the continuous stream of
numbers and decided to create Icons which I thought represented the type
of data that might be analyzed. This is a much better visual
interpretation of the data. It also shows the diversity of analyzing
various types of data and pulling it all together to create something
that is simple and easy to understand for the customer.
Ed
mentioned that usually the data is pretty hard to get at and is usually
a big heap of rubbish so I got rid of the fluidity of the data input
and created a pile of data which sums the company product up allot
better than the stream of data.
I created a few different symbols to represent various types of data which could be included.
Profit, customer profiles, web based data,
Sales figures, business details, weather, mail
Recent Versions
I
think I like this version better with the box of everything you need to
know. I think it looks more interesting than the chart version below. I
have also managed to include the companies online brand font also.
I
have sent these versions off to the data shed and am waiting to hear
back from them with a more detailed brief as I have still to produce
more illustrations.
Monday, 11 November 2013
Data Shed - Research
In order to
get an idea of the Icons and software I would be designing for I looked
around to see what was already out there. The main bulk of the icons I
had an idea about already but a few I was unsure about. Here is some of
the research into information and the icons I will be designing for.
What the Datashed do: http://www.thedatashed.co.uk (taken from website)
Our core product - a simple and robust place that pulls all your data sources together, matches & stores the records and keeps them up to date so you can view it together in the same tool.Bolted on to TheDataShed are simple, web-based tools which allow you to analyse and interrogate your data wherever you are, whatever device you are on. These analysis tools are also embedded within Microsoft Excel, ensuring a simple, familiar interface for all your staff The back-end of TheDataShed is a powerful (geek alert!) OLAP database. Simply put, we've taken complex data, and built a system which stores it in such a way that you can run reports on millions of records in seconds. Using TheDataShed, you can analyse your costs and revenue clearly, look at previous marketing campaigns and make selections, and feed these selections back for future analysis. You can feed in prospecting databases and dedupe against your current customers, input offline campaign results to get a view as to how your prospects and customers have responded – the possibilities are endless…
A Single Customer View is an aggregated, consistent and holistic representation of the data known by an organization about its customers. The advantage to an organisation of attaining this unified view comes from the ability it gives to analyse past behavior in order to better target and personalise future customer interactions. A single customer view is also considered especially relevant where organisations engage with customers through multiple channels, since customers expect those interactions to reflect a consistent understanding of their history and preferences. However, some commentators have challenged the idea that a single view of customers across an entire organisation is either natural or meaningful, proposing that the priority should instead be consistency between the multiple views that arise in different contexts.
Where representations of a customer are held in more than one system, achieving a single customer view can be difficult: firstly because customer identity must be traceable between the records held in those systems, and secondly because anomalies or discrepancies in the customer data must be resolved. As such, the acquisition by an organisation of a single customer view is one potential outcome of successful Master data management. Since December 2010, maintaining a single customer view has become mandatory for UK banks and other deposit takers due to new rules introduced by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme.
I searched the web for examples of single customer view icons to get an idea of what was out there and found that there was barely any, and the majority that I found were over complicated or looked tacky and dated.
The ones above are more relevant to what I am looking for. I think one colour is perfect for the job. The icons need to be simple and eye catching but also readable on a small scale. This means I should stick to one colour ideally. I like the idea of the magnifying glass, I think there is potential with that imagery.
These icons work well however some a still a bit too complicated when shrunk down onto a smaller scale. I like the idea of the cloud connecting, and also the house with the cables, this could work with datashed. I like the simplistic illustration style. In this case I think 2 colours works well, there is also potential here to work with.
What I found with allot of icons is that they are not actually that clear in what they do, you have to have some existing knowledge in order to get the reference. I like the simplicity of these icons however I still think they are lacking something.
I really like bother of these ideas, the jigsaw puzzle piece is definitley memorable and is quirky and different which is what datashed is looking for. I also like the idea of the linked chains which also strongly reference integration.
I also like the idea of the cogs this is a nice visual reference my only concern is that its quite big which makes shrinking it down to be a readable understandable icon is another story.
The tradition Apple apps Icon is memorable and destinguisable but the elements which go together to make up the logo are completley unrelated to the kind of stuff datashed deals with. It needs to be simple and relevant. This is going to be a tough icon to create as it is quite ambiguous.
This design referes more to application windows which is again not what datashed are looking for. There idea of the applications is the tools nesecary to analyse the data not a specific applications folder.
The majority of icons I came across for the database revolved around this imagery seen above which is an old school hardrive. This is a recognisable icon but for those not familiar with computers it is actually not that relevant in my opinion. I will have to come up with something which is recognisable simple and eyecatching.
What the Datashed do: http://www.thedatashed.co.uk (taken from website)
Our core product - a simple and robust place that pulls all your data sources together, matches & stores the records and keeps them up to date so you can view it together in the same tool.Bolted on to TheDataShed are simple, web-based tools which allow you to analyse and interrogate your data wherever you are, whatever device you are on. These analysis tools are also embedded within Microsoft Excel, ensuring a simple, familiar interface for all your staff The back-end of TheDataShed is a powerful (geek alert!) OLAP database. Simply put, we've taken complex data, and built a system which stores it in such a way that you can run reports on millions of records in seconds. Using TheDataShed, you can analyse your costs and revenue clearly, look at previous marketing campaigns and make selections, and feed these selections back for future analysis. You can feed in prospecting databases and dedupe against your current customers, input offline campaign results to get a view as to how your prospects and customers have responded – the possibilities are endless…
Ever since the days when the proprietor of a business stopped
knowing each of his customers individually, the challenge has been
clearly understanding who your customers are and reducing the number of
duplications of the same customer within your database. If the same
customer has moved house and got married and reregisters how do you know
to append their previous purchase history to their new record? Pulling
these seemingly separate customers together makes both analysis and
marketing more applicable.
With the advent of E-Commerce, and increasing marketing channels (SMS, Email, Direct Mail, Social Media) this has become increasingly difficult. How can you be sure you're not spending money targeting an individual three ways, when one would do? How can you understand if the initial cost of acquisition is worth the long term customer value? Having a Single Customer View allows you to get a true view on how your customers are performing and where you should be investing your marketing budgets. Do you get spikes in your sales when you’ve had a TV campaign? Let's input your slot times and find out! How do your customers respond? Sent a DM campaign out but not everyone responding using the tracked phone number? How inconvenient.
Upload the campaign data and let's match it to your customer base to see if you had responses through other channels.
Our Single Customer View tool helps overcome a variety of challenges. Utilising some pretty clever string-matching techniques (even if we do say so ourselves!), we take all your different data sets, and mash them together to produce one single list of individuals and families, making sure that none of the data gets lost along the way.
With the advent of E-Commerce, and increasing marketing channels (SMS, Email, Direct Mail, Social Media) this has become increasingly difficult. How can you be sure you're not spending money targeting an individual three ways, when one would do? How can you understand if the initial cost of acquisition is worth the long term customer value? Having a Single Customer View allows you to get a true view on how your customers are performing and where you should be investing your marketing budgets. Do you get spikes in your sales when you’ve had a TV campaign? Let's input your slot times and find out! How do your customers respond? Sent a DM campaign out but not everyone responding using the tracked phone number? How inconvenient.
Upload the campaign data and let's match it to your customer base to see if you had responses through other channels.
Our Single Customer View tool helps overcome a variety of challenges. Utilising some pretty clever string-matching techniques (even if we do say so ourselves!), we take all your different data sets, and mash them together to produce one single list of individuals and families, making sure that none of the data gets lost along the way.
Our
simple database solutions allow you to manage any operational
process or workflow. They are focussed on swift, cost-effective
development - so whether you need a system to manage your HR data,
finance processes or CRM, we can build it for you in days, not weeks.As
with all our products, the ability to integrate our database
solutions with any other system is paramount. As a result, we construct
our applications to allow easy (but secure!) access to anyone or
anything who needs it, and because we’re all about analysis and insight,
we can build you bespoke analysis tools to go with it.
Single Customer ViewA Single Customer View is an aggregated, consistent and holistic representation of the data known by an organization about its customers. The advantage to an organisation of attaining this unified view comes from the ability it gives to analyse past behavior in order to better target and personalise future customer interactions. A single customer view is also considered especially relevant where organisations engage with customers through multiple channels, since customers expect those interactions to reflect a consistent understanding of their history and preferences. However, some commentators have challenged the idea that a single view of customers across an entire organisation is either natural or meaningful, proposing that the priority should instead be consistency between the multiple views that arise in different contexts.
Where representations of a customer are held in more than one system, achieving a single customer view can be difficult: firstly because customer identity must be traceable between the records held in those systems, and secondly because anomalies or discrepancies in the customer data must be resolved. As such, the acquisition by an organisation of a single customer view is one potential outcome of successful Master data management. Since December 2010, maintaining a single customer view has become mandatory for UK banks and other deposit takers due to new rules introduced by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme.
Icon Research Single Customer View
I searched the web for examples of single customer view icons to get an idea of what was out there and found that there was barely any, and the majority that I found were over complicated or looked tacky and dated.
Analysis Icon
Allot
of the icons I found were a bit too detailed and over complicated for
icons in my opinion. There are far too many colours and shadows which
makes the icon look more like a picture than anything. This will not
reproduce well on a small scale.
The ones above are more relevant to what I am looking for. I think one colour is perfect for the job. The icons need to be simple and eye catching but also readable on a small scale. This means I should stick to one colour ideally. I like the idea of the magnifying glass, I think there is potential with that imagery.
Hosting Icon
These icons work well however some a still a bit too complicated when shrunk down onto a smaller scale. I like the idea of the cloud connecting, and also the house with the cables, this could work with datashed. I like the simplistic illustration style. In this case I think 2 colours works well, there is also potential here to work with.
What I found with allot of icons is that they are not actually that clear in what they do, you have to have some existing knowledge in order to get the reference. I like the simplicity of these icons however I still think they are lacking something.
Integration Icon
From pulling together all your different data sets from your
finance system, E-commerce platform, social media sites or online
analytics provider, or extracting customer records for a
marketing campaign, visualising your data or
analysing business performance, datashed have the tool to help. Each tool has been constructed so that it can
work independently - but also integrate with the rest of the suite.I really like bother of these ideas, the jigsaw puzzle piece is definitley memorable and is quirky and different which is what datashed is looking for. I also like the idea of the linked chains which also strongly reference integration.
I also like the idea of the cogs this is a nice visual reference my only concern is that its quite big which makes shrinking it down to be a readable understandable icon is another story.
Apps Icon
The tradition Apple apps Icon is memorable and destinguisable but the elements which go together to make up the logo are completley unrelated to the kind of stuff datashed deals with. It needs to be simple and relevant. This is going to be a tough icon to create as it is quite ambiguous.
This design referes more to application windows which is again not what datashed are looking for. There idea of the applications is the tools nesecary to analyse the data not a specific applications folder.
Database Icon
The majority of icons I came across for the database revolved around this imagery seen above which is an old school hardrive. This is a recognisable icon but for those not familiar with computers it is actually not that relevant in my opinion. I will have to come up with something which is recognisable simple and eyecatching.
Consultation Icon
The
icons I found for consultation were quite obvious but clear and
readable in my opinion, they could be a bit simpler if anything as a few
of them were over complicated I really like the speech bubble icons,
this is simple and to the point. It references the point well and there
is not much need for lots of detail or colour.
Sunday, 10 November 2013
Data Shed Brief
The DataShed Client brief
Overview:
The DataShed is a new business set up to support other business with their data problems. In an area that’s baffling and laden with nerd and technology speak we want to cut through the noise and simplify data and analysis for our customers. The main premise is that customers email, complain, buy, log in, tweet, chat on facebook, register, request brochures, research online then visit in store, view tv ads, call to chase an order, buy online then pick up in store etc… how to business attribute all these different behaviours to the right customer so you can get a true view how each customer interacts with your business? We consolidate all the businesses data sources into one place and then group actions by customer so the business can make better decisions based on an accurate picture of their world.
We require a number of images and smaller icons to use on our website to represent our business and services.
Business proposition (work in progress):
We take complicated and turn it into simple
Detailed requirements:
Following the brand book (colours/fonts etc) we’d like the following
Main images:
1. The Data Shed – noise in, clean data out (basically what you’ve already done)
2. Single customer view – linking everything your customer is doing to the same person so you can see everything about them in one place.
3. Analysis tools & dashboards
Icons:
1. Shed
2. Single customer view
3. Analysis
4. Hosting
5. Integration
6. Apps
7. Database
8. Consultation
We also need:
Arrows, action button (click here) for the site and 2-3 styles of frame (to put round text in presentations that kind of thing)
I would also like to make a background from the logo – so overlaid circles repeating for things like the backs of business cards/comps slips etc
Styling and design:
Simple, chunky, clean lines, don’t go completely crazy with the orange! Add another colour to the palate if needs be – maybe a lime green? We don’t want to look dry and boring but we have to appear professional and business like while being accessible and friendly.
We’re a technology company using cutting edge software to offer very new solutions. Think google rather than IBM. We’re really pleased with the style you’ve used so far – just maybe look at paring back on the orange!
Overview:
The DataShed is a new business set up to support other business with their data problems. In an area that’s baffling and laden with nerd and technology speak we want to cut through the noise and simplify data and analysis for our customers. The main premise is that customers email, complain, buy, log in, tweet, chat on facebook, register, request brochures, research online then visit in store, view tv ads, call to chase an order, buy online then pick up in store etc… how to business attribute all these different behaviours to the right customer so you can get a true view how each customer interacts with your business? We consolidate all the businesses data sources into one place and then group actions by customer so the business can make better decisions based on an accurate picture of their world.
We require a number of images and smaller icons to use on our website to represent our business and services.
Business proposition (work in progress):
We take complicated and turn it into simple
Detailed requirements:
Following the brand book (colours/fonts etc) we’d like the following
Main images:
1. The Data Shed – noise in, clean data out (basically what you’ve already done)
2. Single customer view – linking everything your customer is doing to the same person so you can see everything about them in one place.
3. Analysis tools & dashboards
Icons:
1. Shed
2. Single customer view
3. Analysis
4. Hosting
5. Integration
6. Apps
7. Database
8. Consultation
We also need:
Arrows, action button (click here) for the site and 2-3 styles of frame (to put round text in presentations that kind of thing)
I would also like to make a background from the logo – so overlaid circles repeating for things like the backs of business cards/comps slips etc
Styling and design:
Simple, chunky, clean lines, don’t go completely crazy with the orange! Add another colour to the palate if needs be – maybe a lime green? We don’t want to look dry and boring but we have to appear professional and business like while being accessible and friendly.
We’re a technology company using cutting edge software to offer very new solutions. Think google rather than IBM. We’re really pleased with the style you’ve used so far – just maybe look at paring back on the orange!
Wednesday, 9 October 2013
Copywrite Talk - The Beautiful Meme - Creative Agency
Key points taken from Tom's talk from the Beautiful Meme:
- Brands are ideas - Ideas needs words
- You need words to sell stuff
- Copy and design challenge each other
- People like well written copy
- Words make your Brand human
- Hierarchy is everything
- Your Job is to challenge every word
- Discuss and articulate positioning before you do anything
- Good designers can spell. Great designers can write
- Be generous
Friday, 31 May 2013
OUGD502 EVALUATION
1. What skills have you developed through this module and how effectively do you think you have applied them?
I think one of the main skills I have gained over this module is my ability to analyze and assess others work and other designers. It is really beneeficial to consider others work and business strageys. The knowledge we have learnt over the seminars this year has been invaluable information which I plan to carry on researching further.
I think my confidence in myself and my work has also grown, I have made the effort to go and chat to visiting professionals and particularly enjoyed the talk with si scott, After the lecture I went and had a chat with him which I found really enjoyable. I will do my best to network with other professionals as I find its not always what you know but who you know.
The module also helped my collaboration skills, the lifes a pitch brief gave us the opportunity to divide the group into different roles, helping to split the workload whilst trying to highlight each others strengths. I really enjoyed this brief and its a shame we didnt have more time to do it as this brief didn't really fit along side the other briefs easily at the time. We were all fairly busy around this section of the course.
2.
What approaches to/methods of design production have you developed and
how have they informed your design development process?
I think Johns talks were probably one of the most helpful aspects of this module. The seminars were easy to understand but also filled you in on the bigger picture explaining it in an way that has stuck with me. HE often highlighted things I hadn't considered. I think asking questions is something I need to start doing from now on I find it pretty difficult to think up stuff on the spot, preparing questions to ask tutors and professionals will help my practice.
3. What strengths can you identify in your work and how have/will you capitalise on these?
My presentation skills have improved loads this year, I was barely nervous until I got up there, I found my nerves disappeared after the 2nd slide which was great for my confidence and my speech. I found it easy to talk about my work and actually enjoyed it, I think its important to make people laugh and kind of break the ice, no body likes a boring presentation so I tried to add some humorous elements.
I think my branding skills have developed loads. For my self branding I really pushed my concept in order to see how far I could take it. I think I have produced a really good package of work which sells my creative and fun size whilst giving off a professional vibe. I will keep pushing ideas to see how far that can be taken its always better tho think above your capabilities as anything is possible you just need yo put in the time and effort.
4. What weaknesses can you identify in your work and how will you address these in the future?
5. Identify five things that you will do differently next time and what do you expect to gain from doing these?
- Do my work as soon as I get it - this will make sure I don't lose work and end up with missing work. It will also mean I don;t get a pile up of work.
- Designate at least 1 night a week to PPP I need to make sure I keep on top of this next year as the workload will be considerably larger.
- Prepare questions to ask proffesionals - I always get nervous around lecturers that come in and never really know what to say which makes networking pretty tough, I will try prepare things to ask in order to start conversion.
- Regular blogging will ensure I have a balanced body of well informed research.
- Network more - I will get involved with linked in and stat asking questions.
6. How would you grade yourself on the following areas:
Attendance = 5
Punctuality = 4
Motivation = 4
Commitment =4
Quantity of work produced = 4
Quality of work produced = 5
Thursday, 30 May 2013
SELF BRANDING - FINAL PRODUCTS
BRANDING PACK
I have applied my branding across a wide range of products, its nice to see how it works on different elements. I chose a few relevant items to complete my pack. Including a note book, Letter head, envelope, business cards and pencils, The colour scheme works well, it looks consistent and proffesional. The problem I do see with the branding is the cost to reproduce to items. I have foiled my buisness cards and used a gold and black colour scheme which would make it quite expensive to mass produce. But on the other hand, I love everything about foiling, I'm a bit of a magpie so I'm a sucker for shiny stuff. Also the whole concept behind the golden egg will be lost without it. I could look at using gold stock but then I have the dilema of it been quite dull, I will have to do more research into cheaper options.
Notebook - perfect for my thoughts and ideas. I have simplified the logo to just the cracked egg. I don't think it is important to have my name on everything I think the golden egg is pretty eye catching and unique in itself.
Business Cards - These are mock ups of the business cards I have made. They are eye catching and
should hopefully spark conversation. I think people take more notice to nicely printed things.
Colour Pencils - I stuck to the colour scheme once again, I think it works great in a set and also the combination of the colours could result in some really nice illustrations, This goes perfectly with the note pad
Envolope for clients etc.
The letter head is quite simple, I didn't want too much going on as at the end of the day its just there to be read.
Once again it might be expensive to have foiled elements on all of the products so this something that will need re considering in the future.
CREATIVE CV PACK
This is my creative CV and packaging that I will be sending off to various studios. I am really happy with the outcome and think it has turned out really well. I would definitely be intrigued if I got that through the post. SO hopefully it should spark some interest in me.
The Cover has a foiled egg which gives it a professional quality. It also highlights my love of the printing processes and my ability to successfully produce work to a high standard. Its essentially a piece of work.
I wasn;t able to print it out with james so I have had to make do with mac suite.
Although it has turned out really well to be honest I was quite suprised
The booklet is pretty small which seems a more digestible read for potential
employers. The format of the book also works well, simple 2 column structure.
The big and small eggs complement one another.
I have highlighted my skill set throughought the book and chose briefs which
complement my practice.
I have tried to keep writing to a minimum and use lots of images.
I want to let my work speak for itself.
I like how the egg kind of looks like an egg yolk.
Here are my business cards. They have come out really nicely and have a great
golden shine. I would ideally like to get these die cut.
Shiny
I spray painted my eggs gold and filled them with shredded black paper.
I will include my creative CV and my Business card and maybe some mini eggs.
Business Cards & CV
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