Welcome to Optimism

What do you get to do at W+K Design London?

Hi there, KJ here. Our MD, Neil’s asked me to write something for the blog today, something about W+K Design London, which luckily for me is a subject that I can ramble on about for days.
Since stepping into the Design Director shoes one thing that has struck me is just how often designers I meet ask “Is it true that being a designer in advertising means that you just get given the idea and your job is to make it look good?” Or something along those lines. Admittedly these are usually designers who haven’t worked in advertising, or more specifically haven’t worked here. But it shows that there’s still a mixed perception out there of what we do.

STR Mouth

The way I tend to answer this goes something like this. In a traditional process it might have once been true that design was limited to the production end of things – taking a visual as a brief and building on that with some aesthetic development and craft. But does that lead to the best work?

W+K _ Lurpak Game On _ Print 3

Without getting into too many crippling definitions of what good design is and can bring, it’s simpler to conclude that our best work usually comes from genuine collaborative working, where different skills mix to push the work into a more innovative place. Design – as with creative, as with strategy and great production – is key to making work that disrupts the status quo, and connects with people in a meaningful way. All of which helps to shape the brands we work on. This means facilitating the best collaborative practice we can.

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All the work featured in this post made the most of genuine collaborative processes.

In an attempt to further define just what it is like for a designer to work at W+K Design London, we asked the design team to answer some simple questions along these lines – what do you get to do here that you wouldn’t elsewhere? What makes it special? Their answers were really insightful and formed the basis of the piece of writing that now lives here.

seven newbies in our creative department

In August, our creative department had three new members on board; the ex-Saatchi and Saatchi creatives, Linda Weitgasser and Alex Sattlecker and Tom Anders Watkins who came to W+K straight from University.

This month, creative team Richard Biggs and Jolyon White have joined W+K London. Before joining us, they had worked at 4creative and made Channel 4’s Rio 2016 Paralympics campaign….you may have seen it, it received over 6.3million views on YouTube.

And yet to arrive but on their way are Katy Edelsten and Chloe Cordon. Katy was a part of Glimpse, the collective run by James Turner which did Citizens Advertising Takeover Service (CATS), a campaign which replaced dozens of adverts at Clapham Common with pictures of cats.

Welcome on board!

NewCreatives_Sept2016_Online

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