“I decided to give freelance a go after the contract ended and I assumed work would just come in. But the truth is, it hasn’t. Every month I tell myself this is it. If I don’t get more work, I’ll start applying to companies and take a break from freelancing. But I don’t want to do that. I want to keep working for myself and really build something I love.”
Read MoreAsking Not Asking #19: I Don’t Hate My Job
“Here’s the thing: I don’t hate my job. I don’t necessarily love it, either. It’s interesting and fast-paced and I like working with a team. I also like the consistent salary and the security that comes with it...But sometimes I get the urge to quit and start over. I get antsy and want to leave. Then I think about it and wonder why. Will I regret not trying something else?”
Read MoreMission Uncomfortable: Embracing the Breakups & Breakthroughs of Creativity
I wasn't following up on my own work – which is awkward to say, but I don't think the majority of people in this industry do. My old style was to hand it off and hope for the best, largely because the deliverables were designed for that. Lately, I don’t hand off and hope.
Read MoreThe Freelancer’s Guide to Working with Editors: What 4 Editors Want You To Know
Now that I’m a freelancer, I find myself back [to] learning how to best communicate with editors, anticipate their needs, and generally try to read their minds. So I invited four editors to tell me everything there is to know about their jobs in the hopes of demystifying it for myself, and for freelancers everywhere.
Read MoreAm I Depressed or Am I Just a Freelancer?
“I couldn’t help but think about the way many of us architect our freelance lives and how these lifestyles make us more vulnerable to depression and anxiety than other people.”
Read MoreMastering The Gig Economy: A New Way To Land Fortune 500 Jobs
“Justin Gignac sees this as a shift from advertising the desired skill sets and responsibilities to focusing on personality and culture. ‘It’s important for companies and job seekers, both freelance and full-time, to get a real sense of each other before taking the plunge,’ he says.”
Read MoreAsking Not Asking #8: Balancing Act
My fear is that I’m spending too much time in this comfortable space and not enough time pursuing work or opportunities that truly excite me. I don’t want to feel uninspired or bored with the work that I’m doing, but the money makes it hard to turn down. How can I find a better balance between steady work and new business ventures?
Read More4 Ways Gen Z Will Change Company Culture
"There's a huge benefit to bringing in fresh blood, fresh perspective and fresh energy," says Justin Gignac, Working Not Working's co-founder and CEO. "Sometimes, a freelancer's enthusiasm and point of view can shake up a team that may have gotten bogged down."
Read MoreDear Burnt Out Art Director...
Remember how hard you worked because of how excited you were? You are more than capable of channeling that same excitement, ambition and dedication towards shifting the tides of your career towards something better suited for you.
Read MoreHow Two Freelance Creatives are Turning Advertising into Altruism
Creatives & philanthropists Tiffany Appleton and Kirstin Roquemore started their own type of freelance business model. One that turns every print ad, script revision, and 92-page pitch deck into an act of altruism. This long-time creative duo just finished building a school in Nepal and are working on a second one in West Africa. Meet Freelanthropist.
Read MoreMeet the Freelance Team Pushing Tribeca Film Festival Forward
This year, there will be a bunch of firsts at the Tribeca Film Festival. That's the nature of putting together a lineup of thought-provoking films. But this year also sees a first for Tribeca's entire marketing campaign, as the festival decided to bring in a freelance creative team. Meet them here.
Read MoreWhat’s It Like to Freelance? Myths vs. Real Talk
"Now, having just ended a seven-year freelance career to go back to a full-time staff position, I’d like to help anyone considering making the same leap I did years ago. When it comes to freelancing, here are the myths and here’s some real talk."
Read MoreWhat It Takes to Work at Work & Co: Meet Co-Founder Joe Stewart
Work & Co's Founder and Design Partner Joe Stewart tells us how Work & Co was born from wanting to get his design hands dirty again, and the internal trust that exists with having agency leadership learning and building alongside you. Joe also offers great advice on what it takes to work there, as well as what he looks for in prospective hires and their creative portfolios.
Read MoreWant to Work at Wieden+Kennedy? Meet Lauren Ranke
We interview Lauren Ranke, the Director of Creative Recruiting at W+K Portland. Lauren tells us how she's seen the agency evolve over her 20+ year tenure and how you can get hired.
Read MoreHow to Get a Job at Spotify
Spotify! I've been looking forward to this interview and I’m happy to finally share it with you. As some of you may already know, I worked at Spotify for almost three years. So I couldn’t resist reaching out to my friends and asking for their wisdom about landing a design job at Spotify.
Read MoreThis Artist Visualizes Our Universe's Most Abstract Mysteries
"I’m really interested in astronomy, quantum physics, psychology, and philosophy. They’re different approaches in search of the same answers." WNW Member Allison Filice is doing her part to add illustration to the list with her latest project. Titled "Strange Universe", Allison's undertaking involves visualizing the most mysterious concepts of how our universe operates. Each illustration captures both the incredible balancing act of these concepts and the hallucinatory depth required to even wrap our minds around them.
Read MoreOvershare Podcast: Kate Moross
Overshare is a Working Not Working event series and podcast that features honest conversations with our favorite creatives about the tough stuff we don't talk about in public often enough. For our 8th episode, WNW co-founder Justin Gignac talks to Member Kate Moross in the first London edition of Overshare.
Read MoreWelcome to the Vibrant & Melancholic World of Lisa Carletta
WNW Member Lisa Carletta is a London-based visual artist who uses photography as her main medium. Her work is a delicate balance, shown in the worlds she creates from both behind and in front of the camera. Every element has a purpose and a place, which often gives her work a cinematic quality; she cites both Wes Anderson and Paul Thomas Anderson as influences.
Read MoreMeet Bulldog Problem-Solver Cyrus Vantoch-Wood
Meet Bulldog Problem-Solver
Cyrus Vantoch-Wood
MIKE O'DONNELL / EDITOR
With over twenty years of experience in the industry, London-based WNW Member Cyrus Vantoch-Wood, who runs an independent consultancy called Head, Heart & Power, is often brought in as a hired gun to solve problems for brands. His past collaborator list is a directory of the biggest brands and agencies both in the UK and stateside. As Cyrus puts it in our interview below, "I’m a designer, not an artist. I try to follow the problem through to the right solution, having fun along the way with all the tools and styles available to me." This scrappy approach, with an eye well-trained in surveying and maximizing the resources available to him, is clearly working.
But Cyrus also offers an honest and resonant portrayal of what he's had to put on the line in pursuing his particular creative path. "We all go through issues in chasing your ambitions. I’ve had to make some powerful choices: The choice to be a designer instead of an artist (solve someone else’s problems rather than my own). The choice to move countries and leave friends and family. I’ve chosen morals over money on occasion."
Since there's much to be proud of in his rearview mirror, and as he readies his next new business venture, we asked Cyrus what the idea of a dream project means to him. "It’s not about a title or a vertical for me. It’s simply about great collaborators, a shared ambition, access to the resources, and clients that will give us the permission."
Tell us a bit about your creative background. Who is Cyrus and how did he get here?
I’m a working class bloke from Yorkshire who always liked to tinker with things. I’ve been a geek since my ZX Spectrum. I loved computers and testing what you can do with them creatively. What ideas you could bring to life on them. It led me to graphic design, animation, and coding, which in turn got me passionate about design methodology. Then somewhere along the line I started writing things. Scripts and articles. Running teams. Presenting ideas. I’m still a geek though.
How would you describe your creative style? Do you recognize a signature style that links your projects, or do you try to excuse yourself and approach each project as its own entity?
I’d like to think I don’t have a style. I certainly don’t aspire to have one. I’m a designer, not an artist. I try to follow the problem through to the right solution, having fun along the way with all the tools and styles available to me. But ultimately I want to create work that is unique every time and answers a brief.
What do you see as the turning point in your creative development and career?
When Dare started back in 2000 I was the third employee to join the agency. Dare definitely helped evolve my work ethic and specifically a man called Mike Williams. Mike sat next to me and mentored me (reluctantly) for a few years. He showed me that you can tackle any problem with obsessive passion and some grit and grunt. Teaching yourself as you go. I’ve always taken that bulldog-like belief and approach to whatever I do. Picking up Mike’s methodology and bravery was a turning point in me becoming a real creative maker versus a creative talker.
What were some of the challenges in launching your creative career?
We all go through issues in chasing your ambitions. I’ve had to make some powerful choices: The choice to be a designer instead of an artist (solve someone else’s problems rather than my own). The choice to move countries and leave friends and family. I’ve chosen morals over money on occasion.
Which of your projects are you proudest of and why?
I’m a bit of a perfectionist, so I’m rarely ever fully happy with a project. I’m often more proud of what the team has achieved for the money. Or what social impact a campaign has had. At R/GA in New York, I was working on a notorious, multi-national retailer, who had approached the agency with a brand problem: looking for a better reception in the world. We jumped at the challenge, researching, theorising, and gathering insight from many sources. In the end, we came to the simple conclusion. If they wanted people to have a better perception of them, they had to start actually being an ethically led company.
A number of different initiatives were implemented but there was one that resonated with me: The economic crash in America had resulted in a food crisis for lower income families. The company had lots of excess stock that was essentially being binned when it passed sell-by-date. After teaming up with various charities, we began a program to start donating the leftover food, raising awareness via ATL, driving participation via social and being a partner in changing internal corporate behaviour. The results were tenfold: We saved millions in the disposal of food waste. The food donated was a tax write-off as a charitable donation. There was a big perception change for the company across the US. And most importantly we made a real impact on supporting those going hungry. In the two years following they’d made approximately a $2 billion donation to charity (one of the biggest in history).
What would be your dream project or job, or is it already on your resume?
Tough question. I look at it as about where can I contribute to making the best work.
It’s not about a title or a vertical for me. It’s simply about great collaborators, a shared ambition, access to the resources, and clients that will give us the permission.
Either that or travelling food photographer. Which I’m working on.
Where are the best places to work in the UK?
For agencies, I think it’s like Indian restaurants on Brick Lane. They go through peaks and troughs - one day Cafe Bangla will be the best place to eat. The next it will be Sheba.
Surprisingly, I really enjoyed my time at Cheil London, which had quite a bad rep. But it had the collaboration, ambition, and permission I mentioned earlier. I loved my experience there and made some great work. Unfortunately, the tectonic plates of business meant they have gone through some real changes, and that culture, I’m told, has gone.
How would you define the London creative scene?
I’m not totally sure I’m cool enough to answer that. I don’t go to that many industry events. I suppose I’d describe my friends and acquaintances as all creative, and we have a lot of fun mostly going to twisted music gigs and interesting restaurants and getting drunk at art openings. If that’s the creative scene, I’d describe it as blurry.
How do you see the creative landscape shifting in the UK from when you first started your career?
It’s much harder for young talent. When I started you could get a job if you could use photoshop. Now, the way interns have to spend years trying to land a role makes me feel very lucky. In the same breath, the work ethic has changed. At the end of the 90’s doing an all nighter in the office was the norm. Now I think younger creatives don’t have such a “trial by fire” experience and have trouble with the harsh critique. It’s a genX / genY difference I think.
If not here, where would you most like to live?
I’m lucky that I’ve lived in a few countries already. I love LA - would happily be there. I am also interested in China or Korea. Maybe at some point.
Who are your biggest creative influences?
They vary so much and are from a real diversity of places. I love singularity. I’m always amazed by Hollywood and the different ways in which directors can collaborate with so many, or dictate and come out with something so pure and pointed. I suppose I love all kinds of people who have that ability. Kubrick, Guy Bourdin, Neville Brody, Stefan Sagmeister, David Ogilvy, Yayoi Kusama, Nina Simone… you get the idea.
One book, one album, one movie, one show. Go.
Hmmm, not a fan of these questions. So restricting. So I’m going to cheat.
Books: For entertainment - Money by Martin Amis. For professional thinking - John Maeda's The Laws of Simplicity.
Albums: For warming up the night - Hustle, Reggae, Disco on SoulJazz Records. It’s a set of rare reggae that covers disco. For reminiscing - Primal Scream's Screamadelica. For feeling weird and twisted - The Cenobites' The Cenobites ft. Kool Keith & The Godfather Don.
Movie: Blade Runner
Show: I have to say Game Of Thrones because Kit Harrington lives a few doors down from me.
What is your most treasured possession?
Has to be my Canon 5D MK IV. I’m a camera geek, and I love it.
What do you do when Not Working?
Photography and cooking. Plus the occasional cycle to somewhere nice.
What’s your motto?
Wave automatic guns at nuns.
What’s the best advice you’ve ever heard or received that all creatives should hear?
Don’t be afraid to be Marmite.
What’s next for you? What are you working on now?
I’m working on a new business venture with an ex-colleague from R/GA. I can’t say much, but it will be called WoodCutters.