Articles
Type
-
Type
Article
- All
- Article
- Podcast
- Video
- Creative Month Video Archive
- A Creative Perspective
Category
-
Category
All
- All
- @ The One Club
- A Creative Perspective
- Advertising
- Agency/Company Profiles
- Art
- Award Shows
- Awards
- Business
- Creative Hall of Fame
- Creative Month
- Creative Showcase
- Design
- DGMS
- Digital/Technology
- Education
- Events
- Featured Articles
- Film/Motion/Animation
- From the Archive
- Gender Equality
- History
- Illustration
- Inclusion & Diversity
- Judging
- Member News
- One Screen
- Online Exclusive
- Photography
- Portfolio Night
- Professional Development
- Profiles
- Social Media
- Strategy
- Technique
- The Future
- Typography/Lettering
- Viewpoint
- Young Guns
- Young Ones
Type
-
Type
Article
- All
- Article
- Podcast
- Video
- Creative Month Video Archive
- A Creative Perspective
Articles
Read the latest viewpoints, learn new techniques and stay up to date with top industry trends. For more information on how to submit an article please contact editorial@oneclub.org.
Technique - Eric Silver: A Bad Boy Grows Up
Eric Silver on his approach to finding good ideas and his philosophy about controversial work.
Interview - Bill Hillsman: The Ultimate Bedfellow
Bill Hillsman on how he has been the secret weapon behind many successful political campaigns.
Viewpoint - DeVito/Verdi
Sal DeVito and Ellis Verdi talk about controversy in advertising.
adidas
How adidas won this year's coveted Client of the Year award.
Back to Basics
PJ Pereira and Kash Sree talk about future plans and how they approach their clients' projects.
One Show Design
How the One Show Design competition continues to grow.
Viewpoints - Basic Instincts
Ad agencies greatest strength ought to be intuition.
Outsiders - Michael Moore
Michael Moore winning documentary filmmaker and rabble-rouser, who created 'Roger and Me
Passions - Out of Africa
The best advertising shows an understanding of the audience and it has a clear, honest message.
Viewpoints - When design meets advertising. What happens next?
The one thing that advertising and design have in common.
Milton Glaser - A design legend on doing no harm
Milton Glaser discusses the role of visual communication as a vehicle for social change.
Client - Debunking the status quo with Diesel
Maurizio Marchiori collaboration with 'creative partner' KesselsKramer
United Way of the Lower Mainland
DDB/Canada wins accolades for its United Way work.
You'd think this relatively simple print campaign for the United Way, visually demonstrating how the charity's famous hand icon is there to literally help people in potentially dangerous situations, would be easy to shoot. 'Fat chance,' says art director Daryl Gardiner.
Roadblocks proliferated. For instance, after photographer Frank Hoedl had obtained permits and posted signs to keep the street clear, on the day of the shoot, a car parked right where Hoedl wanted to shoot. 'We had the car towed,' says Gardiner. 'Mid-shoot, the owner showed up and threw a wobbly, eating up valuable time while Frank argued with him. And for the shot of the boy in the park, we discovered our talent couldn?t throw a ball underhand. I don't know how many rolls of film Frank shot to capture a convincing throw.' Then the talent on the bridge had a fear of heights. 'It's actually the copywriter,' says Gardiner. 'We couldn't afford a model. Every time a large truck drove by the bridge shook not good when you're leaning over the railing and are afraid of falling. At one point some asshole yelled, 'Jump!' Nice.' But luckily for Gardiner and his copywriter/talent partner Kevin Rathgeber, this low-budget ($20,000 Canadian) campaign, designed to raise awareness and money for the United Way and expand and change the public's perception of its breadth of social services, did indeed turn out, nice.
'Our agency has always supported the United Way but we?d never done their advertising,' explains Gardiner. 'Two years ago we were asked to create a poster to run internally to drum up support for the United Way fundraising drive. We came up with the idea of using the 'hand' icon to visually demonstrate how the United Way helps people. It seemed like a natural fit and we wondered why no one had done it before.'
They then approached the local United Way, who already had an agency of record. For a while, nothing happened and they filed the campaign away and wrote it off. A year later the local United Way happened to be looking for an agency. 'We talked with them and decided our original idea still had merit, fleshed out more executions and presented the campaign. The client loved it.'
The United Way of the Lower Mainland, initially nervous about running the campaign, especially the bridge shot, went on to surpass the fundraising goal of $20 million for 2003, an increase of over $1 million. Plus it's won a number of awards on the Canadian awards circuit. 'United Way is such a universal brand that we didn't feel we had to explain what their organization stands for,' says Rathgeber. 'We knew that most people donate to charity based on emotional, not purely rational, reasons. So we wanted to connect with people on a gut level. And we felt simple, graphic demonstrations of what UW does would be the best answer.'