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Tag Archive for: self actualization

Take This Opportunity To Keep Kids Safe

0 Comments/ in Be Helpful, Be Honest / by Adam Walker
April 1, 2010

Symbolic because those that habitually commit the most heinous acts against children are masters at fooling those with-in a circle of trust to violate the rights of that child.

The tragedy of child abuse and neglect afflicts millions of children annually physically, sexually, or emotionally. Sadly, a report of child abuse is made every 10 seconds in America. Worse, statistics indicate that as many as 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 6 boys are sexually abused before adulthood. This is senseless and can be prevented in many cases. Ultimately all of adults are responsible for protecting children. Not the child.

As we take this month to emphasize and reflect on the importance of understanding child abuse and the need for all Americans to help families overcome this devastating problem; below are a few recommended steps and helpful organizations that will minimize this destructive behavior. Take this opportunity to keep kids safe by making a donation or volunteering your time to one of the charities below today because no child should ever have to suffer from abuse.

If You Suspect The Abuse Of A Child Or Have Been Abused

  • Contact your local law enforcement agency immediately. They are there to help and protect
  • Contact the National Child Abuse Hotline: 1-800-4-A-Child
  • Contact a Child Advocacy Center near you by visiting the National Children’s Alliance website [click here]

If You Are A Caring Parent Of A Child Or Teenager

  • Never stop educating yourself to recognize warning signs, how it occurs, and the effects of child abuse
  • Begin age appropriate dialogs with your children about the potential for abuse
  • If you suspect abuse trust your instincts and take appropriate action.

If You Are A Relative, Care Taker, Or Teacher of Children

  • Be conscious. Know the warning signs and trust your instincts
  • Assess the situation and take appropriate legal action

If You Were Sexually Abused As A Child And Are Silently Suffering

  • Success is not just measured in victories but in every loss that doesn’t defeat you. NEVER GIVE UP.
  • Report your abuse and perpetrator to law enforcement where the abusive actions occurred
  • Consider getting involved and joining a SNAP Support Group [click here]

Click Any of The Logos Below To Make A Donation To Prevent Child Abuse

Yvon Chouinard : Power of One

0 Comments/ in Be Inspiring / by Adam Walker
March 28, 2010

It featured a compelling and inspiring story told by Yvon Chouinard, the Founder of the pioneer outdoor gear company, Patagonia®. As always there are a handful of angles you could investigate, discuss, and learn from an inspiromercial like this; such as what is takepart.com? Or if it achieved the desired result? You could even study the production to learn a few tricks about story telling. But perhaps “the cleanest line”  is enjoying the message at face value. Focusing on the core of the story, the man, and the power of one.

Watch the the video below; regardless if you’re a business owner, employee, or a privateer you can absorb that the Patagonia business model is worthy of study and emulation on many fronts. Rarely do companies revel in their focus and unwavering honesty like Mr. Chouinard’s.

Take another step and read the company history. You’ll learn the guy ate cat food to fulfill his vision, and not even premium cat-food, we’re talking damaged freight cat-food, bought from salvage. Now I’m not advocating that people of vision start chowing down on smelly mush to make their wildest dreams come true, but the lesson here is real reward will come in many forms if you are true and honest in your endeavors and to yourself.

It’s proof that you can grow a successful business and be a responsible corporate citizen at the same time. [even if it means looking beyond the short term financial indicators.] It confirms that it OK to be proud of your actions, so long as they are genuine. And this message serves as a brilliant reminder that it’s not necessary to own a huge corporation to move the needle in the favor of good. It’s a simple process according to Mr. Chouinard, “to do good, you actually have to do something.” And that makes sense. So what are we going to do? I know, do you?

**To be clear, though I consider my self an experienced outdoors-man that has spent his fair share on high end technical gear; I have never bought one stitch of Patagonia product. I have known the brand for many years, but never bit. So to question if inspiring message making works… let just say Mr. Chouinard and the Patagonia Team has spawned another Patagoniac. I see a SST Fly Fishing Jacket in my future. As for American Express and takepart.com – well they gained another loyal do-er. So Win, Win, Win.

**To the team that gave this story to the masses in such an eloquent way – Thank You. Keep Doing. Never Give Up.

**All proceeds that Yvon receives from the commercial will be divided between five of environmental groups of his choice: Conservacion Patagonica, Atlantic Salmon Federation, Freedom to Roam Coalition, Native Fish Society and Save our Wild Salmon.

Design A Better Outdoor Campaign – Part 1 of 3

0 Comments/ in Be Helpful, Featured / by Adam Walker
March 9, 2010

Via a three part series we will start with a recount of the path to production and a look at the design strategy behind this outdoor campaign. In Part 2 we will address design mechanics for outdoor printed media, and conclude with a deeper understanding of designing for the newer medium of outdoor digital media in Part 3. So, stay tuned for those updates in the weeks ahead. Now onto an explanation of the design strategy behind this recently created campaign.

Project Background:

  1. Just prior to this project, Sandweiss Koster completed a new corporate mark and positioning for the client
  2. A new client website was being built simultaneously by Sandwiess Koster
  3. No elemental design or typography standards had been developed to compliment the new identity

Project Scope:

  1. Message to be disseminated on both digital and traditional printed billboards of various sizes
  2. Design visual message with the flavor of a new radio spot produced by Sandwiess Koster [click here to listen]
  3. Let the logo take the visual lead
  4. Logo must be presented on white background
  5. Research indicated that client was perceived as one of the most expensive in the market, which was not true.
  6. Drive potential consumers to website
  7. Give serious consideration to clients unique green core brand color
  8. Four days from concept to production

Preliminary Design Challenges & Solutions:

Challenge: Motorists have 2 to 4 seconds under normal circumstances to absorb an outdoor marketing message
Solution: Keep visual message clean, short, and bold

Challenge: A fence typically resides in a crowded environment with multiple elements more visually dominant
Solution: Eliminate all visual elements besides client’s product

Challenge: No professional photography from client was available for large format use
Solution: Find appropriate stock images or render illustrations of product in design apps

Challenge: Campaign to be delivered on both digital and printed billboards of various sizes
Solution: Choose simple color palette and create headline that can be stacked

Challenge: Client sells multiple fence products to an extremely wide consumer demographic
Solution: Create 3 simple bulletins instead of 1 allowing for targeted message/placement for product audience

Rough Concept 1 – “Better”

Headlines echoed radio spots – Clean, simple, and easy to read – Fastest concept to execute – Most flexible format for size variations – Displays variety of product using fence as border – Allows for bold background color styling

Rough Concept 2: “Artisan”

Abstract image filtering allows for artistic styling to celebrate the art of fence building – Promotion tackles price issue and counter balances artistic imagery – Fence drives eye to logo – Does not require great photography to execute

Rough Concept 3: “NamePlate”

Mimics closeup of client’s Name Plate attached to all projects – Logo and copy to be 3D rendered like real Name Plate – Reminds consumer why “it just makes sense” – Shows product variety as dominant background pattern

Rough Concept 4: “My Domain”

Name recognition driven – Forces eye to logo – Product presented from “backdoor” perspective – Use extensions to break rectangular boundary of the bulletin to draw attention – Fence style can change to show variety of products

——————————————————————————————————

Client Concept Selection: “Better”

The client favored concepts 1 and 4 then decided to move forward on concept number 1. This decision brought about about a new bundle of design considerations with the addition of color.

Design Considerations and Solutions:

Consideration: What to do with the background color?
Solution: Time was of the essence, stick with a color client was comfortable, brand green like no tomorrow

Consideration: How do you bring Logo to the foreground and make it come out of the page?
Solution: Create more contrast between white square and background, by using dark green outer glow

Consideration: I felt Concept 1 headline font didn’t match the company personality and voice-over, too formal
Solution: Use a more confident font that better represents a square product and craftsmanship, use small caps

Consideration: How do you bring more attention to the headline and web address?
Solution: Create dark-light-dark subtle monochromatic gradient with highlight on the focus area

Consideration: How do you combat perceived price point issues in the marketplace even harder?
Solution: Change headline copy from concept, call out “Better Price” argument consistently across all boards

Challenge: How do you bring attention to the call to action?
Solution: Fence in web address with stroked rectangle, create contrast by filling rectangle with darker green

Challenge: How do you overcome the plainness of design, but still tell the story quick and simple?
Solution: Insert “simple” art element – by adding a tree to the scene, the story is stronger and builds visual depth

I hope you’ve found this post to be helpful in strengthening the thought process behind your future design endeavors. Don’t forget to check back for Part 2 and 3 of this series on “Better Outdoor” where I will address design mechanics for outdoor printed and digital media. Until then, make sure to view your work through the eyes of the audience and design with a purpose.

Be Honest, Be Helpful, Be Interesting, and Always Be Inspiring.

This post was created with the permission of Sandwiess Koster. www.theskway.com
The Image in this post was remixed with permission from the following creators under a Creative Commons license.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/davidking/ / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lisanolan/ / CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
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