Archive for the ‘Design’ Category

A Giant Money Box for Butterwick House Children’s Hospice

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

wendyHouseAni

10 hours, 7 paintbrushes and 400ml of paint later the giant money box for Butterwick House Children’s Hospice was finished. We stood back, admired, then lovingly packed it into the courier’s van and waved goodbye.

Butterwick had asked us to create them a giant version of a collection box in the shape of a house, which we had recently designed for them. Work started on the 4ft money box early last wednesday morning, with it finally being finished late on thursday afternoon. It was a great project to be involved with, with nearly everyone in the building not being able to resist painting their bit of it.

Watch out for the giant money box in a shopping centre near you soon. Or, visit the Butterwick website here.

View Higher Res Movie Here

Are you cutting back on creativity?

Friday, August 7th, 2009

teessidea1

Have you recently reduced or removed your marketing and design budget? Did you ever have one?

In difficult financial times it is often hard to see the importance of this expenditure. Yet there is a great deal of evidence to support that organisations who think creatively and invest in creative services are far better set to survive and eventually prosper. If you currently employ a creative agency, they should be looking to find alternative ways to help you communicate with your audience, or using creativity into other challenging areas of your business, even with a limited budget. If they are, then we applaud them. More than ever the health and public sector are in need of creative ideas and fresh approaches.

We are always looking to help organisations look at creative involvement in the bigger picture of their business. Specifically, during the year ahead key members of Cynergy are focussing their  attentions on our local area, developing a range of campaigns and initiatives. We exist to communicate issues that matter, and the North East is never short of areas where creativity could help to disseminate, challenge or potentially solve an issue. We are looking for local organisations who are in need of creativity. Someone to listen to their ideas, to help them engage with their audience, to develop and promote their services or champion their cause for now and in the future. So come on all you Teessiders, help us, help you, to create a North East we can all be proud of, email Nick Ball, Creative Director nick@cynergy.co.uk or telephone Sally, Client Co-ordination Manager on 01642 713211

Obviously those beyond our local borders, national or worldwide are more than welcome to throw some creative challenges our way. Our belief in bettering the health and public sector with quality communication and engagement has never been more necessary. We are currently working on ideas to disseminate good practice in health promotion throughout the country so watch this space.

teessidea2

teessidea3

Creative event design brief

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009
Creative event design brief
There is a simple equation within the design industry which is often overlooked – If you want a great design – write a great design brief.
To structure a creative event, which serves its purpose, is financially beneficial, engaging and inspires some form of action the same formula applies. Design briefs can be seen as unnecessary red tape, as restrictive deliberation and often bypassed for simply ‘getting on with it’. Yet you only need to be part of a project that struggles to reach a satisfactory conclusion to realise that a more structured process is needed. Without a strong brief both client and events agency can reach deadline unsure, unprepared and disappointed.
A strong breif is even more important if there are numerous stakeholders, or decision makers who may have a final ruling. Everyone who is working on a project needs to be comfortable with the strategy and purpose before the creative process begins.
When creating events – timing, programme content, venue and budget are all at the forefront of both those commissioning and creating, and rightly so. Yet without consideration of the visual resonance and the emotive impact of design work the event may only serve to pass the time of day.
A great piece of design work impacts the whole event agenda, upholds an organisations defining vision, embeds the key messages in delegates minds and assists in linking follow up material and further initiatives.
Have you ever reached a point in a creative process, where you were unhappy with the progress, unsure about the direction of the design style or frustrated that endless revisions still do not match your initial hopes for the project? If so, then the quality of the design brief could quite possibly be to blame. If has often been said that a successful solution can be reached by spending ninety percent of the effort defining the problem and ten percent solving it, the creative brief is this definition. A brief can actually shorten the time it takes to execute the design process, and make the whole process far more satisfying for everyone involved.
From a clients point of view the most important points to remember is a good design brief can save both time and provide value for money. This does not however mean you need to dictate exactly what is to be done. Being clear about what the item needs to achieve, allows the creatives to explore diverse solutions. The most successful projects come from briefs that are open enough to inspire creativity, whilst remaining specific and purpose driven. More importantly with parameters the results will be measurable.
Design briefs should vary according to the discipline involved and events require even greater consideration of a desired outcome or inspired action. Without going into the full process of creating the brief here are a few directing questions we currently use. Who are you? (defining your activities, niches, purpose, practice, achievements, history), Why this project? (ultimate project aims, specific objectives, potential/desired achievements), Where is this happening? (initial specific target audience, wider demographic, potential scope), How will this happen? (delivery, budget, time scale), What else should we know? (specifics, emotive influence, house style, restrictions).
As mentioned above, all of these points are to be considered alongside the event planning and although the information serves to assist the design team in providing a stunning visual response, the more information provided can allow creativity in all areas of the process.
We are currently formalising these points into a creative event design brief framework, if you have any comments or think this would be useful to you or your team let us know and we will send you a copy.

design_breif

There is a simple equation within the design industry which is often overlooked – If you want a great design – write a great design brief.

To structure a creative event, which serves its purpose, is financially beneficial, engaging and inspires some form of action, the same formula applies. Design briefs can be seen as unnecessary red tape, as restrictive deliberation and often bypassed for simply ‘getting on with it’. Yet you only need to be part of a project that struggles to reach a satisfactory conclusion to realise that a more structured process is needed. Without a strong brief both client and events agency can reach deadline unsure, unprepared and disappointed.

A strong brief is even more important if there are numerous stakeholders, or decision makers who may have a final ruling. Everyone who is working on a project needs to be comfortable with the strategy and purpose before the creative process begins.

When creating events – timing, programme content, venue and budget are all at the forefront of both those commissioning and creating, and rightly so. Yet without consideration of the visual resonance and the emotive impact of design work the event may only serve to pass the time of day.

A great piece of design work impacts the whole event agenda, upholds an organisations defining vision, embeds the key messages in delegates minds and assists in linking follow up material and further initiatives.

Have you ever reached a point in a creative process, where you were unhappy with the progress, unsure about the direction of the design style or frustrated that endless revisions still do not match your initial hopes for the project? If so, then the quality of the design brief could quite possibly be to blame. It has often been said that a successful solution can be reached by spending ninety percent of the effort defining the problem and ten percent solving it, the creative brief is this definition. A brief can actually shorten the time it takes to execute the design process, and make the whole process far more satisfying for everyone involved.

From a clients point of view the most important points to remember is that a good design brief can save both time and provide value for money. This does not however mean you need to dictate exactly what is to be done. Being clear about what the event needs to achieve, allows the creatives to explore diverse solutions. The most successful projects come from briefs that are open enough to inspire creativity, whilst remaining specific and purpose driven. More importantly with parameters the results will be measurable.

Design briefs should vary according to the discipline involved and events require even greater consideration of a desired outcome or inspired action. Without going into the full process of creating the brief here are a few directing questions we currently use. Who are you? (defining your activities, niches, purpose, practice, achievements, history), Why this project? (ultimate project aims, specific objectives, potential/desired achievements), Where is this happening? (initial specific target audience, wider demographic, potential scope), How will this happen? (delivery, budget, time scale), What else should we know? (specifics, emotive influence, house style, restrictions).

As mentioned above, all of these points are to be considered alongside the event planning and although the information serves to assist the design team in providing a stunning visual response, the more information provided can allow creativity in all areas of the process.

We are currently formalising these points into a creative event design brief to be completed during all initial meetings, if you have any comments or think this would be useful to you or your team let us know and we will send you a copy.

Self Care in discussion

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Self Care Aware

Some very interesting insights on the ‘Taking Charge Blog’ (Reflections from Mary Jo Kreitzer, the director of the Center for Spirituality & Healing at the University of Minnesota) in discussion of the Self Care Aware Event for NHS North West.

Self Care: Key to Health Reform Worldwide
I had the opportunity this week to spend time with National Health Service colleagues in Manchester, England, where I gave a keynote address at a conference called Self Care Aware.
During the past three years, the National Health Service (NHS) has been implementing a self care strategy that focuses on individuals taking responsibility for their own health and well-being. It is a strategy that goes to the heart of health reform and strives to balance rights and responsibilities with informed choice. In his opening remarks, Chief Executive of NHS North West, Mike Farrar, acknowledged the profound culture change that this will demand.
Throughout the day, there were many brilliant examples of self-care initiatives including a self-care toolkit for people with chronic illness and a program called The Calm Zone, which is targeted at young men ages 15-35 that offers help, information and advice on work issues, financial stress, bullying, relationships, self-harm and suicide. A six-week course called Self Care for You teaches people how to manage minor ailments, acute illness, long-term conditions, and adopt healthy lifestyle behaviors.
Every organization within the NHS in this region is expected to make self care a major focus of their work. While I have seen many healthcare organizations and systems through the years embrace new directions, too often the changes are cosmetic and don’t really address core values and priorities. I found the progress that has been made here in England and the commitment to self care to be nothing short of stunning and a wonderful model for other countries, including the U.S. My address titled Transforming Health Care: Patient Empowerment echoed some of the conference’s self-care strategy and included information about our website Taking Charge of Your Health.
What do you think about self care’s role in reforming our healthcare system?

Self Care: Key to Health Reform Worldwide

“Throughout the day, there were many brilliant examples of self-care initiatives including a self-care toolkit for people with chronic illness and a program called The Calm Zone, which is targeted at young men ages 15-35 that offers help, information and advice on work issues, financial stress, bullying, relationships, self-harm and suicide. A six-week course called Self Care for You teaches people how to manage minor ailments, acute illness, long-term conditions, and adopt healthy lifestyle behaviors.”

Mary Jo Kreitzer includes some great compliments about the Self Care initiative including, ”…their commitment to self care to be nothing short of stunning”. Read the full article by clicking on the heading above.