Archive for the ‘Creativity’ Category

Cynergy celebrates Earth Day 2010 with pupils from Evenwood Primary School

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

finalPic

As part of our Earth Day activites Cynergy will be making a trip to Evenwood Primary School to get pupils engaged in environmental issues. Planning is currently underway for a fun-filled few days, involving showing the pupils how to grow their own herbs using recycled cans, encouraging greener thinking and an interactive t-shirt session where students will come up with their own eco-orientated slogans.

The activities all fit with the new National Primary Curriculum for 2011 which aims to encourage and educate students further on environmental issues to create responsible citizens who make a positive contribution to society.

Pupils will also get creative by designing their own posters and thinking of ways in which the school can save water by changing their current habits.

At the end of the 3-day initiative pupils will receive a certificate for their participation and should be much more aware of the environment and what they can do to help the planet. The learning won’t stop then though, pupils will continue their efforts through a Green Team which they will set up. Photos, letters and progress will be shared with the Green Team at Cynergy so that learning can continue beyond the 3-day project and into the future.

Click here to read more about Earth Day 2010.

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.

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Events for sustainable survival

Monday, August 24th, 2009
Events for sustainable survival
In the current financial climate, however important or worthy a service offer, no sector is immune to the collective belt tightening of supporters, donators and potential stakeholders.
Expensive mass media campaigns to raise awareness and promote services are out of reach for most organisations. In fact, evidence is showing that very few of these approaches, however well funded, controversial or emotionally moving, have proven successful.
The fact remains that the need for awareness, for support and to raise issues with the public has never been greater. Campaigns and initiatives need to be both economical, specific and highly successful, and rightly so. If you take time to get  something right first time, to make your message meet a human need, it should not need doing again.
Organisations and those who operate on their behalf can no longer create complete systems purely based on opinion to distribute to enthusiastic audiences in the vague hope that there will be a percentage of uptake. The collective trend in both private and public sector is, provider looking to those they serve for new direction, and finding success in co-creation and participatory development.
Events and consultations are a becoming a far more suitable proposition for transferring information, quickly and efficiently to large audiences. They not only allow distribution of key issues but are ideal for discussion, debate, workshops and lateral thinking exercises, all far more effective ways of resolving issues and discovering creative solutions.
Conferences that include service user speakers, public consultations and staff taking part in formulating ‘vision and values’ all conclude that if you want something to work, ask those who are going to use it. If you want to change a community for the better then consult them on what is wrong with it and help them to uncover how to put it right. This is putting the power back in the hands of those who need it most, communities gathering around a cause and resolving it, a kind of ‘collective self care’.
So the role of the health and public sector communication is shifting from a position of distributing advice from above, toward being amongst those they serve and listening, learning and providing support for the kind of services they need.
If the formulation of new initiatives are structured by users and are implemented with feedback and evolution platforms in place, allowing continual involvement, they will become self supporting. If users participate in creation and own the project it may go beyond sustainable and do more than you could ever of anticipated.

wood

In the current financial climate, however important or worthy a service offer, no sector is immune to the collective belt tightening of supporters, donators and potential stakeholders.

Expensive mass media campaigns to raise awareness and promote services are out of reach for most organisations. In fact, evidence is showing that very few of these approaches, however well funded, controversial or emotionally moving, have proven successful.

The fact remains that the need for awareness, for support and to raise issues with the public has never been greater. Campaigns and initiatives need to be both economical, specific and highly successful, and rightly so. If you take time to get something right first time, to make your message meet a human need, it should not need doing again.

Organisations and those who operate on their behalf can no longer create complete systems purely based on opinion, and distribute to enthusiastic audiences in the vague hope that there will be a percentage of uptake.

Events and consultations are a becoming a far more suitable proposition for transferring information, quickly and efficiently to large audiences. They not only allow distribution of key issues but are ideal for discussion, debate, workshops and lateral thinking exercises, all far more effective ways of resolving issues and discovering creative solutions. Rather than acting as a climax to a campaign, these events needs to sit as a significant point of a expanding circular process. Developing a programme based on delegate involvement, acting to shape the process during the event and evaluating based on feedback to develop a continual programme of activity. The key to this approach being a changing mindset from events for dissemination to opportunities for collaboration.

Conferences that include service user speakers, public consultations and staff taking part in formulating ‘vision and values’ all conclude that if you want something to work, ask those who are going to use it. If you want to change a community for the better then consult them on what is wrong with it and help them to uncover how to put it right. This is putting the power back in the hands of those who need it most, communities gathering around their own cause and resolving it, a kind of ‘collective self care’.

So the role of the health and public sector communication is shifting from a position of distributing advice from above, toward being amongst those they serve and listening, learning and providing support for the kind of services they need.

If the formulation of new initiatives are structured by users and are implemented with feedback and evolution platforms in place, allowing continual involvement, they will become self supporting. If users participate in creation and own the project it may go beyond sustainable and do more than you could ever of anticipated.

Playlist or catalyst, what am I?

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Vinyl collection

A new free web service and a lot of research into social marketing this week has got me thinking about ownership and authorship.

A couple of weeks ago the Cynergy studio was introduced to Spotify.com (thanks Dave) a free web service which allows you to listen to music from a massive database spanning decades, genres right up to recently released material. Our studio has always been proud of operating to the tune of a diverse, eclectic collection of music. We believe it enhances the exchange of opinion, ideas and creative expression of our individual and mutual personalities. The inclusion of spotify has just added range to this practice. The itunes database we collectively cultivated so proudly is in danger of becoming cobwebbed.

So how does this affect ownership? Since the late 70s I have collected music, on whichever formats were the current trend, even recently succumbing to MP3s has maintained a sense of the ‘collection’. But with a web service that offers most of my CD collection, the vinyl slowly warping in my loft and all the new music I haven’t got around to purchasing yet, who needs a collection? A broadband connection, a couple of decent speakers and you’d never need to visit a record store again, real or virtual.

There is obviously the factor of taking your music away from your computer but more importantly for me this service throws up interesting dilemma around ownership. The music I have hoarded over the years is precious to me, it is part of me. Is that to be reduced to a mere playlist, a set of data that merely links my email address to some files on a hard drive? Is that what I am to become?

These questions of ownership have coincided with a lot of recent work we are doing which highlights the developing role of the designer and creative agency in propagating ideas that live and survive rather than delivering stationary slabs of information which simply exist to communicate a linear message.

There is a natural urge within graphic designers and the agencies they work for to maintain a sense of authorship. Even the most altruistic of us struggle to suppress the desire to ‘do things their way’. In most cases a comfortable balance is found which draws upon the clients aspirations for their project and the agencies creative expertise, a healthy compromise is set on a need for each other to reach a worthwhile solution.

Hence a designers need for authorship is met and a clients problems are solved, everyone is happy, that is until we start including the end user (the projects primary audience) in the dissemination of the initiative.

Social marketing – using creative marketing for behavioural change – is becoming an increasingly common approach in the projects we are engaging with. Events in particular are by their nature inclusive of research, discussion and consideration of a target audience or encouragement of a specified act. This method of approach is however renowned with moving in directions previously unimagined. Once an individual or community is provided with the tools and information to self manage their issue how they use it is out of our control. If a social marketing initiative is successful designers may take credit for the initial idea, the client for the drive to solve a social/health problem, yet once in the public domain ownership is well beyond both our grasps.

So now I no longer own my music (or the music available for me to listen to), and the creative ideas that I formulate with great thought and care are up for grabs for anyone to mold to suit their needs. Maybe the focus on the structure and meaning behind an initiative will become increasingly important factor. Design that is solid, iconic and comfortably adaptable will be more prevalent.

Maybe their is some merit for clients and agencies alike in launching our ideas from the nest. Confident in our nurturing their strengths and proud in their ability to take flight and hopeful of their healthy growth and longevity.