Omaha Startup Week 2017

It’s Startup Week in Omaha starting today. I’m on a panel in the design track with a few other Omaha designers to share our thoughts on design for good. Here’s the setup:

Today we find ourselves in a rapidly changing global society. Information moves faster than ever and impacts a broader audience. As designers, we have an opportunity to open hearts and minds with our unique ability to solve problems through visual communication and user experience. With this in mind; how do we encourage growth and acceptance through our work and leadership?

Design & Social Consciousness Panel
Tuesday May 2, 2017 // 1–3 PM
The Startup Collaborative
1905 Harney, 7th Floor

2,608 Miles

It’s a long journey from Omaha to Anchorage. Exactly 2,607.99 miles separate the two cities. I just returned back to the OMA from the ANC where I presented to AIGA Alaska. A round table discussion over lunch and an evening lecture about my work and approach. I met some really great people and shared a story of pursuit, independence, activism, and keeping it weird in the middle of America. 

Overall, Alaska is insanely beautiful. It was great to experience its vast landscape of mountain peaks and frozen oceans at the tale end of winter—blinding white snow crunching under foot and a burning bright sun beating down. My wife Katie made the journey too. We were able to connect with our longtime friend, fellow designer, collaborator, and Alaska resident Jontue Hollingsworth who helped show us some sights.

The roundtable discussion was casual. On the topic of going from raising awareness to moving people to action. We talked client relationships, measuring success, scope creep, and communicating to diverse audiences. The evening lecture was in an old theater in downtown Anchorage. It was an intimate setting on a stage furnished with the retro set of its current play. I presented on how principles can lead to doing the work you love, how my graphic design manifests itself along the way, and what five core projects look like at a deeper level. The audience was attentive and the Q&A time was thoughtful and broad. On community, inspiration, process, and politics.

The city and the pace reminded me a little of Lincoln. The designers who attended were young and old. They worked as freelancers, in small agencies, and at nonprofits. At dinner we commiserated about people who don’t quite know where either of our states are. At some point in our lives, we’ve had to explain to folks that no, we don’t all live in igloos or tipis. That Alaska is not an island and Nebraska does not have mountains. Good times all around.

Definitely make the trip to the 49th state in the union at some point in your life. You will not be disappointed. Whether for the sights, winter activities, fine food and drink, or welcoming residents. I’m so glad AIGA Alaska extended the invitation. I enjoyed sharing why I think making this design thing matter is key. Getting to meet another design community with lots of passion and interest in making things better, just one more example of the inherent desire of designers to use our talents for something bigger than ourselves.

Get to know me and my work

Say I’m coming to your city to do a lunch round table and a lecture to your design community. And you need a primer. Things that would be shared on social media and what not. What might that include?

Here’s a good list:

Case Studies: (a couple projects of note)
Pipeline Fighters 
Stand Up For Justice

Medium Stories:
Why Work Here (what makes a creative place great)
Hell With This (here I interview myself)
Design Plus Social Justice (thoughts on design for change)

Videos: (fun to watch)
I Voted Today 
Round and Round Coworking

Cause Posters:
Action Backed on Instagram 
We’re Looking for Posters

Regarding the AIGA Alaska talk ...

... I’m thinking it will focus on the importance of having a firmly established set of principles for the work you do. Having those in place is an effective way to exist as an independent designer and to do the projects you’re most passionate about.

From there, the talk will cover a host of my projects that involve community engagement, political campaigning, getting active in your city, art show experiments, and ways to always keep pushing your design practice. Lots of slides/visuals/designs. (Some GIFs, too!)

It will also touch on working in flyover country (not a place known for great design), running a small business, making your city more awesome, and building up a solid client list. And really, why design can be a great career path while allowing you to make a difference in the world with your talents.

More Details from AIGA Alaska »

AIGA Alaska Lecture

Very excited to be speaking in Alaska later this month. A lunch round table and evening lecture hosted by AIGA Alaska. The focus will be on working somewhere not known for design, running a small business, building a solid client list, and making a difference.

Lunch Round Table on Action
Monday, March 27 // 12–1 PM
The Boardroom, 601 W 5th Ave
Anchorage, AK 

Making This Design Thing Matter
Monday, March 27 // 7–9 PM
Cyrano’s Theater, 411 D St
Anchorage, AK 99501

Portfolios, Social Networks, Resumés, Timesheets, Scopes, Invoices, Oh My

Last week I spoke with the Senior Capstone students in design at Creighton University. A casual presentation and discussion around working as a designer today. Mostly from a freelance/independent point of view, we pulled back some of the curtain.

Aside from going through my portfolio site and talking about the logistics behind some of the decisions made, we also dove deep into tracking time, putting together proposals, defending against scope creep, and getting paid. It was time well spent. I’ve never really discussed these topics in such detail before in a group setting. Two hours went by rather quickly.

It does play into something I’ve thinking more and more about, especially as it relates to discussing design with young designers and students. And that’s design as a career. I don’t think you should go into design if you don’t see it as a career. It is not a job. It’s much more. It requires more time. More effort. More blood, sweat, tears. It is not 9–5. But it also doesn’t have to be 80 hours week. 

Your career in design is meant for you, young designer, to design it. Your philosophy, your journey, your work ethic, your attitude, and your persistence. It’s there for you, and it’s ready for you to make it what you will, if you’re up for it. And not everybody is, which is completely okay. But if you are, it’ll be difficult but it’s totally worth it. The ride is turbulent, but if you hold on, you’ll be glad you did.

Ready to Affect

OMA > PDX

This week I’m hitting the road to PDX! I’ll be speaking at the Affect Conference on Friday. Here’s the schedule of events. My slides are done. The flow feels good. I’ve practiced a bit. Feeling solid overall. I’ll be sharing the story of #NOKXL design. Based on our case study, it looks at the high points of a six year project. From the land of rural Nebraska to the steps of the White House, it’s a tale of people power, relentless organizing, and working for social change. There’s also a healthy does of typography, color, texture, etc. It’s a design conference after all. Really looking forward to hanging out in Portland and experiencing a 2-day event on work, culture, and design for social change. 

Affect Conf »