09 April 2011

Make things happen.

It amazes me how many people just sit around and expect things to happen to them. What a waste of life. There is a societal expectation or belief that after college you get a job and get married and have a family and live happily ever after and . . . and . . . and.

I don't know if anyone has noticed that it's a shit storm out there and the white picket fence isn't going to cut it anymore. We need people who are willing to take a stand, people who are proactive and people who aren't willing to settle for what worked in the last 50-100 years.

One of my favorite people to follow on twitter is @coolsideburns. He said something today that really resonated with me.


Remember to push for change, push for what you think is right. You can do all of this and still be respectful of those who came before you. Remember when William Bernbach and Paul Rand changed the future of advertising by partnering a copywriter and art director together? I feel like it's time for something revolutionary to happen again.

That's my rant for the day now go out and make shit happen. 

02 April 2011

Holy Fuck.

I don't believe that "hit the ground running" would accurately describe my first month at Moses Anshell. It's been incredibly busy but the best thing about it, is that the crew there is amazing. I feel like I've been friends with these people for years. It makes for a great working environment.

In the last month we have pitched 2 clients, completed multiple assignments for existing clients and won some awards. Not too bad in 4 weeks.

Here's some work we did for RSC Equipment Rental. They hold these seminars for VPs and other managers in their clientele companies. The purpose of the event is to get these guys to come and try the equipment and see what the company has to offer. Well, no one REALLY wants to go to these events except for the free food. We decided to use this as our main facet and named the event Power Lunch.

Everything about this event started to focus around the food and then, oh yea, there is also this equipment you can demo and meet the guys at your local shop. Blair Bunting, a family friend and professional photographer, did the photography and it's beautiful.

Poster Front
Poster Back

RSVP Microsite

Email Blast

Hard Hat Stickers

Variations of the Hard Hat Stickers

21 March 2011

SXSW 2011


SXSW was awesome. I am so glad I decided to suck it up and pay for it myself. There are so many people in Austin during this week that you can't or wouldn't meet any where else.

I attended one of the seminars about advertising and actually started to steer clear of them for the rest of the week. I wanted to explore other panel discussions about ethics and personalities and social media. It was so worth it. I feel like I am able to come back to my new position at Moses Anshell and really showcase a diverse knowledge this conference had to offer!

Pretty excited for next year.

18 March 2011

Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Welcome to the 2nd Annual Green Flip Cup Tournament. Shout out to Meyer and Haller for the posters and Swenson and Shhhwhale for painting everything in their wake gold. It was a blast.



Bets . . . my CW

Quarters.
The crew.
Meyer & Haller
Gas Can Baby.
Some of the frogs hidden around the office.
Only Irish.
Chad warmin' up
Annette  and Andy
One of the trophies.

13 March 2011

SXSW 2011

Thank you Austin, I. had. a. blast.

It was amazing to go and meet so many great people. 4chan speaker was probably my favorite from the entire conference probably because it related to me the most.

Fruitfly Life was the most interesting, she is trying to reposition a derogatory word in society and turn it into something positive and celebrated. It brought me back to my deviance class in graduate school and as you all know I love people trying to change the world and create positive chaos.

I saw the film "A Matter of Taste" a friend produced at the festival, one word, AMAZING. It was really well put together.

Did you go? What were your favorite talks?

Below are some shots from my camera.

The line to get a free Adobe tote bag. . . 
Best grilled cheese EVER.
Tables full of Legos.
Squirrel fight.
Lauren, a fantastic lady I used to work with at HWH!
Sheena, my HWH bud! 
Squirrel.
This reminded me of my friend Jana.
Creek.
TEX-ASS
Torchie's Tacos, a must have!
MORE TACOS!

03 March 2011

Arizona, a Lexus and a Haircut


So as you all probably know I am back in Zona and it's amazing. I love it, the weather has been beautiful, the people that I work with are great and it's so nice to be around family again. The only thing that sucks is I realized that I left an entire load of nice shirts in the dryer . . . guess I know what my first paycheck is going towards.

I have taken a job with Moses Anshell, a great ad agency in Phoenix. There are some great things coming in the near future and I am so excited to be a part of it. Don't worry I will share more as we get things moving . . . I wouldn't want to spoil the anticipation.

-----

As for the Lexus, I have realized how much better the traffic is here but how much worse the drivers are. In LA, when there is a hole people drive faster and are aggressive. They also use their horns, thus in the last three years I have gotten REALLY good at using my horn as well.

So I am pulling out of PetCo this girl cuts through parking lot almost nailing my car, so I do what anyone would do, I honked. Not in a "hey whore don't cut me off" but in a "hey I'm here don't hit me" kind of way. She proceeds to flip me off. So fine whatever Arizonians use their middle fingers instead of their horns . . . it's all starting to come back to me.

Then we are making a left across traffic, no light. Nice size hole in traffic comes, we can both make it if we both go. So, she goes and I follow her out, we both begin to accelerate and then all of a sudden she slams on her brakes with NO ONE, NOOOO ONNEEEE, around. She is obviously pulling a backdoor (backdoor is when someone slams on their brakes because they think the person is driving too close to them in anticipation that the other person will rear end them.)

Her being a stupid bleached blonde whore that is driving a (most likely) leased Lexus obviously can't judge distance very well because I had more than enough room to maneuver into the lane next to me and go around her. Oh did I mention there was no one around us, so that also made getting around her a lot easier as well.

So I then get slowed down by a truck that is trying to turn right so she then gets in front of me and starts going 15MPH, so I take a picture of her license plate, this obviously did something because she sped off.

Anyway, I just thought I would share because this woman/girl/whore managed to cut me off, flip me off, pull a backdoor and then reverse tailgate me in a matter of two blocks. She is lucky I didn't have eggs with me or I would have thrown one at her. (Those of you who know me know that last statement is only half true.)

-----

Ok onto the haircut, if any of you are still with me, this part is about social media.

I needed a trim, my hair was lookin' a bit nappy, so since I'm home I thought I would hit up the local Great Clips that I used to frequent while in high school. Since my lady didn't speak English that well, I was reduced to eavesdropping on the lady next to me.

They were talking about facebook. These ladies were in their 40s maybe early 50s and were talking about how they didn't use facebook and couldn't believe that people would openly put all that information out there. The lady was afraid her children would get stolen and the hairdresser was afraid she would get stolen. The hairdresser also said that she didn't even own a cell phone, honey you look like a cave woman so I understand you not having a cell phone, and unless the man is a neanderthal you have no worries about being stolen.

I had to contain myself from laughing at most of their conversation and at one point I almost interjected but I realized I really just didn't care.

What do you think about the generation that is too young to retire but completely missed the digital revolution?

01 March 2011

Arizona and a Haircut


I have finished moving back to my home state of Arizona. It is an amazing place and I am happy to be home. I have recently started a new job as the Senior Art Director with Moses Anshell. Even though I've only been here two days,  I feel like I've been here forever. Everyone here is amazing, so nice and helpful. It is also a young agency, meaning the employees are in their early 20s to early 30s. It is refreshing and inspiring.

I got here yesterday and I had a bunch of goodies on my desk which included food, gum, koozies, and other assorted items. Also, they gave me a duck toy and water bowl for Leroy. It was great. I also didn't sit around on my first day here. I was thrown in and picked up the pace, I'm amazed at the difference that makes and how exciting it is.

Today hasn't slowed down a bit either. There's too many things that I've been impressed with in my two days here to name. But just know it's good.

-----

On to the haircut. I desperately needed a trim so I went to the Great Clips I used to go to in high school when I was too poor to get a proper trim (kind of like now). The lady that was cutting my hair didn't speak very good english so I had to resort to ease dropping on the lady next to me.

So apparently she isn't to tech saavy and doesn't like facebook or even computers in general. Apparently they are too public, and she's worried about pedophiles "coming to her house to steal her children." I seriously had to contain myself from laughing out loud and messing up my hair cut. Though the hairdresser agreed with her stating that she didn't even own a cell phone. . . she did kind of look like a cave woman so I let that one slide.

It amazes me how incredibly different the two generations are and I am somewhat spoiled because I am in advertising so the older crowd gets and uses facebook and other social media platforms. Though there are so many people over 30 that are scared of technology and won't venture beyond Microsoft Word. The internet sends chills down the spine and they think they are going to get sucked into a black hole.

While our generation is great when it comes to sharing socially online, we royally suck at face to face communication. It has come down to asking someone out over a text. 52% of youth in Japan think that is the socially acceptable way to go about it too!

I wonder if we will ever see a revolt against technology and cubes. In someways we are already, the laptop and skype allows us to work where ever we want while still being able to conference with co-workers. Do you think that offices will ever be out of date?

I know an entire thought process of how generations interact with technology just from going to get a haircut. It happens.

18 February 2011

Last Day at HWH

So today is my last day at High Wide & Handsome. It's been an interesting run, though I have been offered a new adventure that I couldn't turn down. There are some great people here who I hope to work with again sometime in the future.

Sheena - The only other person in the office who has not worked at Ignited, she quickly became a close friend. I also love it when her Brooklyn accent slips out, sometimes it even surprises her.

Farls - Don't let the quiet exterior fool you, he's a baller on a wacom and incredibly sarcastic. He's taught me a lot and I am grateful.

Matt - I have worked with him the most, partnering with him on Arbor Mist and some other projects. It got to a point that sometimes we could finish each others sentences . . . that was weird. Matt is a die-hard USC fan . . . all I have to say is 2005 National Champions. :D

Mags - Hands down, amazing boss. He is the right amount of goofy. I once asked him if he weren't in advertising what he would do . . . without hesitation . . . pirate. I think it's because he has a boat.


Thank you for the good times and the awkward times (you know what I am referring to).

15 February 2011

Communication Arts Exhibit: ASU Women's Rugby




I had the honor of having work showcased today on Communication Arts. Pretty exciting, I wouldn't have been able to pull it off without a great photographer and a wonderful copywriter. 

If you missed it, please visit Communication Arts website.

14 February 2011

Sex Appeal

So last night on Discovery there was this show about human behavior and finding a mate called the Science of Sex Appeal. Since I am in advertising and love to people watch I found this show incredibly interesting.

Scientist from all over the world are studying the mating rituals of human beings, one being from Arizona State University made me particularly interested since that is my alma mater. It was really interesting how men and women find a mate with the best genes but also tend to "stay within their own league."

The face is the first thing both sexes find appealing when choosing a mate, though going down the line it begins to split and mix between tone of voice, scent, walking styles, flashy possessions etc.

The thing I found really interesting was that men give off an odor that repels women unless they are ovulating, the scent then becomes incredibly pleasant. Also, women's voices tend to be an octave higher when ovulating and men become more attracted to that woman because of her higher pitched voice.

If you are interested in seeing clips from the show goto http://dsc.discovery.com/videos/science-of-sex-appeal/.

In one of the clips the scientists layers faces on top of each other to get an average face. I found these average faces for different ethnicities. I think it's interesting to see all of the ethnicities and how the bone structure is formed.

11 February 2011

I can't keep up with my Google Reader.


Does anyone else have this problem? I look at my GR everyday and it's like 1000+ new items. This is incredibly intimidating. There is only so much information I can take in at one time. Plus I would actually like time to make things myself. So I have started putting a limit on my GR time. I have update it to things posted that day only and I get 45 minutes to look through things.

It is making me more productive in my browsing. I subscribe to over 100 blogs and they range from advertising to stupid funny stuff to weddings (i love themed weddings . . . it's kind of like branding a new company) so there is no way I would get anything done if i looked through thousands of things a day.

. . . though today . . . i accidentally hit the "mark all as read" button . . . sooo i guess we will try again tomorrow.

To see what I'm looking at check out MY GOOGLE READER

09 February 2011

My SXSW Plan - Let's see if I can pull it off.


So as you probably know I am going to SXSW Interactive. Pretty excited there are a lot of great sessions lined up, though now I have to go through and figure out which ones I want to attend. Which ones are you going to?


Friday 11.March.2011

9:00 AM - Drive A Chevy
Charged up for SXSW? Reserve your spot to drive the all-electric Chevy Volt at the Catch A Chevy stop on Trinity and 3rd from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. every day during SXSW.

2:00 PM - Being Young and Rocking It
Being a young entrepreneur in this period of time in business and commerce is an exciting thing. It is your biggest asset. You should rock it. But how do you rock it? How do you overcome traditional preconceived notions of being "younger", more "inexperienced", and "naive"? Simple. You turn them into your strengths. Everyone always talks about how being curious, how retaining youthful characteristics is a great way to succeed without bounds. Why can't those who truly embody those characteristics be the ones that indeed reap those rewards? Most younger entrepreneurs are at the edge of a cliff. They are looking for reasons to jump, or not to jump. There are lots of people willing to tell them all the reasons of why they shouldn't. Very few are there to tell them all the reasons why they should, and to help them throughout to show them how to grow wings in the process. I'm there to nudge them. Being a 19-year-old entrepreneur with a funded start up - experience at a well-known company in the social news landscape, and literally being thrown into a pit of extremely successful entrepreneurs as a non-American (a Canadian), helped prime me to learn all of the lessons that I will be sharing with everyone. Anyone fascinated by the elusive "young" entrepreneur - and especially the type that genuinely takes tangible action towards successful milestones in their career - and wondering about how to learn from them and to help nurture their growth - should come. 
LEVEL: Intermediate

3:30 PM - Creating an Effective Marketing Intern Program
Would you like a helping hand that is affordable, accommodating, and productive? With the explosion of Web and mobile applications, now more than ever, companies could benefit from a helping hand. With so much to do, and so little time, Amanda and Caroline share how to knockout that online marketing to-do list with an internship program, where they address how to assess the workload, create a mutually beneficial program and recruit Rockstar interns. Amanda and Caroline will share strategies and tactics on: (1) Finding ideal tasks for interns (2) Developing the internship program structure (3) Setting expectations on free versus paid. This presentation intends to show you how to create a win-win situation for both your company and your interns. 
LEVEL: Beginner

4:00 PM - The Personal MBA: Mastering Productivity, Happiness, and Wealth
Running a business can be intimidating, frustrating, and stressful if you don't really understand the fundamentals of how every successful business works. Life gets much easier once you understand what you're doing: if you correct your business mental models, you'll quickly achieve a "Triple Double" - doubling your profits, doubling your productivity, and doubling the fun you have at work this year. This panel will teach you the most powerful fundamentals of business - a few simple ideas that you can use immediately to make more money, get more done, and actually enjoy the process of building your world-changing venture. “These concepts really work: I’m booked solid with clients, making 8x more money, feeling far less overwhelmed, and having a lot more fun. If you want to live up to your potential, you can’t afford to miss this.” – Tim Grahl, Founder and CEO, Out:Think Group 
LEVEL: Intermediate

5:00 PM - Apps for Healthy Kids: Government Challenges FTW
The Apps for Healthy Kids competition pooled $60k in prizes in support of the First Lady's Let's Move initiative to reduce obesity and raise awareness for healthy lifestyles. USDA led the effort providing the MyPyramid dataset and focusing the app and game competition on "tweens" for learn through play, and nutritional gatekeepers to arm them with critical information to make healthy food choices. We started from scratch and found tremendous support in the Office of Science and Technology Policy as well as the game/app developer community. The challenge platform welcomed entries and we invited the public to vote. An esteemed judging panel including Aneesh Chopra and Steve Wozniak will select winners. By the time SXSW begins, the winning games and apps will be making a positive impact on children and adults to make health food and lifestyle choices. Other federal examples will provide alternative approaches to using competitions to achieve specific goals. Government is becoming more adept in utilizing games, tools and Internet technologies to reach citizens on relevant platforms and devices. Learn from our mistakes and successes, and take away useful tips for designing your own challenge or competition.

5:30 PM - Creative Workshop: 80 Challenges to Sharpen Your Design Skills
You're under the gun. Again. Only a few days to come up with a revolutionary new feature for your Web app. Or you've been tasked by your boss to give the company's new mobile experience a little more oomph. Or you're floating in the space of a nebulous client problem that you just can't seem to pin down. In these situations, it can be hard to focus on coming up with breakthrough ideas. But don't worry--


Saturday 12.March.2011

9:30 AM - How Print Design is the Future of Interaction
This session is about how the history of Print Design is becoming an important influence in the evolution of Interaction Design. As a craft, design for printed media has a rich history. Several generations of designers have pushed its boundaries in countless directions. It has been shaped over several hundred years as both a functional and aesthetic discipline, with a deep foundation of principles, practices, theories, and professional dialogue. In comparison, Interaction and UI Design is still a relatively young field. Its history has largely been driven by technology and functional goals. The dialogue around it has been centered on usability, which has been its purpose in the context of technological advancement. The visual language of UI has evolved from that standpoint: that it should evoke the familiar, analog experience of tools, buttons, knobs, and dials. That foundation has led to a very specific visual language in interactive experiences. In the past ten years however, the relevant technologies that support the design of Interfaces - displays, processing speeds, and rendering engines - have matured to a point that they provide a more capable canvas for design. Meanwhile, our culture has become visibly more comfortable with the technologies that surround it. These combination of trends are creating an important inflection point for designers. The aesthetic experience of the digital surface can now be considered and explored in a more sophisticated manner. 
LEVEL: Intermediate

11:00 AM  - Using Twitter to Improve College Student Engagement
While faculty and staff at higher education institutions have experimented with the use of social media, there has not been a concerted effort to integrate these technologies in educationally-relevant ways. Emerging research in the field of social media, student engagement, and success shows that there are specific ways that these technologies can be used to improve educational outcomes. This presentation will focus on reviewing and translating research on the effects of Twitter on college students into effective and engaging educational practices. Background research on the psychological construct of engagement will be provided and will be linked to engagement in online social spaces. In addition to presenting cutting-edge research on how to create engaging and engaged communities, the presenter will review specific ways that Twitter can be used in the classroom and the co-curriculum. The presenter will discuss how academicians can hack existing technologies, specifically Twitter, for educational good and will present the results of his latest research on the effects of Twitter on student engagement and grades. 
LEVEL: Intermediate

12:00 PM - Open Government through Participation: Designing Successful Online Consultations
Public participation—the process of engaging citizens and stakeholders in collaborative problem solving and decision making—has been around for a few decades. Whether urban planning, participatory budgeting or environmental conflict resolution, the basic principles of designing and running effective consultations to gather citizen input or co-create policy solutions are, for the most part, well understood. The use of technology to support and enhance these participatory efforts, on the other hand, is still a fairly young and emerging discipline. While there have been many advancements in this area in recent years, the lessons learned still aren’t always readily available for practitioners. This fast-paced and interactive panel will explore what it takes to deliver successful online consultations. We’ll go over the basic processes involved, look at some of the typical challenges and how they can be addressed, and highlight innovative tools and projects from around the world. Technology, if applied properly, can greatly increase the opportunity for citizens to participate in the decisions that shape their future. With this session, we want to give anyone involved in delivering on this promise a solid head start. 
LEVEL: Intermediate

3:45 PM - No. Great Minds Do Not Think Alike
Where do good ideas come from? Diversity. There is a growing body of evidence showing that cognitive diversity can play a powerful role in increasing the ideation and innovation capacity of a group or community. This session unpacks cognitive diversity, shows how it can drive better outcomes and examines some things that can get in the way. As General Patton said; “If everyone is thinking the same thing, then someone isn’t thinking at all.” If a group of people are considering something that matters, there will be some disagreement. Pursuing better solutions requires that we are willing and able to create social spaces where we can surface and recombinate those differences. We often avoid those differences because there is tension there. If you want the benefit that diversity brings, you have to be able to contain the tension that comes with it and that is where a lot of individuals and groups fall short. They avoid or deny differences because it is easier and safer. Even if we have an intuitive appreciation for the fact that different perspectives can be valuable, human nature can still get in the way. Things like stereotypes, assumptions, implicit association, attribution errors, and cognitive biases can have a profound impact on our considerations of others, regardless of our intentions. We can however, reduce the impact of our drive to judge and categorize so that it does not prevent us from creating robust intersections of differing perspectives. 
LEVEL: Intermediate

5:00 PM - Grow Some Balls: Build Business Relationships from Nothing
Fear holds many people back in business. There is fear of not having enough to offer, fear of not knowing what to say, fear of rejection. This session is about how the game is changing and how to build quality relationships out of nothing while not being afraid. Business is about relationships and using technology to foster those relationships by growing social spheres of influence and creating a network of contacts of friends, acquaintances, and business partners. Also to be covered will be the advanced tips and tricks for making a cold connection a warm one, how to make a great impression, follow-up like a rock-star and how to complete deals that are not typical deals. Social media sites such as Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook have changed the way business is done. When should you add someone on Twitter versus LinkedIn versus Facebook? How do you avoid being ignored? What about instant messenger? Is the IM agreement the new term sheet? All these questions will be explored in the session that covers the best methods for being successful in business even if your main function in your organization is not business. 
LEVEL: Advanced

5:45 PM - The New Queer Media


Sunday 13.March.2011

9:30 AM - Creative and Effective Leadership in Design Environments
A search on Amazon shows 62,000+ books on leadership but almost nothing to help creative team leaders build and sustain a creative environment. Creativity and innovation can be delicate and emotionally fraught processes. Leadership theories are helpful, but what do you do when your star designer suddenly starts mailing it in? Or a project team is frozen in infighting? Or one of your designers just can't find their footing in a new project? When you got your big promotion for being an amazing designer, no one told you that you needed an entirely new skill set. Sink or swim, baby. For this session, Sarah B. Nelson gets practical on the topic of creative leadership. From vision development to team alignment, from bottom-up empowerment to top-down intervention, Sarah will inspire you with practical ideas to motivate your team and rouse them to greatness. She will draw on her extensive experience leading creative teams at Adaptive Path and Hot Studio -- and inform the discussion with research and interviews from organizational psychologists, experienced managers, and successful creative leaders.
LEVEL: Advanced

11:00 AM - Bend Over? Surprise! Agencies Are Screwing You
The agency model of billable hours, budget overruns and hierarchical team structures was built in the early 20th century. Although things have changed significantly thanks to technology, labor equity and innovation in other industries, this outdated model continues its vampire-like sucking of vendors dry. Examining the traditional model, we’ll identify reasons why agency-contracted work is potentially perilous for your business. Instead of being results-oriented, agencies charge hourly rates regardless of (un)successful outcomes. Agency staff, constrained by the pressure to bill hourly are stifled creatively and prevented from serving clients as best they can. Should these time sheet zombies continue representing brands to the public? Thankfully, many workable solutions exist: bring creative personnel in house, pay for quantifiable results, empower yourself to learn new necessary skills, insist on agency and vendor accountability, and more. As the sun sets on the agency world, and the ball is in the court of business owners. Are you ready to adapt to the 21st century and make a jump to a new way of doing business?
LEVEL: Advanced

12:30 PM - No Excuse: Web Designers Who Can't Code
Some of the most important design decisions happen in code. In 2009, I gave a talk at the Build conference in Belfast with what I thought was a fairly uncontroversial premise: web designers should write code. Since then, the subject has sparked more than a few debates, including a particular heated pile-on when Elliot Jay Stocks tweeted that he was "shocked that in 2010 I’m still coming across ‘web designers’ who can’t code their own designs. No excuse." In a recent interview, Jonathan Ive said "It's very hard to learn about materials academically, by reading about them or watching videos about them; the only way you truly understand a material is by making things with it." He's talking about product design, but the principle is just as relevant to the Web (if not more so). "The best design explicitly acknowledges that you cannot disconnect the form from the material--the material informs the form.... Because when an object's materials, the materials' processes and the form are all perfectly aligned.... People recognize that object as authentic and real in a very particular way." As our industry grows and roles get more specialized, it's possible to become a "web designer" without more than a cursory understanding of the fundamental building materials of the Web: the code. Is this just the price of progress? Are the days of the web craftsman soon to be in the past? Or is a hybrid approach to web design and development something worth preserve?
LEVEL: Intermediate

3:30 PM - The Refrigerator Speaks: The Secret Language of Things
Why have smart refrigerators failed to take hold? Where are the smart tables that were supposed to fill our homes? Smart products with embedded sensors are poised to share their intelligence, but lack of connections among products and services have limited their usefulness. Until now. In this session, we will showcase emerging smart products and break down the design and technology that will separate the wheat from the shaft. We’ll examine the connections these products will make with our lives by bringing more sensibility to sensor-based products.
LEVEL: Intermediate

5:00 PM - 27 (Fun!) Ways to Kill Your Online Community
In this fun and extremely fast-paced session, you'll learn how to manage an online community backwards. You'll become an expert in the quickest ways to kill your online community, using tips you can take and use today to kill yours as soon as possible! You can even take these skills and work with clients who want to hire you to kill their community, too. Of course, if you want to attend the session to learn from those bad methods and do the opposite, in order to build a successful and well-run online community, you can. But, I'm not sure why you'd want to do that.
LEVEL: Intermediate

5:30 PM - MapQuest Road Trip to the Salt Lick
MapQuest plans to host their 2nd annual Road Trip to the Salt Lick at the Salt Lick Barbecue Restaurant. This year's event will be even bigger than last year's, still offering free all-you-can-eat BBQ and drinks. We'll be bussing over 250 people to the event – all you need is a SXSW Interactive, Gold, or Platinum badge, and an ID to prove you’re 21 or older. Remember, you must be on the bus in order to participate. The bus will load at 5:30pm, and it's first come first serve, so get there early! The bus load meeting place will be determined soon. Check back for more details!

Monday 14.March.2011

9:30 AM - Touching Stories: Designing Digital Magazines for the iPad
The launch of the iPad signaled the start of a new era for magazine publishing. A single device that delivered the fidelity of print and the interactivity of the Web, all wrapped up in a fun and easy-to-use form factor gave the industry new reason to hope. There was one trick: no one had designed for this brave new medium yet. Editorial teams suddenly needed to consider multi-touch gestures, multiple orientations, dynamic layout and the integration of rich media into the design of their issues. Ink-smudged print teams had to reach out to the pixel-based life forms in charge of the company Websites, and engage a new breed of Cocoa developers as well. Whole new models of information design and user experience we're launched at high velocity into the App Store. Both speakers were involved in designing some of the first digital magazines that launched on the iPad on April 3rd, 2010. They've spent the last year exploring new ways to experience and engage with magazine content on this exciting new platform. Together they've worked on iPad editions of magazines such as Spin, Dwell, National Geographic, Car and Driver and many others. In this session they'll share hard-earned knowledge and useful insights on how to design for gestural interfaces, how to integrate interactivity smoothly into digital magazines and what it takes to build an issue for the iPad.
LEVEL: Advanced

11:00 AM - I'm So Productive, I Never Get Anything Done
Make the coffee, check the RSS, groom the avatar, freshen the blog, make nice with the Twitter, now it's time to ... do the same thing again. Meanwhile your job/project/spouse/story sits there, staring at you with big cow eyes and wonders if you will ever leave the grid and do something real, something productive, something that will yield cash money and not just more followers on Twitter. Most of us work alone in a room, armed with a desktop that is more powerful -- and distracting -- than entire offices a decade ago, and yet the actual throughput of an average day can be negligible. Let's talk to some people who have actually done things -- written books, built businesses, created technology -- about their process. Do they have a clear, bright line between consuming media and producing it? Is it best to have multiple streams on one screen or toggle between to stay on task? Do they have a day part when they are off the grid? And why do great ideas come in the shower? Let's figure out whether the Web is the greatest productivity tool ever invented or a destroyer of initiative and long thoughts.
LEVEL: Beginner

12:30 PM - You Are The Gig Economy
“No one I know has a full-time job anymore. They’ve got Gigs.” - Tina Brown, The Gig Economy (http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-01-12/the-gig-economy/full/) Depending on when you last watched Office Space, Lumbergh might be your idea of the quintessential boss from hell or evoke nostalgia for “when people had bosses.” Welcome to the jobless, boss-less Gig Economy. Where independent workers now make up 30% of the American workforce - freelancers, contractors, part-timers, self-employed, dabblers in a little bit of this and a little bit of that. Where 75% of small businesses in the US are sole proprietorships – that’s 20 million businesses with no Lumbergh and no employees. And where 75% of 2010’s college grads don’t have a job waiting for them on the other side of their Commencement Address. Maybe we’re better off working for ourselves. In his latest book, Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us, Daniel Pink argues that “extrinsic motivators” like bosses and bonuses are less effective than things that motivate us from the inside out: autonomy, mastery and purpose. So what makes us tick when we don’t have a boss, an office, a time to show up at work, or even a paycheck? Through the lenses of autonomy, mastery and purpose, we’ll talk with a panel of the nation’s leading thinkers on the freelance lifestyle and work productivity and argue whether we’re looking at a crippling, jobless future or the emergence of a better way to work.
LEVEL: Beginner

3:30 PM - Kiosks, Mobile and the Evolving Retail Experience
New opportunities for sophisticated in-store and digital interactive experiences are fundamentally changing the way retail stores connect with their customers. These changes – from interactive kiosks, sophisticated mobile devices, digital & interactive vending machines, and the wireless delivery of software - are creating opportunities for brands and marketers to connect and interact with their customers more richly. We will share how are clients are leveraging these tools, and our vision of where it is all going.
LEVEL: Intermediate

4:15 PM - What Overseas Innovations Still Haven't Hit the US Market Yet?
5:00 PM - Why My Phone Should Turn Off the Stove
With the momentum of green design, new technologies and applications are continuously being developed to assist in sustainable living. A large percentage of your energy consumption is in the home, majorly impacting your individual carbon footprint. By monitoring home energy consumption in real time with a web or mobile application users can pinpoint vampire devices, times of high or low consumption, and wasteful patterns of energy use. This presentation will explore the available web, mobile, and touch screen applications for monitoring energy consumption and automating the home that are currently on the market. After identifying components of successful applications the presentation will cover why designing a strong user experience will make total home management applications a convenient tool, motivating the user to make adjustments, and change their consumption behaviors. An intuitive application will help users to quickly understand their usage habits by clearly identifying total consumption as well as individual device consumption. Specific examples will prove why great design equates to more security, big environmental impact, and even bigger savings. LEVEL: Intermediate

Tuesday 15.March.2011

9:30 AM - Accessibility for the Visually Impaired: Groundbreaking New Technologies
Don’t you think the internet should be accessible to all, including people that are visually impaired? The visually impaired are people that need aide to see, either with glasses or contact lenses or they can’t see anything at all. Society is living longer, thus making older web users more impactful in market segments. The visually impaired demographic is exploding and will require technology to bridge a visual communicative gap. Imagine how marketing, advertising and the general quality of life for the visually impaired would drastically improve if accessing the internet was easy and addressed their needs. This panel focuses on groundbreaking new technology that will allow the visually impaired to have full access to the web with voice browsers, speech interaction and desktop projection. There will be a demonstration of voice browsers in development and how they work. A discussion on the W3C initiative called the WAI (Web Accessibility Initiative) that is rolling out in full force with technology and information for designers to understand how to make their designs inclusive for the visually impaired at minimal effort.
LEVEL: Advanced

11:00 AM - Designing Ideas, Not Objects
12:00 PM - How To Be A Badass Online
Do you long to let your inner badass out online, but are afraid of the consequences? Do you edit yourself, because you think you *have* to? Are you afraid of your commenters? Stop living in fear, and learn how to blog HARD at this panel discussion where we will cover all the ins and outs of online bad-assery. Believe it or not, you can be who you want to be, curse, share your real opinions, and lay it all out on the line on your site—-and people will still like you! (well, some of them, at least). Hear from some of the biggest badasses online about how they make it work on their own sites, and all the tips and tricks you’ll need to create your own bullet-proof badass persona.
LEVEL: Intermediate
12:30 PM - Your Caption Here: How-to Manipulate Images Without Photoshop
We all know how easy it is to doctor an image with Photoshop, but there's an even easier and low-tech way to alter an image's meaning: just change the caption. It turns out that pictures can say whatever we want them to say, provided we use the right words. In this session, we'll get the lowdown from a panel of bloggers and cartoonists who have elevated captioning to a brilliant, often hilarious art form. We'll learn why the old writing adage "Show don't tell" is useless, and how a picture might be worth a thousand words, but when it's paired with a caption that deepens, expands, or redefines its meaning, it can be worth a million.
LEVEL: Beginner

3:30 PM - Employee Wellness: Farce or Untapped Potential?
Wellness programs are popping up everywhere in Corporate America. To stem the ever-rising cost of health care, more and more companies are throwing points-based systems, incentives, and discounted weight, tobacco cessation, and fitness programs at their employees. Meanwhile, dubious employees aren’t snapping up these benefits. And employers are miffed. Should they be? Or is the problem housed in the current piecemeal approach to wellness? Explore and debate a more expansive approach to employee wellness, one where the workplace becomes a driver of health for the emotional, physical, and financial benefit of both the organization and the individual.
LEVEL: Intermediate

4:00 PM - SXSW Trade Show BLOCK PARTY

5:00 PM - Taming the Monkey Mind: Yoga and Creative Focus
The perfect way to wrap-up your SXSW experience: a lively and carefree conversation about how yoga can help you easily access your creativity and imagination at will. We all know this feeling of being under the gun with a deadline, needing to access our most creative ideas at a moment's notice. When we really need our creative muse to show up, she somehow has the uncanny ability to hide like a needle in a haystack and then show up at 3:00am as we bolt upright out of bed, making our way in the dark to scribble down the ideas she's handed to us. For too long we've accepted that's just the way creativity and imagination work - unpredictably. Yoga - physical postures, breathing techniques, and visualization - helps us tap into our imaginations at will and with ease, exactly when we need them. A regular yoga practice keeps our minds sharp, helps us make connections between seemingly disparate bits of information that may otherwise go unnoticed, and imagine solutions to complex challenges. It gives us a way forward. This session is helpful for everyone who needs to tap into their own creativity on a regular basis - from performers to programmers, in all mediums. 
LEVEL: Intermediate

6:00 PM - The Interactive Awards Pre-Party

7:00 PM - The Interactive Awards presented by Adobe

9:00 PM - The Interactive Closing Party

08 February 2011

TED Tuesday:


Liza Donnelly is hilarious and I like her humor. It's a short 7 minute watch. Enjoy.


07 February 2011

The Wreath Project: February

So I have this challenge for myself that I started in January where I make a new wreath for my front door every month. I finally finished my February one, and here it is.


There are these boys that live down the hall from me who add their own flair to my wreaths. . .I kind of love it. 


For those of you who missed my January one, here it is. Just so you don't think I'm a complete hack.


I have also finished the March one, which I can NOT wait until March comes, because I like that wreath a lot more. Plus March is my birthday month and who doesn't like their birthday?!

Any suggestions for April? My mother told me if I put Easter eggs all over it she might disown me. (We are a very sarcastic family.)

01 February 2011

CLIPPERS / BUCKS

So we had a company outing last night to the Clippers / Bucks game. Beer, Hot Dogs and Basketball . . . it was a great time. As you know I like to make videos of our outings so . . . enjoy.

Oh and as I was shooting Griffin, apparently his team mate was practicing his ball handling skills.


31 January 2011

A have found a new interest.

Photo by ray.blas
My birthday is coming up soon since my new interest is paddle boarding, I've been looking at boards. I found one by Holua, it's great and has that grandpa faux wood paneling in the Caddy look to it. I've also found another brand I like it's Three Bros. out of Florida.

The thing I loooove about paddle boarding is you can do it ANY where. Whether you are landlocked in the mid-west rocking the lakes or on a coast hanging on some waves, you can get on a paddle board and enjoy the day. I first saw paddle boards in Hawai'i when I was there almost 10 years ago, so yes I'm a little late to the game, but sometimes that happens. 

I just found a living social deal today for a $49 2-hour session. I am pretty stoked. Check out the deal at http://livingsocial.com/deals/16156?ref=personalized-link-box-5485684&rpi=5485684. If you are interested in going with me, let me know.

26 January 2011

A little to the left . . .

So we had a massage therapist come to the office today. The massages were only 15 minutes but I will take it. A man with the name Yoshi just screams "My hands are versed in massage greatness."

Sheena attempted to pull a number out of the bowl. . . 
Mike getting work done. 
Also we launched some Booty Parlor facebook items today. The Booty Parlor Manifesto & Quiz. The manifesto serves as a movement for women to love themselves and take care of their needs. The quiz allows women to find their Mojo type and learn how to improve their sexy lifestyles. Sign the manifesto and take the quiz at facebook.com/bootyparlor. Enjoy!