w+k global charity art show

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After much ado and a lot of hard work from our digital team, studio and art show committee, the W+K art show is up for viewing and purchasing. All proceeds go to room to read who are awesome!

View the site now here.
 
The show, which is also happening physically in the offices of W+K Portland, is composed of artworks made by W+K folks all over the world.

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del hi

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Kev Chesters writes:

Hello there.
 
Awesome couple of days with the guys in Delhi - loads done, lots of people met, lots of fun.
 
Spent the first day taking the guys through the TED presentation, and also the Nokia team here through the wider brand story.
 
Then Nusrat, Drew, Madhavi, Amelia, Rob & I headed off to Rajastahn to drink in a little of the emerging market vibe for "My First Nokia".
 
A three hour drive terminated at the Hotel/16th century hillfort in Neemrama. Amazing place, beautiful. Nicest place I've ever brainstormed in by far! Stuck up in hills in 44c was a bit hectic though. Spent the afternoon working through ideas in a pretty amazing room before heading off to a few villages to just hang out and ask a few questions. It was all pretty head spinny stuff.
 
Back way after dark for a few beers and a bit more work. and then lots of sleep. Monkeys peacocks and donkeys on the veranda this morning...
 
Back to Delhi today to work on the presentation for tuesday. Back to London tomorrow.
 
Out tonight for post-pitch Delhi beers and hopefully disgraceful behavior.
 
Lovely place, cool bunch of people, happy planner
 
Massive thanks to Madhavi, Nus, Drew, Rob & Amelia for putting up with me and looking after me, and usual big love to Christian
X

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W+K in India

Nice piece about Wieden + Kennedy from Campaign India.

Don’t act big, says W+K

Kurien Mathews, 03 March, 2009, Mumbai

Campaign India was one of the fortunate few to receive the spectacular showpiece record of W+K. Here’s a masterly review of the limited edition, not-for-sale, collector’s item It is tough to comment objectively on work done by iconoclasts who have successfully demolished most established rules of the game, to build an enterprise that remains one of the most admired companies in our business, ever. It is easy to get overwhelmed, and there is a lot that there is to be overwhelmed about W+K.

This book is their story. It is a book that chronicles their work, their beliefs and their times. It is about the agency two guys started in Portland, Oregon in 1982.

How did they get to be so successful? To borrow a quote from a book by another agency a few years ago, who in turn borrowed it from Lao Tzu who wrote it nearly three thousand years ago in his classic, Tao Te Ching: "Evolved individuals know that people who are not intuitive can be dangerous to work with, since they are guided solely by the current appearance of things that are in reality, changing. Evolved individuals seek out others who have intuition and vision a form of intelligence that comes from cultivating the instincts, observing the direction of change, apprehending the evolution of ideas."

Dan Wieden and David Kennedy fully embody Lao Tzu’s words. Their level of consistent success simply cannot come otherwise.

Why a book for such a famous agency, one might ask. Creative people have "books". Agencies too have had books before W+K, as they will after. It is the way both, agencies and individuals, put forward their best work, their abilities and try to influence you to think about them in a particular way. We could suppose that as W+K sets about expanding geographically it would be an appropriate time to communicate their culture and their successes to wider audiences, and a book is as good a medium as any.

We have all seen some books in our time, from individuals and from agencies. There have been all kinds. From the pompous to the raucous; the arrived, and the trying-to-arrive; from the shiny-new-me to the look-at-all-we’ve-done.

Some have been very good, some in poor taste. Usually all of them have been very large books. At least A3 size, if not more. Most of them said, ‘notice me’.

Not the latest offering from Wieden + Kennedy. It is the size of your average diary. Comes with a not too loud cover, just the letters W+K emblazoned on it in gold, in serif gothic (or something like that … I am no art director), rather like you would see on the leather bound cover of The Old Testament, except this one is on plastic, which we hope is biodegradable.

The three words "don’t act big" feature somewhere in the middle of the book. There is a nice teaser that leads to it early on in the book, about how W+K don’t have rules except for something they found written on a scrap of paper, something before D and D founded the agency back in 1982, which they reveal later to be "don’t act big". Quite a nice contrast to what is on the spine of the book: "what we honor are individuals, in all their wackiness…"

What is it that makes W+K different from the rest? We could attribute it to that fairly well known acronym: KISS. Keep it simple, stupid. Staying true to that, W+K’s new book is simple, much like most of the advertising from W+K that has been for all these years; simple, yet brilliant. As a matter of fact all their work has been consistently simple and brilliant, since the day, as the book says, ‘they quit their day job to follow this client who wanted to make shoes with a waffle iron’. Simple like, "Just do it", or "the Coke side of life". Clearly inspired in letter and spirit by Oliver Wendell Holmes who said "I would not give a fig for the simplicity this side of complexity. But I would give my life for the simplicity on the other side of complexity."

The book is full of inspirational stories like Nike. Stuff that we have all oohed and aahed at, in various award annuals all these years since 1982. Going beyond Nike, to Coke, Google, Honda… and even Royal Enfield and Indigo Airlines.

But as with all "books" by agencies that are done to put forward their best work, their abilities and to try and influence how you think about them, it does showcase the best work, carefully handpicked to leave out the mediocre. However, there is also a certain honesty to admit that that they too have failed, when they point you to the giant mural (made of 100,000 pushpins) that hangs in their Portland office that simply states: Fail Harder. W+K have had their share of troubled times in the past with layoffs, salary cuts, financial troubles and client losses (which include Nike, which sacked them only to return a few years later).

Overall W+K comes across as a good, honest, hardworking agency that has got a lot of things right. Very, very right.

There is very little bullshit in the book, which tends to creep in, in most attempts at self-promotion. That is because all the work is real. No scams here.

The work and the honesty with which one needs to approach it comes through. For it is not about how many awards their work wins or the industry admiration it gets. At the end of the day it is about the success the work creates for the brands that engaged the agency in the first place. W+K created a lot of successes for the brands who engaged them.

W+K is one of the agencies that understand very well that building a brand is not something you engage in over an IPL season. It takes time. You have to live through all the challenges the consumer, the client, and the competition will throw at you. W+K comes up tops on every count, obviously only with reference to the work they have showcased in the book. I did not find any mention of Subaru in the book, with whom they have had a fairly tumultuous relationship.

There are lots of interesting nuggets in the book. My favorite is: patience and progress are fucking hard. Is that Gita-esque or what? There is more of that kind of stuff towards the end of the book, in a section W+K have called "The moral of the story".

Another nugget: advertising is storytelling. Good point, stated by many, restated by W+K. Often forgotten by practitioners.

All in all, this is a great storybook. It has its share of gimmicks; fold outs, iron-ons and tear-aways. But they are practical and nice, though. Not overdone.

There is a USB pen drive thingy tucked away quite nicely. That has all the films and work since the book went into print. Nice touch.

The book is, at the end of the day, an attempt to market themselves: W+K now have seven offices. They need to establish heritage and credentials in these new markets. They need a tool that goes beyond the Portland office. They need to evangelize the thinking, set it in stone, so that the success that it has been can be replicated, over and over again.

Feel good about the more than fair coverage the fledgling India office has. Given the terrific work (and the relatively low profile Mohit Jayal and V Sunil have maintained all these years), this should help them grow and prosper.

Try and get your hands on a copy. The book is only for private circulation. There are apparently innumerable issues on copyright if you publish and put it out on sale, but no issues if it is for limited private circulation.

Finally, watch out for W+K in this market.

chesters in amsterdam

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Quick daytrip to w+k Amsterdam to present the "TED2009 in 60 Minutes" presentation at the invitation of Lee Newman. Most of the office turned up to hear it and a lovely and attentive audience they were too.

Chesters
 
Photos are: some of the brilliant and extremely creative graffiti from the streets of Amsterdam, and myself (Kevin) & Jeff Kling on the pushbikes.

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bill and kirk

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Bill Davenport and Kirk visited today from the Portland office to tell us about plans for W+K Entertainment and WK Radio.
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curry, cabs, Colman & Conaway

Hero honda
Alex Conaway writes:

The world of Honda has drawn us to more exotic surroundings than Hanbury Street. 
We've started the new year with a trip to Delhi to spend some time with our Indian W+K colleagues.
 
Being of the car industry persuasion we're of course fascinated to find out the Indian driving test consists of having to navigate around a roundabout (trust me, no easy task) and park the car.  Once you've done that, you're through.  This would go some way to explain the total lack of road rules. 

Back of cab
Straddling two lanes and excessive use of the horn for example.  It's not a question of braking, it's more about steering out of the way to avoid a stationary object (more often than not a person or a cow).  It's day two, and we're still rather nervous passengers.  It's actually a right hoot, but there have been times when various other modes of transport were about to join us in the back seat.

Rickshaw

It's a miracle but it all actually works.  Just don't ask me to drive myself.
Still on car related things, the variety of cabs is briliant, we've had a couple of Vanettes (minature motor caravan type things that are like a Corgi toy car), an old fashioned HM Cab, tiny little Suzukis and finally an Audi.
We've had one curry, where Bill Clinton ate in 2000.  We bypassed the Presidential Platter and also the Chelsea Choice Plate.

Oh, and we're doing some work too...here's our 'war room'.

Meeting room

Looking rather Kubrick, I thought. Those walls will be full of ideas tomorrow, promise.
And here's the temporary Delhi office conveniently located above a Honda showroom.  We haven't tried the rocking horse yet. 

Rocking horse

And no, this is not our washing.

Washing

'walk in as a stupid'

Modern weekly
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Modern weekly 4
Modern weekly 5
Modern weekly 6

perkins in shanghai: the finale

Ian writes:

Well, it's almost time for me to leave wk shanghai after an unforgettable
experience. (Shanghai hen nanwang. 上海 很 难忘 .)

It's been an up and down ride.

Today's pictures:

Chiewling's shoes. Little mice. Ahhh.
Mice shoes
The icon for non-recyclable - nice - I'd not seen this in the uk.

Unrecycled

I xi shanghai (double happiness).

Bikes

Nike and China propaganda. (Hey, isn't advertising product propaganda
anyways...?)

Nike
Dixon, one of the guys from our office, who had to be our Nike athlete
as we couldn't find an appropriate model in Shanghai... He is tied to a shopping
trolly by a yachting harness while we photographed his "jumping" feet...
That's the Chinese "can do it" mentality...

Dixon-trolly
I'm sad to leave. The office has so many lovely people who are working so so
hard. I'm very impressed with them for their effort. I'd love to come back
sometime. Great experience.

Thank you, wk.

Ian

more from perkins in shanghai

Hallow_ian
Ian writes:

We had the W+K Shanghai Halloween party last week, which was great, David Stevens
from W+K London dropped in as well. Here are some pictures of us at the party.

IMG_5961
__ 090
OK, now my rant...

So, someone asked me today, 'Isn't it hard working in China?­ Like, how do you do good ads out here?'

I thought, what a stupid question.

Take Olympic athletes. Do you think they said to themselves, 'Oh this market is less developed, I'll give a worse performance than I would elsewhere'? Of course not; they are going to give their absolute best on an international level. And so I don't see why any other professional would be any different.

While I'm talking about work it's very common here to have client meetings 7pm Sunday, 8am Saturday, to work all through the nights...But that's not always to move the project in one direction, it's sometimes because the project direction changes repeatedly. This seems to happen where levels of approval exist, like local, regional and global, and each layer has slightly different agendas.

Hmm... maybe there is a connection between the quality of final work and number of people involved with different opinions...  but perhaps I should get a second opinion on that...

perkins in shanghai: week three

Panorama

"I want to shake off the dust of this one-horse town. I want to explore the world. I want to watch TV in a different time zone. I want to visit strange, exotic malls...I want to live, Marge! Won't you let me live?²

Homer Simpson seems to sum things up well. While China is amazing, a lot of my experience has been similar to day to day UK life. Once inside the W+K office, I'm at work. It's like london, only I hear a bit more shanghainese or mandarin around me. Or more american accents. Ive done my first all nighter in China within 2 weeks. (I'm sure it took me two months at WK London).

My favourite Shanghainese habit is that people pop out in their pj's. It's all very casual. So I went up one of the tall buildings in shanghai, the jinmao tower, with Yaya from work.

Specs

But when I got up there it turned out to be the second highest observatory, not the highest. My book was 6 months out of date and they seem to have built a new skyscraper....Never mind.

They have a giant statue here in a stripy top called perks. (It's the taller one) Is it an omen?

Perkins lookalike

The pic below is of us at Nike China, playing table football before a meeting.

Table football

Here is the Nike foyer...

Wall

We have a Hallowe'en party and the wk office clairvoyant had to check with the ghosts at the venue if it was ok, and they said the spirits said theywere looking forward to it! (Obviously they've not seen W+K party-goers in action).

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