May 13, 2013

Repositioning My Portfolio

The Portfolio As Explanation

There's no shortage of blog posts telling you how to make a killer portfolio. This isn't one of them. It's simply my personal experience showing my work online, and what I've learned while designing my portfolio. If there are any lessons here, they are intensely personal, and may not apply to you.

Still curious, dear reader? Then carry on.

I've always attached undue weight to my personal site. If I could just crop those images the right way, or just write that CSS a bit more cleverly, it would magically bring a wave of interest in my work. Since I don't have my own (internet) TV show, it obviously didn't work. What I've realized, slowly, is what my online portfolio is actually for. To prove (to myself) that I'm not a faker.

I joined the Art Directors Club about a year ago, on a whim. They seemed to have a few interesting events happening, and being new in New York, I figured it was an good way to meet people.

The ADC Executive Director Ignacio Oreamuno started having office hours, and invited members to come in and talk, have a cup of coffee, and get portfolio advice. I jumped at the chance, mostly because I needed some impartial outside advice about my work. He asked what I wanted to be when I grew up, and I said an astronaut, but I was only half joking. So was he.

Pulling out my iPad and showing him a bit of my portfolio, we talked generally about the work, about technology, and digital art direction. The advice I got was straightforward. “You have a bit of everything in here. Anyone who says they can do it all is a liar.” he said. “You need to focus on one area, and get fucking awesome at it.” Being all over the place, trying to prove I'm capable, diluted my portfolio.

Ignacio suggested I look for radical digital ideas that organizations like MIT's Media Lab were working on, and design conceptual work around those. He said the in order to craft mind-blowing digital experiences, I needed to look years in the future, and not at today. Too much of what I produce seemed focused on chasing short-term successes.

The typography, color choices, interaction patterns in my work need to have real purpose, and my portfolio should showcase that. Not in that esoteric Art World way, but in the pragmatic, rule-based way that design calls for. Talking about my work more critically, more forcefully, is a skill I have yet to master. A small realization that came from an impartial observer, with no personal stake in me or my career.

Strangers can be your most honest critics.

April 12, 2013

I’ll Be Speaking At UXPA NYC on the 16th of April

Just a quick note to say I will be speaking at the New York City User Experience Professionals Association next week, on the 16th of April.
The talk is one that is close to my heart, and is entitled The Art of Effective Narrative. I'll be looking at examples of effective digital storytelling, and asking some pointed questions to help attendees use storytelling to create unique user experiences.
Thanks to Rodrigo Sanchez and all the UXPA crew for hosting me, hope to see you there!

You can register here: The Art of Effective Narrative

March 31, 2013

The internet is full of answers, but it’s not full of questions

Sugata Mitra, a Professor of Educational Technology at Newcastle University, talks about how his Hole in the Wall Experiment helped poor children in the slums of Hyderabad, India teach themselves English. His point about the internet being full of answers, but not full of questions, speaks to a larger shift in our society. Is data taking the place of curiosity? These children seem to go against that notion.

Via @GOOD

(Not sure why I didn't post this before, but here you go.)

March 22, 2013

Cultural Factors in Web Design on Net Magazine

I was really excited to get an article published on .net magazine this week.

We need to start using cultural queries in our designs as a way to adapt content for different groups of people.

By factoring in cultural variables, we can create sites that are relevant for a wide variety of users around the world. Over the past three years, we’ve been captivated by media queries. Our focus on responsive design has been incredibly successful, especially when you look at statistics saying the majority of web users demand mobile ready sites. I believe that something is still missing. By looking so exclusively at technology and code, we have largely ignored cultural differences and the global mindset necessary in our connected world.

Go check it out!

Cultural Factors in Web Design

March 5, 2013

Four Things I Wish I’d Learned in Art School

Design Is Methodology, Not Technique

Much time was spent in art school on the technique of painting, on the mechanics of the perfect litho ink mix, or on the procedure for etching copper plates. I hardly focused on the methodology of creation. It was all about the nuts and bolts, of assembling things, and not of designing systems and methods. I don't mean how much nitric acid to add to your gum arabic. I mean how to see visual creation as a set of interlocking prinicples.

I cringe a bit when I see posts about OOCSS or grid systems. I love these ideas, but I was never taught to think or act in an analytical manner like this. The methodology behind structured content, of functional operations as a basis for creativity? Not so much. Perhaps these revelations come after a few years on the job. In my opinion, however, they should have been taught from the outset.

Money Skills Are Really Really Important

Being broke sucks. Not knowing what to charge for work, or how to write a basic contract, or how to negotiate a budget? These are the most important parts of being successful in the creative industry. Just ask all those super-talented art school classmates of yours that don't actually make anything anymore. As a designer, if you can't fight for yourself financially, you are at a severe disadvantage.

Why the hell did none of my art school professors think it was important to tell us this stuff? Perhaps I was in the wrong class. Maybe I slept through that session. But I doubt it. There were drawing classes of all kinds, and not one core curriculum class about financial planning for creative people.
Well, look where we are now. We still struggle to convince clients of our worth, probably because we can hardly even define it.

Career Decisions Are Never Final

“Art School” was a bit roundabout for me. I started in the graphic design track, in Graphic Design 102. Yeah, I goofed off. One day, our professor asked me what I wanted to be after graduation, and I said I wanted to be a graphic designer. She looked knowingly at me and said, "Are you taking any other art classes here?”

I said yes, that I had some painting classes on my schedule.

“You should think about taking more of those then.” She said, flatly encouraging me to drop Graphic Design as a major.

I took a few painting classes. After a semester or so, a teacher asked me privately, "Are you taking any other classes?” When I said I was taking some printmaking classes, she replied, “Well, maybe you should think about taking more of those...”
I'd been encouraged to leave ANOTHER department.

That winter, relegated to the printmaking department, I randomly began talking to a printmaking teacher. She asked if I was taking any other classes. “Oh, no,” I thought. “Not again.” When I asked why, she says to me, “Well, if you are, you should drop them, and take more printmaking. You have the knack for it.”

And there it was. Affirmation. A direction. Of those three professors, only one of them really thought to help me forge a career path. Two of them actively encouraged me to drop a concentration and do something else. Perhaps they talked about me in the teachers room between studios. Perhaps there was a tenured professor blood pact to get me into the Print Lab. I could care less. The path I took has little bearing on what I do now.

Career choices at that age are usually worthless.

Your Ideas Are Not Precious

Everyone has a great idea. Actually, no we don’t. Most of our ideas suck. So did most of the printmaking I did in school. So did most everyone's. We took 20 minutes to think of an “idea”, or got offered one, and the it was off to the races. We had a few weeks to deliver a set of editioned prints. There was a little time to revise our ideas, but they were often not aggressively challenged.

Doing the first thing that comes into your mind can be a great way to generate ideas and form connections. In this day and age, however, when every single tumblr and twitter feed is exactly that, it’s important to cultivate a thoughtfulness and brutal honesty about your creative thought process. That selectiveness, the ability to separate the unmemorable from the good, is something I still struggle with. I wish I had started learning that lesson sooner, when I was still in art school.

There's a lot I did learn in school. Most of it was really useful on campus, and totally useless in the real design world. I just wish I had been taught these lessons then, instead of in the chaos of the real world. Perhaps nothing can truly be taught, it needs to be learned. For these 4 things, however, I should have known.

November 13, 2012

About the Lagos Behance Portfolio Review Day

How This All Started

Behance is a wildly popular portfolio and social network for designers and creatives. I've been posting work on there for a number of years, ever since I saw an MTV/Behance collaboration on TV in Japan. It was always a bit tangential for me, until I had a typography project of mine get featured. Then it got real. The site also started to have more Nigerian designers posting work. Through this network I met Daniel Emeka, a designer and Art Director in Lagos.

Attending a Portfolio Review here in New York had crossed my mind a few times, but it can be a bit daunting to see Meetups with hundreds of people attending. I knew Daniel was hosting a Portfolio Review in Lagos, and it just so happened I was going to be there for Maker Faire Africa at the same time. I reached out to him.

The Discovery of a Community

What was the digital scene like in Nigeria? What kind of work was being created? I wanted to find out. The design scene in New York, while very vibrant, seems at times to be very myopic, and I wanted to see what links could be forged with a community that was not yet on the global design radar.

The portfolio review itself went smoothly, despite starting a bit late. We looked at the work of Karo Akpokiere, myself, and the other designers who brought work. People showed advertising, illustration, and photomanipulation work, but no interactive design or web work.

I think this has to do with the health of print advertising vs. the newness of the web as a medium. Internet connectivity is still very troublesome there, which closes off much of the casual browsing we take for granted in the West.

The Future of Digital Design in Nigeria

It's useless to focus purely on connectivity issues in Nigeria. This will work itself out, largely because there is massive demand for broadband Internet and new software. Instead, I tended to focus on design concerns. A lot of what I saw was based on a Western visual language. Nigeria is nominally part of the West, sharing the English language and a national culture that owes much to England and the US, but there seemed to be remarkably little work that addressed Nigerian culture as a visual foundation.

I would like to see more of a truly African design emerge, one that has roots in Nigerian cities and language. That could mean tutorials done by and for Nigerian designers, teaching us how to create that "look", or explanations of how to localize iconography for the Nigerian market. I'd like to see more homegrown publications asking hard questions about style vs. substance, and challenging the community to grow.

More links can and should be forged with communities in South Africa, Ghana, and Kenya. As Africa sees a resurgence in economic confidence, the voices of the design community need to speak clearly, across the continent.

Finally, startups like Behance can play a role. They can provide an organizing platform and a model for Nigerian startups to follow. There were smiles all around when the Behance video played, partly because of the high production quality, but also because of the positive message for designers. By showing what CAN be done, and done well, Behance and others give Nigerian designers and artists a model to implement in their own communities.

My first portfolio Review was an interesting one. Not only was it in Nigeria, my home, it was more than a visual showcase- it was about a nation struggling mightily to coalesce and thrive. I was impressed by what I saw, and hope I get the chance to attend next year as well.

June 16, 2012

Failure to launch: 5 tips on working with deadlines as an in-house designer

Working as an in-house designer means you encounter a particular set of issues every day. I have attempted to summarize the five things that keep me on schedule. While I know I often fail to keep these principles sacred, it is important to spell them out.

Read more

January 30, 2012

Your Website Is a Product

University publishers sell facts. They sell information. They sell opinions and theories. Until recently, that was all packaged in a bound book, but we all know that model is changing. Now, content is consumed on tablets and screens, as well as books. While a lot of the old publishing houses are sitting on mountains of information, they struggle to change the model for delivering it.

A thread running through all of that is their online presence, or lack of it. Without a robust digital home, the struggle to sell their information gets even harder. The big retailers have poured huge amounts of money into their websites, and most have the revenue to show for it.

Websites need to be viewed as a product, not simply as a place to sell other products. The information for sale is a part of that product.

©Senongo Akpem. All Rights Reserved.