Archive for February, 2010

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Friday, February 26th, 2010

Real Simple just made our day by linking to JMMD in their fun things to do: http://bit.ly/aO0XfQ #jmmd #verse

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Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

We’ve just launched the new website for our friend, John DeGroote http://johndegroote.com/ #design #launch #verse

RFP Theatre

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Dear Ad agencies and their serial clients,

You guys are awesome. You’re highly entertaining; better even than an organ grinder and his trained monkey. No, seriously, you should come up with a good name for it and televise your little soap opera on one of the networks so that housewives and previously-employed ad executives and brand managers can watch in the afternoons.

Serial clients of ad agencies, you guys kill me. Ha! (*knee slap*) You’re like the vicious movie villainess we all love to hate. You stand there all sexy and inviting, but everyone knows you’ve got no moral core, no ethical boundaries and yet you’re knee-deep in suitors who just keep asking you out on dates (that’s ‘cause you’ve got half of the booze and all of the money). You dance around and show a little leg while pretending you’ve got rules and boundaries that you and everyone else should respect and then WHAM! …you pull your trick—you’re caught making out with some girl no one else even knew was invited to the party. God bless ya’, you keep pulling that same ol’ crap and agencies just keep falling for it. Awesome.

Your plan is as masterful as it is gutsy, and the genius lies in its simplicity. Even though you know nothing about running the process or what it takes to create what you need, you have the balls to demand that you set all of the rules that agencies must follow. And even though you should do your homework and research to find the agency that best suits your needs and requirements, you pretend that this is the agencies’ problem. But your talents aren’t just relegated to deflecting responsibility. You are also talented puppet masters! You’re all like, “I know…we’ll get the agencies to do a bunch of the work up front and without pay!” Pure genius.

Ad agencies, watching you is like watching reruns of some Fellini film. You complain about how you hate being set up and proclaim that you’re a bunch of savvy and worthy professionals, but when the cattle call goes out, you line up at the abattoir with everyone else. “Oh, no, we’re not cattle. We’re perfeshnuls! Huh huhh. (*drool)” Maybe the only thing that could make it more entertaining is if you dressed up like Pagliacci while you did your thing. “Work and expenses first? We’re there! Creative effort before ever meeting with the clients? We can do that! Boo hoo, we’re such sad clowns!” :-(

And then you walk straight into the meat grinder and act like you’re surprised and hurt. While it is hilarious to watch as you throw childish tantrums as if at the grocery store with mommy; …you go ragdoll limp and flop towards the floor, crocodile tears streaming down your pathetic, collective face, snot gathering just above your upper lip… it’s even more hilarious when mommy just lets go of your hand, walks out to the car and leaves your hypocritical ass lying in the middle of aisle seven.

Then you whimper and sob just a bit louder to make sure that everyone heard you, which while not funny, is entertaining. It is funny, however, when you then pick yourself up off the floor and saunter out of the store all cool and stuff, playing things off like you’ve got self-respect and dignity. Yes, like the poet once said, all the world’s a stage and you are merely players. But you always seem to play the same part. What are you, typecast method actors?

Anyway, ad agencies and their clients, please continue to behave like idiot children. Please continue to pretend that creativity, strategic acumen, design, brilliant ideas, and masterful execution are commodities …and that the RFP process is relevant and useful. Please continue to pretend like you’re all professionals behaving in a professional manner in a professional process.

RFP Theatre (Ridiculous Faux Professionals Theatre) is a hoot to watch and even fun to read about. So y’all keep doin’ y’all thang. The rest of us are having a blast watching.

Makin’ Days

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

We didn’t have to create Just Made My Day. There was no imperative dictating the (at this moment) mostly unprofitable format, and definitely no room in the market for another site that lets users share updates about their lives. We did feel, though, that it was worth it to craft a little beacon of positivity on the oft-negative internet. It has been so good to us, after all.

The following is the casually recollected time line of concept-to-creation for Just Made My Day: Unit’s latest way to brighten people’s day:

Concept

Nov. 4th, 2009 — An idea comes to Andy while showering. Not specifically focused on anything, he thinks about how nice it would be to create a place online where “folks could just celebrate the cool things that happened to them, especially the cool people who did something nice for them”.

Nov. 5th, 2009 — Andy takes R.A. and me out for coffee. The trip is a Trojan horse laden with a new undertaking for Unit. It’s solid idea from the start: “Just Made My Day” (JMMD if you’re savvy) will be a site to allow users to easily share the little things that make them happy. We discuss the various implications, difficulties, and merits of launching such a site. Quick sketches and wire-frames are scribbled on scrap paper. R.A. uses phrases like “implicit moderation” and “social-media authorization APIs”. We emerge highly caffeinated, with a foundation for moving forward.

Design

Nov. 5th, 2009 — While watching a documentary on Monty Python—Almost the Truth: (The Lawyers Cut)—I think it would be nice to rip-off Terry Gilliam’s collage style for something. It occurs to me that JMMD would be ripe for experimentation.

Nov. 6th, 2009 — Although there’s no plan for me to design JMMD, I decide to get a jump on a look and feel rattling in my head. I spend a quite Friday morning making a collage of landscape elements. I want to create an impression that is inherently positive, and will behoove users to behave. While playing with more organic layouts of nature, I realize that a fully symmetrical approach allows the landscape to both be more pleasant, and act more as a background to the form elements, not a focal point. The resulting masthead gets me excited; I decide to finish a full design comp.

Nov. 10th, 2009 — I finish out a full comp of the site design. Somehow, the thrill is gone. I wind up with what I feel is a muddy attempt at redesigning Rotten Tomatoes. The design needs more simplicity, and serious amount of editing. It occurs to me that I’m riding a little too hard on the landscape concept; it needs to be a website, not an art project.

Nov. 13th, 2009 — I show Andy my design. We decide this is the right direction, but it needs some work. Angela later tells me about some great little games on the Xbox arcade.

Nov. 17th, 2009 — On Angela’s recommendation, I download Braid late one evening and am blown away by its ingenuity and pure artistry. Shortly before bed—still humming a haunting tune from Braid—I have a few design-related epiphanies. When I say them out loud, my sleepy wife does her best to act like I am smart, God bless her.

Nov. 18th, 2009 — I complete the design that will become JMMD. I make some tweaks to the form to give it affordance, and help it feel more balanced. Now, we’re ready to build this thing.

Development

Nov. 19th, 2009 — The entire Unit crew sees JMMD as an opportunity to push our knowledge. We have already begun delving in to HTML5, and this looks like another great opportunity to work with it. I think that a parallax technique will really make this design sing, and begin learning how to pull off such a thing.

Nov. 24th, 2009 — I finish the parallax effect, add some birds and the main title in Chunk Five, using some @font-face goodness via Font Squirrel. I put up a teaser site, and begin developing the rest of the site.

Nov. 25th, 2009 — I really want to make sure I am using HTML5 to its fullest, so I read up on everything. I start working heavily with CSS3 techniques as well. We discuss the ramifications of leaving Internet Explorer in the dust. We are okay with this.

Dec. 7th, 2009 — I finish front-end development. We decide WordPress will work best as an engine for posts. I begin integrating a theme and R.A. helps me build a set of plug-ins to allow users to post. Basically, we turn WordPress inside-out. Next, we begin learning authorization APIs for Twitter, Facebook, and Open ID.

Dec. 18th, 2009 — Early on, we decided that in order to lower the barrier for entry as much as possible, we would need to allow users to log in using social media accounts. We were sure they wouldn’t want to create and remember a whole new account for our little site. Twitter authorization (oauth) was the easiest (IMO). We test and then soft-launch JMMD without Facebook or Open ID integration. Over the holidays, we leak the site to a few friends and family, and allow some initial posts to build up.

Jan. 13th 2009 — I finish up Facebook authorization using Facebook Connect. We use RPX to allow Open ID. Next we fire up the Twitter clients and start telling the loyal web denizens of our latest project.

Epilogue

So far, response has been overwhelmingly positive. Even if it were a failure, though, this scrappy Unit staff was able to take a great idea from concept to launch in just over 2 months. We learned a lot and we are proud of the fruits of that labor.

Thank you to everyone who is making days, or sharing about days made!

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Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Unify v1.1.8 is up! Added HTML5 support, fixed encoding errors, and more: http://bit.ly/1Q6hF9 Update now! #unify #verse

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Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

New Unify site includes a live demo: http://bit.ly/a1BIJN G’head, test drive Unify right now! #unify #verse

Our 2009 Annual Report

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

We’re now just over 2 years into Unit Interactive’s existence and this is our first ever annual report. As we’re writers and designers, we’ve split the report into two components to best address both the real story and the fun trivia about our 2009. Here is where we’ll delve into what, for us, were the compelling moments of the past year. We hope you’ll enjoy both components as much as we enjoyed preparing them.

See the Graphic Report »

Our Mantra for 2009: We Refuse

As 2009 started, we weren’t experiencing crisis, but we were certainly surrounded by it. The deepening recession was showing its tangible effects in our market, as our designer and developer friends were being laid off and peer agencies were either scaling back or closing doors. Doom and gloom was the subtext to most market discussions. Like most folks we had clear reason for concern, but our optimism was holding strong.

Despite the global economic turmoil, by February we decided we needed another team member and by March we were turning down work because our project queue was too full. Then R.A. Ray joined us. Like Nathan before him, R.A. was a lucky find for us and a welcomed addition to the team.

By March, our contempt for the limp-noodle, doom and gloom sentiment in the media over the recession pushed us to boldly proclaim, “We refuse to participate in this recession.” We knew that we didn’t have to play by everyone else’s rules because of the winner’s exemption, which allows those who dare while prepared to craft their own rules. And as luck would have it, by April our business swelled to never-before-attained levels; well beyond what we’d planned for.

The latter half of the year was touched by some sort of fortuitous glamour. Just when our internal efforts to finish and launch Unify were required, our client project load cooperated flawlessly. After the Unify launch, our project inquiries jumped significantly, but there was a curious trend that followed. Most of the potential clients who inquired of us either fell short of our standards or the projects were somehow vaguely unsuitable. All of what followed had a bittersweet quality.

Having proclaimed just 6 months before that we’d not participate in the swelling recession, we were severely challenged to either demonstrate our conviction or see it crumble in the face of concerns. Truly, for any not yet convinced, the next few months proved to us that uncompromising standards have a very literal monetary cost. Instead of gathering a host of new projects, we were compelled to decline most of them. Just when the waning season required that we gather a bounty in preparation for the distractions of the holidays, our scruples demanded that we turn down much of the largesse offered us. It was a bitter pill to swallow, yet we held fast and looked to our belief that we could craft our own destiny.

Each time we decided to decline a project offer and we explained as much to our team (we don’t hide business mechanics from our team), our folks understood. Never once did anyone here indicate even the slightest concern, or deign to second-guess any choice to avoid a lucrative project that failed against some standard of ours. That was one of the blessings that lent us courage to forge ahead, resolved to our ideals. The payoff today is that we enter 2010 with no shame in our practice and no compromise in our standards.

Despite the decline in client projects, we never once failed to meet payroll or maintain profitability. Luck favors the prepared.

Developing a stronger unit

Not everyone sits idle through a recession. Winners are working to gain strength even in lean times, and so that’s what we aimed to do. Throughout the year and especially during the periods of diminished client work, we took on internal projects that challenged both our design chops and our development abilities. We let our eyes get bigger than our stomachs. We let our reach momentarily exceed our grasp. There was much to which we aspired with these projects that we simply didn’t have the know-how to accomplish. We took several seeming risks, but for us the outcomes and the benefits were never in doubt.

The result of all of this aspirational activity is that along the way our team learned new skills, developed more breadth and depth of ability, and we gained valuable experience and insight into important processes. In short, our folks bit off the tough meat; we invested time, effort, and money into working through the challenges, and emerged stronger for it.

From design agency to product retailer

We launched Unify in August of 2009. This immediately placed us into a couple of new business categories: product retailer & customer service organization (oh, and we design and develop websites, logos, and user experiences, too). Both are cumbersome hats to wear, but we knew what we were getting into.

Our staff includes those who have significant retail and customer service experience, so we had a fundamental base from which to draw in our new roles. That—coupled with an unwavering enthusiasm and belief in the product—made the launch and all that came with it a far less daunting prospect.

For us, the whole Unify development process and launch fit right into what had become our mantra for 2009 (“we refuse”) because it represented doing things some would find too risky or dangerous during a recession. Namely, we were taking time away from lucrative work for clients to produce and launch a retail product when many folks—our potential customers—had less and less to spend. Furthermore, the product itself was meant to help our industry peers to provide a service that we ourselves offer. This effectively made it easier for other designers to compete with us. But as we stated in the article, we refuse to participate in a fear-driven, cannibalistic market. We’re in the habit of collaborating with our peers rather than stealing from them, and working to support and grow our profession rather than trumping it. With our approach we’re defining our own market. We like it best that way.

Rounding out the year

Continuing our internal project and overreaching trend, we initiated two more fun projects late in the year. First we collectively produced 14 mini-projects for our client Advent calendar. This was our holiday gift to our clients; where they could visit each day in December and find a new freebie or game or just something to bring a smile to their faces. Some might consider this to be a frivolous waste of time and resources. We found it to be a joy.

Very late in the year we seized upon the idea to create a site where people could trumpet the nice things other people had done for them. We spent the last couple of months of 2009 conceptualizing, designing, and developing JustMadeMyDay.com (which launched in early January, 2010). It was a process that demanded that we learn from scratch how to do just about everything that the site had to do functionally. We were happy with the process and thrilled with the results. Thankfully, so are a lot of other folks.

So…not to put too fine a point on it, that was our year. We grew in all sorts of ways during a lean economic period and we’re now better equipped and prepared to meet the challenges of the coming recovery. We’re evolving in interesting directions these days and excited about all of them. We’re blessed with excellent clients, wonderful friends (many of them are clients!), and a terrific team that fits together perfectly. As for 2010: Bring it on.

See the Graphic Report »

Sewanee Environmental Institute

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010


We’re excited to announce the launch of the Sewanee Environmental Institute this week. This was the first project that we did with Sewanee: The University of the South (and we liked each other so much we’ve done 2 more projects since—coming soon). Here’s the SEI case study.

Sewanee has a magnificent campus and a 13,000 acre domain to surround it, on and around the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee. That setting is ideal for an environmental institute and SEI was created to take full advantage of the domain as well as the scientific and academic capacity of the university. SEI is groomed to be the most consequential environmental research institute in the South.

We had a wonderful time at Sewanee and we are thrilled to see our design realized for the institute, thanks to the fine development efforts of John Rogerson, Director of Web and Digital Communications at the university (who also managed the project on the university side). The SEI staff, university administration, and the university’s Office of Communications and Marketing staff have all been a joy to work with. We can’t wait until the next project launch!

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