Dan Wieden runs the best advertising agency in the world. It gave Nike their voice. Nike would not be here like it is without Dan. Nike will never say that. But they know. They just never say.
Act Stupid. "Our philosophy is to come in ignorant every day. The idea of retaining ignorance is sort of counterintuitive, but it subverts a lot of [problems] that come from absolute mastery. If you think you know the answer better than somebody else does, you become closed to being fresh." states Jelly Helm, creative director.
Shut up. "The first thing we do when we meet with clients is listen. We try to figure out what their problems are. Then we come back with questions, not solutions. We write these out and put them on the wall. And then we circle the ones that we think are interesting. More often than not, the questions hold the answer."
Always say yes. "What I've learned from improvisation is to let go of outcome and just say yes to whatever the situation is. If you say an idea is bad, you're creating conflict--you're breaking an improv rule. You want an energy flow that moves you forward, as opposed to a creative stasis."
Chase Talent. "Find people who make you better. It's best to be the least talented person in the room. It's reciprocal. It challenges you to keep up."
Be Fearless. "Do anything, say anything. In the worlds of our president, Dan Wieden, 'You're not useful to me until you've made three momentous mistakes.' He knows that if you try not to make mistakes, you miss out on the value of learning from them."
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very interesting
Posted by: Geoff Griffiths | 10/17/2010 at 06:02 PM
It's taken me 15 years in the ad biz to finally reach this point - and I have to remind myself daily to reset to this state of mind. As for Jelly, he's a smart, kind fellow who, when I sent him an envelope of my terrible, rough, junior-writer ideas when I was still working in a mailroom, took the time to make really thoughtful comments before mailing them back to me. He was a rising star in this industry and took that time. Made an impression.
Posted by: Brian Miller | 11/05/2010 at 04:11 AM