The Fearless Thinkers – Brand Lesson in Sixty Seconds

All brands, businesses and products must pivot to better connect with the changing needs and evolving challenges being experienced by your customers. If you have not downloaded the My Pandemic Pivot Dot Com workbook or watched the webinar please click here.

The task of your brand is to instill confidence, impact culture and inspire devotion – The

Fearless Thinkers teach simple brand building.

If you are considering building a brand platform and communications strategy for your company or cause but feel confused about what the components are, you are not alone. Brand building is both intricate and intimate. It is about knowing your values, setting boundaries and communicating unique benefit in a way that meets your customers in the moment.

Let’s get started.

What is a brand?

A brand is not a logo, a brand is a central governing principle that:

  1. Embodies your spirit, values and character.
  2. Is a benchmark for all decisions.
  3. Is the one thing that customers or consumers internalize, remember and reference when making a choice to engage with your products and services.
  4. Informs the way you do business, communicate and perform.
  5. Is your promise to your customers, employees and community.

A well orchestrated and authentic brand will:

  1. Instill confidence, inspire devotion and impact culture.
  2. Truly matter to those who engage it, they will trust and value it. It will not be perceived as interruptive advertising, but a helpful and welcomed part of daily life.
  3. Equally an inauthentic brand, one who breaks its promise will become broken itself. We are all stewards of the brand.

What makes a strong brand work?

In order for your brand to work effectively, many things must happen, including:

  1. Your message must be simple.
  2. The visual elements must be engaging and consistent across all mediums.
  3. All brand stewards must speak with a single voice.
  4. You must have a robust, reactive and thoughtful marketing program that stimulates the market and responds to feedback.
  5. Your brand message must be clearly communicated across all mediums.

Looking for a few examples:

  1. Bomba Tacos & Rum
  2. CHN Housing Partners
  3. Northwest Hardwoods
  4. Original Mattress Factory
  5. Saint Ignatius
  6. Sisters of Charity
  7. Storm Power
  8. White Dove Mattress

Interested in TWIST helping guide you through the brand strategy process? Message us today to schedule an initial call and discussion.

Buy Something. Help Someone.

The Design for Good Shop – by TWIST

Cleveland branding agency, TWIST Creative, Inc. is no stranger to adversity after muscling the business through two recessions with vital lessons learned, such as always having a hedge strategy in place.  That’s what enabled the leadership team to pivot when the COVID-19 pandemic broke. Instead of launching its planned 20th Anniversary rebranding initiative, the agency quickly dedicated a portion of its resources to build a Cleveland-focused public service and public health campaign that translates vital information into something that’s easy to understand and remember at a glance. And as a result of the popular campaign, there’s now a cool product line that will help fund local COVID-19 relief efforts.

Today, you’ll see the line “Love & Big Ideas for Cleveland Brands & Causes” on the social media campaign that resulted. “We don’t make vaccines but we do have the antidote for bad information. We as communications experts know when under pressure facts don’t stick, but visual stories do. Our entire team believed that the best way for us to contribute is to do what we do best and on behalf of the place that matters most to us, Cleveland.” Mike Ozan, CEO and Chief Creative Officer

In addition to helpful and clinical messages delivered in fun, unique, local and interesting ways, the tributes to public health campaigns of the past, with its vintage illustration series and to Ohio Heroes like Dr. Amy Acton and national figures like Dr. Anthony Fauci created not only a lot of engagement they lead to requests for merchandise.

“Our team works with many nonprofit organizations and foundations, and we are seeing firsthand the impact that COVID-19 has had on organizations who work to serve Clevelanders, said Charlene Coughlin, Managing Director at TWIST. “As a nonprofit board member, I know that small, individual donors are critical to the livelihood of organizations as they provide an opportunity to cultivate their donor of tomorrow” said Coughlin.

TWIST selected Society6 to produce the products and host the store. The agency has been converting its StayCLE campaign into products to raise funds for the Cleveland Foundation, which has created the Greater Cleveland COVID-19 Relief Fund.

“Society 6 has such a fun variety of gallery quality prints, home goods like throw pillows and rugs and top quality shirts, bags and other well designed accessories,” said Connie Ozan, Founder & Chief Design Officer at TWIST. “It met our vision for the line of reasonable quality and very accessible prices. Every bit of the proceeds is going to charity so we want people to love it, share it and buy it. I personally oversaw the design and execution of every piece of the campaign to ensure it honored not only the TWIST standard, but that it would be something that Cleveland and Ohio could be proud of,” added Ozan.

The number of products in the line is now approaching 30 as the design team at TWIST works to balance production of the line, while supporting the agency’s 30 active accounts. “It’s a little extra work, but at the same time we’re happy to do our part – plus it gives us the freedom to explore some new ideas. There’s a little bit of each of us in every product,” said Michael Ozan.

The entire campaign can be seen at StayCLE.com. Products can be viewed at
The Design for Good Shop – by TWIST

Please help Cleveland service and hospitality workers by dropping what you can in the CLE virtual tip jar.

#WFH Diaries with Mike & Connie Ozan

As confinement continues in most parts of the world, we’re checking in with creative people to see how they’re faring. Here’s an update from Mike and Connie Ozan, the chief creative officer and chief design officer of TWIST in Cleveland.

Give us a one-line bio of yourselves.

We’re co-founders of Twist.

Connie: I’m a mom, wife, daughter, friend, artist, designer and business owner trying to make the best of this right now. I get excited about the details—that’s what makes me happy. I express that in tending to our family, our work and our home.

Mike: I live for the big idea, seeing clients and our staff find success, and for my family, who give my challenges both reason and purpose. And I write copy.

Where are you living right now, and who’s with you?

Our home in Shaker Heights, Ohio, with our two quarantine mates, teenagers (Monte, 15, and Sophia, 17), and our labradoodle (emotional support dog) Champ.

What’s your work situation like at the moment?

We’re both taking one day at a time. The day starts with our 8:30 a.m. team meeting via GoToMeeting, where we can hear everyone’s energetic voices and the day ends the same. Not only is our team creative, but they are resilient, determined and loyal. No one has missed a beat. We’re proud and grateful for that. The two of us work from a shared office, which has been fun and nostalgic because we started together in a room about the same size. Our work situation? Improving, slowly, maybe.

Describe your socializing strategy.

We’ve been doing a lot of driveway visits and meeting new neighbors, at a distance, while walking our dog Champ. With both of us celebrating milestone birthdays, we’ve also done a lot of FaceTime with friends and family.

How are you dealing with childcare?

Our children are teens, so they are self-reliant, which is good. We just need to make sure they don’t sleep in too long and are doing their virtual homework.

What are you reading?

Connie: With the extra time, I’ve had the chance to dive into a collection of design and inspiration books that have been sitting in our office for years. Not so much reading but “ogling” the imagery from design heroes like: Hella Jongerius I Don’t Have a Favourite Colour and Athena Calderone’s new book Live Beautiful.

Mike: I’ve been listening to a ton of audiobooks, typically biographies and autobiographies of leaders, writers and thinkers. Elon Musk to Steve Martin—hearing how successful people persevere through tough times. I’ve also been devouring MasterClass’s content—with the favorite being Doris Kearns Goodwin instructing on presidential leadership in times of crisis.

What are you watching?

We sped through Ozark Season 3 on Netflix and are enjoying watching The Plot Against America on HBO together, as well as Honey Boy on Amazon.

What are you listening to?

’70s yacht rock in the office and by the fire pit.

How are you staying fit?

We have a nice exercise setup in the basement that is much appreciated now.

Connie: My gym is hosting virtual Zoom classes every day where I can see gym friends while doing an insane amount of burpees and bodyweight exercises.

Mike: I have my early morning ’80s-style push-up bar routine, which is multiple sets of a variety of push-up types to failure.

Have you taken up a hobby?

Connie: Watercolor painting again (it’s been over 20 years) and hanging art and photos around the house. Together we are always working on the house or dreaming or planning our next project.

Mike: Cleaning the cars or riding my motorcycle.

Any tips for getting necessities?

Wear your mask and be patient when running out to the store. Forgive those who are reluctant to follow the rules, but stay away from them. Mike actually brought a work chair home from the office to be able to work more comfortably, encouraging our team to do the same, if needed.

An awkward moment since all this started.

Every moment since this started! Working remotely is OK, but it is full of awkwardness, especially when trying to make small talk at the beginning of client meetings. Also, when Connie’s parents stopped over for the 50th birthday and Easter and we had to wave from a distance. That made us sad.

Best work email you got since this all started.

You’ve been approved for PPP. Low bar, but it’s all relative.

An aha! moment since all this started.

We have two.

This information needs a campaign, so we created one just focused on our city (Cleveland) to make sure localized information was being served. Every disaster is full of opportunity because it creates an urgent need. How can we help? We can try and spread the word faster than the virus.

We both turned 50 during Covid-19. We couldn’t believe how creative our friends and family were in celebrating. Mike threw Connie a parade—20-plus cars drove by our house (a great idea that spread like wildfire). Connie collected 50 letters from family and friends for Mike—they were heartfelt, hilarious and a nice keepsake for him.

What’s your theory on how this is going to play out?

The greater the disaster, the greater the opportunity. I feel that this is not just a tragic event, but it is a landmark event for us as 21st century residents of Earth. I believe that everything has a natural balance and when that balance is disturbed, like a pendulum it will eventually rest at the center again but it will take patience and perseverance. We will adapt in ways we never thought possible, and from the innovations that adaptation necessitates we will discover that we can work, learn and connect in new ways. It’s not the end of the world, but I think this is all close enough to provide the kick in the ass we need to remind us that the engine of democracy is compromise.

On a more personal note, I think we will all realize how important human interaction is and the relationships we hold close to our hearts will not be taken for granted.

See the full #WFH Diaries series here.

 

#WFH Lessons in Leadership

It’s week six of quarantine life, and my Type A, extrovert-ness has taken a real hit during the past month and a half. While Zoom and FaceTime calls are great, it’s just not the same. I’m used to being around people (clients, partners and team members) and I thrive in situations where I can collaborate face to face. But quarantine life has given me an opportunity to reflect on my leadership style while also teaching me some lessons, in just six short weeks, that I wasn’t expecting.

  1. It’s okay to not know the answer. I don’t think anyone knows the answer(s) right now. Things are fluid and changing and your gut, your head and your heart may all be telling you different things depending on the minute, the news or what you are hearing from others. I personally have just been trying to balance all three – and trusting my gut.
  2. It’s okay to show vulnerability. We’re all human and we’re all experiencing a wide variety of emotions (sometimes within minutes). I’ve had my highs where I feel like I’m being productive, working ahead and being proactive. Then the next day – a total mess. I’ve let my guard down with my team and simply been open and honest. I had recently learned that the nonprofit that I’m on the board of would need to close down services, and during a group call with the team that same afternoon I was honest – that news hit me hard; there was no denying it. The thing I wasn’t expecting? Hearing from multiple team members afterward who wanted to check in and make sure I was okay and wanting to know how they could help.
  3. It’s okay to not be your most productive. As a leader of the agency, I feel like every minute of my day should be productive and that’s just not possible during a pandemic. There’s too much happening and to stay on task can sometimes feel completely impossible. Just when I’ve hit my stride on an item, I’ll get an email notification, see a tweet or overhear a press conference and things change.
  4. It’s okay to take time off. I am the absolute worst at this, even when we’re not in a pandemic. I am quickly realizing though that I can’t be on all of the time. It’s just not possible or healthy. I’ve found myself needing to keep the TV off (sometimes for multiple days in a row) and turn off notifications for our project management system or email. Allowing myself that moment to block the excess noise tends to make me more effective once I’m back online.
  5. It’s okay to change your routine and schedule. I am an early bird. My coworkers would tell you it’s not unusual to see me in the office before 7am most days. For me, I’ve had to rework my routine more than expected. I am still awake early and working (sometimes at 6:30am or earlier) but I’ve been needing to take breaks way more often throughout the day than I would when I’m in the office.

 

The five things that do matter:

  1. Visibility matters: Be present and have a presence is something we talk about all the time. As a leader it’s more important than ever to be there for your team and clients. Does that mean extra hours to get other things done? Yep. But does it reassure your team and set the right tone during a time of high stress and anxiety? Absolutely.
  2. Balance matters: If you know me well you know I hate, hate, hate the term “work life balance”. I think it’s bullshit, to be honest. But during a pandemic, especially when working from home, I’ve found the importance of shutting things down. I am not one to usually take a lunch but I’ve been taking lunch breaks and turning off notifications, even if just for 30 minutes or so.
  3. Self-care matters: As much as I love a good spa day that’s not the kind of self-care I’m talking about here (truth be told – my sheet mask collection is proving to help during quarantine though). I’m talking about the kind of self-care that includes working out, eating well and chatting with a therapist or someone you trust. In order to truly lead you need to take care of yourself first (something I did struggle with for years).
  4. Compassion matters: Like I mentioned earlier, no one has the answer and everyone is reacting differently to what’s going on in the world today. Don’t assume you know everything on your team’s to do list or understand what may be happening in their home life. A little compassion and empathy goes a long way.
  5. Laughter and humor matters: Let’s be honest – this stress level is unlike what most of us have ever experienced. Luckily I’m surrounded by some pretty bad ass women who have become my support system during quarantine life. Sometimes you just need a drink and some laughs to shake things off – because that’s how we’re all going to get through this craziness. Or maybe even a good old fashioned Taylor Swift dance party.

How are all of you faring working from home during this global crisis? Do you feel like you have a pretty good balance? Learned some lessons of your own? Currently driving the strugglebus to crazytown? (PS – Pick me up on the way! lol).

The Bright Side is Outside

Right now the world as we know it has been drastically changed. Many of us are working from home, trading family nights for facetime calls, and staying in pajamas for what is probably far too long. People are sick, businesses are struggling, workers on the frontlines are exhausted; even going to the grocery store has become a scheduled event that you have to prepare for. But, there is a bright side to all of this and that’s what we have to focus on to get us through. Many people are taking advantage of being home to spend valuable time with family and loved ones, and – you can still go outside.

Over the last few years my fiancé and I have been traveling as much as possible, but last year we went on a trip that felt particularly inspiring – we were headed back out west for a little over a week along with my Mom and her boyfriend Rick with the goal of hitting as many national parks as we could in Arizona and Utah. Along the way I decided to challenge myself by creating an illustration from each park we visited – because who doesn’t need a good homework assignment on vacation?

At one park in particular (Capitol Reef National Park) we went on a hike to go see some pools in the rocks and as we approached a pretty steep part of the hike we talked to some other hikers that were on their way back down, and had the usual “is this worth it?” conversation. Long story short, we ended up finding out that they were from Mentor, Ohio – basically right around the corner from where we live. Here in Ohio doing day-to-day life would we have talked to them? I doubt it. But being happier outside has a way of bringing people together. I didn’t realize it then, but this experience sparked something in me.

After we came back I started making more designs in my free time focused on the outdoors and decided it was time to make it something real. Thus, Happier Outside Company was born. There are so many brands focused on the niche of hiking, or fishing, or literally everything else but you don’t have to be one thing or the other – you can just be. And that is really the focus of this side project – to support however YOU do the outdoors, just be happy while you’re doing it. Since launching it on instagram I have had people reach out to me just because they connect with this simple notion, whether for physical or mental health reasons, or just because they have a love for the outdoors. No matter the reason, they feel inspired to share their stories with us and that’s pretty amazing to me.

This experience has truly taught me a lot about connecting with people no matter where they are and I think that’s a situation we can all relate to right now. So I encourage you, (with the proper social distance of course) to go outside on this Earth Day and be nice to people. Walk around your neighborhood, visit your local parks, and maybe even pick up some trash while you’re at it. There are beautiful places all around you, you just have to go spend some time outside and get some fresh air.

Visit online at Happieroutsideco.com and follow @HappierOutsideCo on instagram and facebook.

Check out what local parks are near you:
https://www.clevelandmetroparks.com/parks
https://www.geaugaparkdistrict.org/parks/
https://www.lakemetroparks.com/parks-trails
https://www.nps.gov/cuva/index.htm

Dear COVID-19

Dear Covid-19,

Adversity doesn’t just build character, it reveals it. Over the past few weeks, for Twist Creative, Inc. we’ve seen both.

Like many other brand agencies working from home, we’ve seen the tools we took for granted in the office become a matter of necessity. With that said, we are grateful for companies like Hive who have given us the opportunity to continue to work as a team and continue doing great work for our clients and community – unimpeded.

Though apart, we’ve seen our work family draw closer. We check on one another – not just during morning and end-of-day meetings but throughout the day. We’ve seen leadership across the board. It’s not easy being the “away” team, but together we haven’t lost an inch. This moment of adversity hasn’t just built us up, but it’s revealed our core values, solidified our culture and it’s shown that our passion and quality of work doesn’t just burn out because of a little social distance.

As we look forward to being in the office again—our home—we understand that things will be different. We’ll be stronger than ever before, more appreciative of our team and more grateful for the opportunity to work in this industry and to be part of something special: Twist Creative, Inc.

With Heart,
The Fearless Thinkers

The Smartest Dumb Idea We Ever Had

The Story of an Advertising Experiment Meant to Test The Impact of Both Intellectual Curiosity And Outdoor Advertising on Engagement and Brand Awareness.

In a “Fearless Thinking” and “put our money where our mouth is” move, TWIST funded and created a real-world integrated campaign led by a billboard series and supported by a content marketing strategy.

The goal? Demonstrate that, in a time when the average consumer is exposed to 3,000 advertising messages each day, a small campaign could break through and create brand awareness and real engagement. All while being simple and by what it didn’t tell you. The results of this experiment will probably help marketers settle an argument they are tired of having and help brands – especially those with limited dollars – leverage curiosity as a brand value with real ROI.

Advertising’s job is to create an itch. It’s the product’s job to scratch it.

As an agency we spend a lot of time in meetings with clients who fear that simple means oversimplifying (and we always hear: we’re not Apple).

We get it. Many of our clients are like the majority of small businesses where the marketing budget is like a gun with one bullet: you don’t want to miss.

Spending money on advertising and then not filling your ad with every value proposition can feel very uncomfortable.

The creative team at TWIST wanted to prove the impact that simplicity and creating the type of momentary shock and confusion that sparks actionable curiosity could have for a small brand. We rolled up our sleeves and prepared for a dose of our own medicine.

DSC_4433_forweb

A billboard campaign with demonstrable clickthroughs?

The power of outdoor is that it impacts culture and it is part of the visual story of a place. It truly is a brand’s greatest opportunity to be a landmark. With consumers, in their cars, alone with their thoughts, it is an opportunity to give them something to think about.

Now, what do we want them to think about? As David Ogilvy said, “you can’t bore anyone into buying anything.” We need to be interesting but this experiment is also not an arts and crafts project. We wanted the data to tell us if we had created a want for a product and we also wanted it to promote TWIST.

With “simplicity” and “curiosity” as the mandatories in the creative brief for the campaign, the TWIST design team set off to create a series of billboards that would start a conversation, would disrupt the better-funded competitors and lead to brand engagement and conversation.

The team decided to focus on creating a want for what they described as “brandless” common household items (things that people need and buy everyday). In order to further stand apart and further stimulate curiosity, the names of the items are set over natural landscapes that somehow suggest a journey. We thought it was a truly unexpected mix that blended our viewers’ everyday lives and their aspirational lives. The team further sought to make the campaign a sort of mental palate cleanser, offering your mind and your eyes a peaceful rest.

We made our campaign to suggest not to demand.

Did it work? What happened?

The content part of the campaign created awareness of the board through social media. We put a survey form and an explanation of the campaign on our website. The first few days after the billboards went up were a bit quiet. We had to remind ourselves that it takes several impressions to inspire action. That rule proved true.

By the Monday following the launch, our survey form began pinging with responses to our questions. We continued to layer social content and slowly disclose more and more about the nature of the experiment.

Q: What did you think the billboard was for?

“I was simply confused but intrigued in what it was advertising.”
“I have literally no idea, that’s why I went to the website. I thought it may be a scavenger hunt-Esque campaign.”

Q: Do you like these billboards? If so why? If not why not?

“It’s nice to have a break from traditional advertisements; your billboards evoke thought.”
“Yes. They make you think of all the things you associate with words. It also reminds you what you need to buy at the store.”

Our web traffic doubled and then it quadrupled with the most trafficked page being the explanation of the campaign. Many filled out our form and nearly 75% of traffic clicked on the campaign explanation. With site traffic came inquiries. Resume submissions were up more than 50% for our open positions and many cover letters mentioned the campaign.

Q: Have you had a conversation with anyone else about this campaign? Please tell us about it.

“My sister, I sent her pictures captioned ‘what the heck is going on’ and she replied ‘what.'”
“When I got to work I asked around and others had seen Pickles. We came to the site together because we wanted to find out what it was all about.”

It worked! So what have we learned?

The biggest takeaway for TWIST was proof that consumers are smart. They can and want to figure things out and like when you challenge them.

Keep it simple, clear and suggestive. Don’t dictate and allow confusion to take hold. Curiosity is a natural and positive response to the discomfort of confusion. Companies need to express their differentiation but we would ask you to do this exercise: set your company’s differentiation in your mind and focus on it. Now, put it on a billboard.

Tough, right? Sure it is. We at TWIST have a philosophy about the type of engagement that leads to understanding of differentiation: experience and education lead to appreciation and appreciation leads to value. I can’t value your differentiation if I don’t appreciate and once I do value it, I will clearly distinguish your offering’s value from your competitor’s

Today, all brands require a deep relationship with their customers and there are no good relationships that are one-sided. Subtle suggestion though is what creates real engagement and brand engagement is where it’s at these days.

Yet, if the drive to overshare persists within your team, consider this:

No one ever got lucky by oversharing on the first date.

20 Years Worth in 2 Minutes.

For 20 years, I have run TWIST, a design firm, then brand firm and now a brand agency. When we started, my wife, Connie, was the sole designer and I was the sole writer. I managed clients and developed strategies and concepts, while Connie built the visual vocabulary. We presented together and split the duties of account services – based on their more emotional (Connie as account executive) or logical (me as account executive) leanings. Starting an agency with one room, a beige Mac and a one page-per-minute inkjet printer, then growing it through back-to-back recessions taught us a lot of business lessons, life lessons and patience.

The thing to understand about any agency is that in the world of business-to-business services, we are an oddity. Do you equate us to your law firm or your accounting firm? Well, I say “yes” and I say “no.” Yes, we are as essential to your business as those professionals, but no, we are nothing like them.

Here’s the difference: lawyers and accountants play defense. As your agency, we play offense. Culturally, this idea dictates a lot about how I think about TWIST. This “all-offense” style of thinking has generated a lot of breakthroughs and plenty of challenges.

Here is how I deal with some of those challenges:

1. Think inside the box too.

While we think intensely about bold moves, vision and innovation, we (creative service professionals) always need to filter ideas through business objectives and what we, at TWIST, call “in-the-box thinking.”

Every other day, I am in a meeting where someone says they are looking for “out-of-the-box” ideas. I am a writer first and everything else (professionally) second, so I take words seriously. What does “out-of-the-box” mean? To me, it seems like a ridiculous request. We create ideas that advance business objectives and in vision those things are sometimes outrageous, but they should never be uncontained, unmeasured and ultimately unusable (by professional advertising standards).

At TWIST, we are problem solvers and all problem solvers work inside a box. In the agency world, the box is defined by the parameters of time, budget, staff capacity and risk tolerance. The best, most creative and certainly most effective work lives inside that box.

2. Don’t get any on you; they hired you to do what they can’t.

I try to insulate our team from external politics, committees and corporate think. We exist as an agency to move a business, a cause or a conversation forward. If the company that hired us was able to do that themselves, then they would.

They can’t. That is why I remind our team “don’t get any on you;” meaning yes listen, yes observe but remain an outsider. This is the best vantage point to innovate. It’s our job to ask, “Why?” We are contrarians and that’s good.

3. Candor is what makes creativity go faster, better and smarter.

Wake up. Creativity compromised is not going to get the job done.

Ours is not a contemplative age. It is the age of right now. Business is aggressive; those of us who remain are the wolves. We are the survivors of one of the most challenging times for American capitalism and for advertising. The work we do leaves our caress and enters into a harsh world of digital clutter where the human attention span has been whittled down to less than ten seconds (and ticking away with every smartphone upgrade).

Before I lose your attention, when it comes to your business dealings I recommend you be direct, concise and candid. None of us have the capacity for anything more (or is it less?).

4. Most of your value cannot be seen on a spreadsheet. Never let a number dictate your worth.

Abilities like intuition, interpretation and emotional intelligence are assets that make my accountant cock his head in confusion. They don’t show up on the spreadsheet.

Back-to-back recessions taught me how and when to say “fuck it.” Our business is about doing what others say cannot be done. It’s about new, it’s about change and it’s about knowing it when you see it. If you are good at that, then get a great accountant and remember the bad numbers tell you to quit. Never quit. The good numbers tell you to rest. Never rest.

5. Embrace the silence.

In a time of instant gratification we all feel compelled to answer now—don’t. Instead wait, pause, withhold. If you are in a meeting, especially in a negotiation of any kind, be quiet. Allow the other party to speak. If you are patient they will reveal themselves and the answers you need. Quiet is powerful. It’s an important aspect of creativity. Groupthink doesn’t necessarily make for great think.

6. Professionalism still matters. Conduct business ethically, even if others do not.

When we started TWIST, I set out to do everything right – every client, every idea, every time. I had a moral compass and was rigid. Experience, time or the world wants to take that away from you, but hold on to it because it really does matter. There is the way business is and the way it should be. Hold people to what it should be.

Your professionalism is what clients pay for. Uncompromising values or morals are what talent sticks with. I do what I can to remind myself of the ideal vision for our culture and the client experience. It is the one thing we got right, right off the bat.

7. Pick up the phone already.

A conversation is worth a thousand emails.

The best use of email for complex business correspondence is simply to set a time for a call or a face-to-face conversation. Email is great for quick, get-it-done correspondence, but I have seen misinterpreted emails explode into devastating, business-killing moments.

It’s important to leverage telephone communication for day-to-day and face-to-face for conflict resolution. My father, himself a retired CEO, has always told me not to put anything in an email that I would not want read in court. Every time I have strayed from this tenet, I have found myself in trouble and saying I could have avoided it with a two-and-a-half minute call.

8. There will be fat times and lean times, learn to manage them.

When you are working impossible hours without rest, something magical happens, you complete a lot of work. Suddenly, everyone looks up at you and says what’s next? Don’t panic, business has natural cycles. Whatever your business, it would behoove you to do some pattern recognition and slot in some self-care during those less hectic times. Take the opportunity to retool, sharpen your sword or whatever in order to get prepped for what’s next.

9. Take risks to grow as long as you cannot classify them as foolish

It’s exciting and frustrating. Entrepreneurs have vision and can see the business one year from today and ten years from today. Sometimes the vision is clear, but just because the destination is in view doesn’t mean you have arrived. Take great leaps, make great hires, pursue big opportunities, but find your filter. Mine is—don’t be foolish.

10. Only show your best!

If you are going for an agency position or securing a new account, only show your best work. Less is absolutely more. We won’t miss what you don’t show us. Separate what you like from what clearly communicates your capabilities—no renderings, no incompletes. This business is a show, it’s a song and dance reel, a case study. Amazing photography, design and breakthrough copy. That’s what sells.

TWIST Honored with 20 ADDY Awards

The American Advertising Federation of Cleveland presented TWIST Creative, Inc. with 20 ADDY awards last night at the 2014 ADDY Awards Show. We’re proud to announce we won three Gold, six Silver and 11 Bronze awards.

TWIST received the second highest number of the total ADDYs awarded, just ten fewer than Cleveland’s largest advertising agency. “With a creative team of advertising, design and public relations experts, our agency took home ADDYs for more than 65 percent of our entries,” said Charlene Coughlin, Director of Account Services and AAF Vice President of Membership and ADDYs Co-Chair.

“We’re well aware of the company we keep,” said Chief Design Officer Connie Ozan. She and husband, Michael, founded TWIST 15 years ago. “We’re constantly up against amazing talent. Receiving an award from any organization, on any level, is a tremendous acknowledgement to our team, our work and our clients,” said Michael Ozan, President & Chief Creative Officer.

Our Gold and Silver award-winning work will be entered in the District 5 ADDY competition.

We’d like to thank our clients for the opportunity to create the work below and for their teamwork during the process. We believe great relationships produce great work.

TWIST celebrates the following awards:

Gold
Integrated Campaign, Consumer Local
Black Powder Tavern Campaign, Select Restaurants

Elements of Advertising, Visual, Logo
St. Ignatius Seal, St. Ignatius High School

Elements of Advertising, Visual , Photography Campaign
Black Powder Tavern Photography, Select Restaurants

Silver
Sales Promotion, Product or Service Sales Presentation, Catalog
Arhaus Catalog, Arhaus

Out-of-Home, Site, Exterior Still or Static
Tri-C Campaign Out of Home, Cuyahoga Community College

Out-of-Home, Campaign
Tri-C Campaign – Out of Home, Cuyahoga Community College

Consumer or Trade Publication, Campaign, Four-Color
Black Powder Publication Campaign, Select Restaurants

Consumer of Trade Publication, Campaign, Four-Color
Tri-C Campaign – Out of Home, Cuyahoga Community College

Elements of Advertising, Visual, Illustration Campaign
Arhaus Illustrations, Arhaus

Bronze
Collateral Material, Stationery Package
Storm Copper Components

Consumer or Trade Publication, Campaign, Four-Color
Creativity for Kids Campaign

Digital Advertising
Tri-C Digital Campaign

Television (TV) Local (one DMA) Campaign
Cleveland Indians 2014 Campaign

Integrated Campaigns, B-to-B Local
BOMA Cleveland Campaign

Integrated Campaigns, Consumer Local
Cleveland Indians 2014 Season Campaign

Integrated Campaigns, Consumer, Regional/National
Creativity for Kids Creativity Can Campaign

Elements of Advertising, Copywriting
Cleveland Indians – “This Uniform Is A Promise” Campaign

Elements of Advertising, Visual, Photography Campaign
BOMA Cleveland Photography

Elements of Advertising, Visual, Photography Campaign
Cleveland Indians Photography

Elements of Advertising, Visual, Photography Campaign
Oliver Printing Photography

#TBT – Fearless Thinkers featured in Crain’s

April 27, 2014,

Crain’s Cleveland featured TWIST’s brand documentation assignment by the Cleveland Indians

 

Crain’s reported it was the team’s first external branding agency partner in more than five years.

“To earn the Tribe’s trust, and some of its advertising budget, Twist Creative appealed to the team’s — and the city’s — roots.

“‘Cleveland as a city has really evolved and has really connected people with its determination and personality,’ said Mike Ozan, who founded Twist with his wife, Connie, in 2000. “‘We very much thought it was important to connect the team to that same sentiment. That determination, we all feel it and love it.'”

See the rest of the campaign

Read the full article here: Brand Agency Puts Its Twist on the Cleveland Indians’ Roots