Mike Ozan Directs Creativity and Candor at Twist, an Agency That Knows Your Brand

September 15, 2012, Cleveland.com published an article on TWIST CEO, Michael Ozan and covered his thoughts on the power of a brand to inspire confidence in a product or a community.

“Ohio City is a great example. We said, we have to decide what’s going to create the most momentum in the neighborhood. Ohio City became the perfect match for what is this emerging artisan economy. These are chefs with Ph.Ds. We describe them as artisans by choice, not by upbringing. There’s all these storefronts with apartments above them because mom and pop once woke up to go downstairs and bake bread. This creative class emerged and they are now artisans by choice. We decided we would go after those people. We knew they would like the neighborhood because they would be attracted to the historic real estate, the character, life in the big city. They want an urban environment.”

Read the full article here: Mike Ozan directs creativity and candor at Twist, an agency that knows your brand

 

 

Rapid growth prompts TWIST’s move

September 11, 2014, Cleveland.com reported on TWIST’s move to the Fairmont Creamery in Cleveland’s Tremont neighborhood.

“After a year-and-a-half search for a new space, in partnership with Scott Simon, president of North Pointe Realty, Inc., TWIST was introduced to Sustainable 
Community Associates and their development project at the Fairmont Creamery.”

Read the full article here: TWIST relocates; city to participate in immigrant celebration: Local Business Briefs

Bigger Staff Prompts Twist Creative’s Move to Tremont

September 26, 2014, Crain’s Cleveland featured TWIST to highlight the agency’s recent growth and expected move from a four-story victorian walk-up in Ohio City where they had been long-term occupants, to a customized build-out at the historic Fairmont Creamery in the nearby Tremont Neighborhood.

“Michael Ozan, President and Chief Creative Officer at Twist, said in a news release, ‘We’re proud to be the agency that built the brand of Ohio City and hope to make an equally significant contribution for our new neighborhood. We’re excited to once again be on the forefront of a neighborhood reinvention. This area of Tremont reminds us of Ohio City 12 years ago when we arrived.'”

Read the article here: Bigger staff prompts Twist Creative’s move to Tremont

Rapid Growth Prompts Exciting Relocation for Cleveland Agency

On the cusp of its 15-year anniversary, TWIST Creative, Inc. enters an exciting period of growth in personnel and clients.

CLEVELAND – September 04, 2014 – TWIST Creative, Inc., a full-service agency based in Cleveland, Ohio, is excited to announce its relocation to the newly renovated historic Fairmont Creamery in the city’s Tremont neighborhood. Motivated by an expanding pool of clients, the addition of new team members and growth in several service lines, the move will provide the agency with a more cohesive and creative space to match its progress.

“We’re proud to be the agency that built the brand of Ohio City and hope to make an equally significant contribution for our new neighborhood,” said Michael Ozan, president and chief creative officer at TWIST. “Today, as we move into our new space and approach our 15-year anniversary, TWIST has the ambition, uniqueness of service mix, and creative culture to move forward as a market leader.”

The company’s strong portfolio of clients includes, Arhaus Furniture; Voss Industries; Faber-Castell; TTI Floor Care, North America; Paladar Restaurants; Select Restaurants; Cuyahoga Community College; and Storm Power Components. More recently, TWIST has added relationships with the Cleveland Indians; Lake Health System; Embrace Pet Insurance; and Welty Building Company.

“Both our client relationships and employee mix are growing rapidly,” said Mike, who also added TWIST has more than doubled its annual revenue in the past two years. “Our team has grown by 30 percent over the last twelve months and will likely increase by another 30 percent before 2015.

After a year-and-a-half search for a new space, in partnership with Scott Simon, president of North Pointe Realty, Inc., TWIST was introduced to Sustainable Community Associates and their development project at the Fairmont Creamery. Both parties felt it was a good match and began working together to create a space that would match the vision of the agency’s leadership team.

“TWIST’s relocation to the Fairmont Creamery is a perfect synergy—a vibrant, growing creative firm located in a hip, newly-renovated mixed-use building in a great neighborhood,” said Scott. “This is a Cleveland success story.”

“We currently work on four floors of a 19th century building. The Fairmont Creamery project will bring our entire team onto one floor and let us get more fun and collaborative with the way we work,” Connie Ozan, founder and design director at TWIST, who added that she looks forward to meeting with the team on the rooftop deck, overlooking Tremont and views of the Cleveland skyline.

“We’re excited to once again be on the forefront of a neighborhood reinvention. This area of Tremont reminds us of Ohio City 12 years ago when we arrived,” said Mike. “We focus on breakthroughs for our clients and we believe that this move is emblematic of our vision and ambition as a Cleveland-born agency.” 

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A Celebration of the Human Spirit.

In light of the recent Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriage, we at TWIST are proud to have supported the largest international competition and life-changing cultural experience in the history of Ohio with our involvement in the 2014 Gay Games.

As the agency responsible for the brand and identity of Gay Games 9, we were challenged to create a system that would celebrate freedoms, views, voice and lifestyles that have been historically oppressed.

Held only every four years, Cleveland’s hosting of the event said volumes about us as a city and about our position of tolerance from within the Midwest. Accepting participants from all walks of life, regardless of race, health, sexuality, gender or ability, the Gay Games promotes an appreciation for perceived outliers in our society and celebrates the human spirit in all of its diversity.

Inspired by the iconic striping of the Olympic medal band and utilizing an in-line type treatment, our design adopted a heroic blue as the dominant tone with color variations in the spectrum of the rainbow. The intention: to validate, uplift and inspire as the games create a transformational benchmark and set the tone for the next era of our culture.

We’re proud to have contributed to one of the 1,000 cracks in a glass ceiling that led to a shattering decision on June 26, 2015. The Gay Games continue to evolve the conversation about what it means to be gay in our society.

BOMBA: The Making of “Latin Flavor Wherever it Leads”

Eighteen months ago, long time client Paladar approached TWIST with a new and very exciting assignment. Paladar founder and restaurant visionary Andy Himmel said “we want to create a new restaurant concept that takes the most fun and special part of our now seven location Paladar concept, the taco and rum bar, and turns it into a new kind of corner bar.” Together with the Paladar team and our good friends at Richardon Design we imagined the experience, created the name and the full creative expression. From menu to web to social media, TWIST provided design, messaging, signage design and promotional support. We are so excited that it is opening this month. This is a can’t miss night out. As we say, this experience is Latin Flavor Wherever It Leads.

The focal point bar showcases BOMBA’s private label rum and features rich wood and distiller’s copper.

TWIST Honored With 20 ADDY Awards

Golds for Hospitality Lead The Trophy Count

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

Playing Offense: Building an Advertising Agency from the Ground Up

For 15 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.

Reinforcing culture and inspiring creativity with a beautiful workspace

As co-owners of TWIST Creative, Inc., a branding agency based in Cleveland, Ohio, my husband Mike Ozan and I are committed to creating a strong creative culture within our team. To further that goal, we are relocating our offices this fall to the historic The Fairmont Creamery building in the Tremont neighborhood. We’re designing a space to fit our needs and inspire creativity. Here are some of the ways we’re working to do that:

Creating a strong internal community:
At TWIST, our agency is made up of a diverse mix of creative and strategic people, all working together toward a common goal. Fostering a sense of community within our agency encourages collaboration and work that is challenged by unique viewpoints. We’re excited to further that sense of community at TWIST with a space that lets us work together on one floor.

Making it feel like home:
Our office is our second home. It should feel like a safe haven – a place of comfort, clarity and healthy productivity. Like a home, it’s the little things that make us happy. In the new space, the mechanics and finishes are all new – plumbing, electrical, lighting, tiles, paint, etc. We’ve never had that before! It will keep us operating like a well-oiled machine.

Staying competitive and recruiting talent:
As business owners, Mike and I realize the importance of keeping and attracting intelligent and talented people—both team members and clients. Along with the work, your office space is often the first impression you give and can be a powerful influencer. In addition to a beautiful space, we’ll benefit from several on-site amenities, including fiber optic internet, a state-of-the-art gym, a raw juice bar and a rooftop deck with stunning views of the city.

See what’s inspiring us! Check out our Pinterest page for more ideas and reference.

Our Building Blocks

Pin up materials and dry erase boards:
The new office quadruples our wall space. We’ll use it to pin up reference, work-in-progress and literally “write on the walls” with dry erase areas. Creative people, especially those who are visual, benefit from looking at images, colors, shapes and words, and ask: How do they look together? How do they sound together? Is the message clear? Wall space can serve an important role in inspiring breakthroughs and collaboration.

Personal desk space and bookshelves:
Our goal has always been to let our team members personalize their space showing how they create as individuals. Each person can reflect their own personal style and process by bringing in iconic objects that inspire them. When people are given a space of belonging, it encourages them to feel comfortable enough to be themselves, which is always good for creativity.

Flexible zones:
Like a good urban planner, it helps to think in terms of zones when organizing a creative space. From war room creative sessions, to boardroom client meetings and social gatherings in the kitchen, we’ve designed zones for specific roles and the flexibility to multitask. These will be wonderful places to show hospitality by hosting clients and like-minded firms.

Natural light:
Historic garage door windows made of glass and hollow metal line the face of the building, an area that used to be a loading dock. These grid-like windows let in massive amounts of natural light. A few key areas will truly benefit from this – the designers studio, reception and conference room. To promote light flow in areas further from windows, we’ll continue to use sliding glass doors and bright lighting. Studies show that natural light has healthy benefits for the mind and can boost creativity.

Color:
We’ve chosen a warm neutral color palette using various shades of white and an accent color called “iron ore.” White walls and large columns will juxtapose with gray concrete floors and wood plank flooring. This subdued color palette will provide a sense of calmness and modernity as well as complement finishes like stainless steel, black metal and birch wood. It will also serve as a backdrop for pops of color and moments of surprise in art and furniture.

We’re moving!

We’re excited to announce our relocation this fall to the newly renovated historic Fairmont Creamery in Cleveland’s Tremont neighborhood. We’re growing and are excited for a space that better reflects the way we live and work as a team.

Ohio City has been TWIST’s home for more than a decade. We’re proud to be the agency that built the brand of the neighborhood and will miss being a member of one of Cleveland’s newly thriving areas. We hope to make an equally significant contribution in our new neighborhood.

“We’re excited to once again be on the forefront of a neighborhood reinvention. This area of Tremont reminds us of Ohio City 12 years ago when we arrived,” says Mike Ozan, president and chief creative officer at TWIST. “We focus on breakthroughs for our clients and believe that this move is emblematic of our vision and ambition as a Cleveland-born agency.”

Our current office spreads our team out over four floors. “The Fairmont Creamery project will bring everyone onto one floor and allow us to be more collaborative,” says Connie Ozan, founder and design director at TWIST.

In the last two years, both our client relationships and employee mix have grown rapidly. Our annual revenue has more than doubled and in the last twelve months, our team has increased by 30 percent and is still growing.

“As we move into our new space and approach our 15-year anniversary, TWIST has the ambition, uniqueness of service mix and creative culture to move forward as a market leader,” says Mike.

Learn more about our move, 15-year anniversary and growth on our press release.