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  • The Never Not Creative podcast is back after a 2 year hiatus. Joining Andy for this new season is co-host, Rachel Zhang, a digital product designer living in Sydney and with experience working across brands and agencies including Telstra, R/GA, Accenture Song and now her own design consultancy Ro&Co.This first episode of the new season focuses on Burnout. Andy and Rachel pull in some of the best advice that’s been shared by Asking For A Friend guests from over the past 3 years of events.Leaders and experts we refer to in this episode include:- Simon Lee, ECD and Co-Founder of The Hallway- Kimberlee Wells, CEO, TBWA Melbourne- Sabina Read, Psychologist- Jess Lilley, Creative Director, The Open Arms- Ash King, Psychologist- Wez Hawes, ECD, Innocean- Katie Feder, PsychotherapistQuestions we cover include:- How to deal with the franticness of deadline after deadline?- Will we ever be able to protect our mental health if we can’t say no to clients?- How do I say no to myself?Listen to the full advice from our guests by clicking the links above.Watch this episode on YouTubeSubscribe to the podcast on, Spotify, Apple PodcastsFollow us on InstagramCheck out snippets of this episode on TikTok.And if you liked it, get in touch and share some feedback, write a review or just check out more at nevernotcreative.org. Thanks to our sponsor Streamtime. Studio management software for happier, healthier creative teams and businesses.And a big thank you to B Corp creative agency, Paper Moose who shared their space and recording equipment for this episode.Thanks also to Linley Lai who’s produced and edited this episode - nice work!

  • Paul Balfe is no football expert. But he is a male creative who was willing to chat to us about his mental health and his experiences with anxiety. Paul is Creative Director and Founder of Pennybridge Creative, an independent design studio at home on the Gold Coast of Australia. 

    Paul shares his battle with anxiety as a result of the recent Queensland flooding and the steps he took to improve his mental wellbeing. From hypnotherapist to psychologist, Paul tried a number of different ways to tackle his challenges. 

    He's gone on to curate an exhibition about creatives' relationship with their own mental health, titled, Welcome to Yourself. Find out more about the exhibition at https://www.nevernotcreative.org/welcome-to-yourself.

    Thanks to Streamtime. Project management for healthier creative businesses.

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  • Nasya Kamrat is the Co-Founder of FACULTY, a certified, woman-owned spatial storytelling agency. After experiences working with multi-national agencies owned by the global holding companies, Nasya decided to start something new and do completely the opposite. Nasya is joined by Chief Creative Officer, Aaron Wolfe and both chat to Andy about the positives of building a company that is diverse, equitable and different to the status quo. Nasya also shares how she's gone one step further to co-found Komuna, a co-operative of independent BIPOC, women and LGBTQ+ led agencies and leading industry knowledge brokers designed to support the world’s most intrepid brands.

    Show Links:

    Komuna
    FACULTY
    Never Not Creative

    Thanks to Streamtime for their support of Never Not Creative. Go to Streamtime for project management for healthier, creative businesses.

  • In our latest episode, Ve Dewey interviews James Routledge, the co-founder of Sanctus. After starting Sanctus, a coaching business to help improve mental wellbeing in workplaces, James has gone on to author the Penguin Business Book, Mental Health at Work. He's always very transparent and honest in his own challenges and shares how practice was the key to opening up and helping people realise that we're all capable of talking about our mental health.

    Links:

    More about James and Sanctus.

    James' book, Mental Health at Work.

    Thanks to Streamtime, project management for healthier creative businesses.

  • In this episode, Ve and Andy join forces to chat to recent winners of the Deutsche Bank Awards For Creative Entrepreneurs – Jameisha Prescod, founder of You Look Okay To Me, an online space for the chronic illness community and Nahum McLean, founder of African Diaspora Dance Association (ADDA), an organisation that aims to expand the curriculum and training of dance under the African Diaspora.

    Jameisha and Nahum share the importance of strong mentorship, community and not letting social norms stand in your way.

    Since 1993, through DBACE, Deutsche Bank has overseen the launch of over 220 ventures, helping young visionaries bring their ideas to life as one of the longest running creative enterprise programmes. In 2018, MeWe360 was brought in as a new partner to deliver and help shape the new direction of the programme.

    Every year, the DBACE programme provides support to 10 entrepreneurs (5 Winners + 5 bursary business support recipients). All entrepreneurs join MeWe360’s incubator membership to receive tailored 1-2-1 mentoring which looks at aspects of business support depending on the entrepreneurs’ individual needs.

    Applications for the 2022 DBACE program are open now. You can apply here.

    More about Mewe360
    You Look Okay To Me
    African Diaspora Dance Association

    And thanks to Streamtime

  • It's our third and final episode of the F Word Mini-Series. David and Ve sit down for an inspirational conversation around failure at an organisational level with the award-winning transformational change leader Eva Applebaum and Global CEO of Butchershop® Global, Trevor Hubbard. Within the episode, we go in-depth discussing failure, what the opposite of failure is (clarity), key leadership attributes, and what failure for women in a work environment means.

    Eva Appelbaum – Butchershop – The Clarity Project

    Thanks to Streamtime for their support. 

    More at nevernotcreative.org

  • In our second episode, David and Ve sit down with Alina Mendoza Lopez, currently an intern at Dragon Rouge London, and Max Ottignon, co-founder of the London based agency Ragged Edge to discuss failure at the individual level. Within the episode Max and Alina discuss their experience of failure: Alina discussed her relationship with failure in university whilst Max elucidates early career experiences with failure as well as his current experiences running Ragged Edge.

    Ragged Edge
    Dragon Rouge

    Thanks to Streamtime. Project and studio management for healthier creative businesses.

    More at Nevernotcreative.org

  • Based on the “The F word”, our latest mini-series focuses on "Failure." This first episode with Never Not Creative Co-creator, Ve Dewey and David Beare, Executive Creative Director of Dragon Rouge, come together to discuss what we mean by failure. Their discussion lays the foundation for future episodes exploring what failure is and what counts as small or large failures and how we deal with them on a daily basis.

    Stay tuned for more in episodes 2 and 3 coming soon.

    More about David – More about Ve

    Thanks to Streamtime for their support - project management software for healthier creative businesses.

  • The final episode of our Creativity and Football mini-series rounds out with The Hallway's ECD Simon Lee. Simon has lived experience with the ups and downs of mental health, but has also been working closely with mental health charity, Gotcha4Life for the last 3 years. The result of this work is the quite excellent Boys Do Cry campaign – a clever take on The Cure's "Boys Don't Cry" from 1979. It's a powerful piece bringing together 30 men from all walks of life to unite in tackling the stigma of mental health – especially relating to men.

    Andy and Simon discuss the rules of masculinity, the stiff upper lip and the power and relief that comes from opening up. 

    You can find out more about the campaign at: Boys Do Cry. 

    Thanks to Endel.io for background music. Check them out for one month free.

    Support from Streamtime always appreciated and for joining us on the fight for a healthier creative industry.

    Check out what's happening at Never Not Creative and last chance to take the empathy survey.

  • In the 4th episode of our Creativity & Football mini-series we head to Switzerland with renowned lettering artist Stefan Kunz.

    Stefan is an internet phenomenon, entrepreneur and educator who is passionate about sharing his gift to inspire others.

    But his quest for excellence and always doing how best isn’t free from the challenges of struggling to get out of bed, becoming bereft of ideas on how to excel further and everything in between.

    Stefan shares his coping mechanisms and how his willingness to be realistic about what his ‘best’ is on any particular day, helps him through.

    Find out more about Stefan and sign up for his courses at https://stefankunz.com.

    Thanks to Endel for their support… Focus, relax, and sleep through the power of sound. The Endel app creates AI-powered sounds designed to support your everyday life. Backed by science, and enjoyed by millions worldwide. Endel is powered by its patented core AI technology. It takes inputs like location, environment, and heart rate, to create the optimal personalized soundscape. This happens on the fly and allows Endel to reconnect your state with your natural circadian rhythm.

    Get a free 1-month subscription for the NNC Community here 

    And Streamtime… always on the mission of creating healthier creative businesses and helping create a healthier creative industry. Find out more at Streamtime.net.

  • It's the 3rd episode of our Creativity & Football mini-series. Craig Elimeliah is an award-winning ECD at VMLY&R in New York. A native New-Yorker he gets his football analogies from the oval shaped ball rather than the circular one. A couple of months ago, Craig wrote a brave post on Linkedin sharing his experiences with many years of mental heath ups and downs. It's not easy to suddenly go from zero to a hundred in the transparency and vulnerability stakes, but Craig has taken it in his stride and now understands his own mental health in order to pull the right levers at the right time. He's also excited by the change our industry is destined to make with a new generation of talent and leaders who won't stand for the toxicity and culture of the past that has burnt out far too many of us.

    Need help with your mental health?

    Find out more about Craig.

    Craig's interview with David Sable for New York Festivals.

    Thanks to Endel.io - the AI-powered wellness app that helps you focus, relax, and sleep better through the power of sound. Created by artists, proved by science.

    And thanks to Streamtime. Project management software for healthier creative businesses.

    More at Nevernotcreative.org

  • Dr Zac Seidler knows a thing or two about football. Whilst he's scored many a goal from all over the pitch, his ultimate goal is to reduce the staggering rate of male suicide. In this second episode of our Creativity & Football mini series (psst, yeah the one on men's mental health in the creative industry) Andy and Zac discuss everything from mental health to masculinity and the one secret that just may give men the courage to speak up.

    Find out more about Zac at https://www.zacseidler.com/ and of course support the global Movember phenomenon at https://movember.com where Zac is Director of Mental Health Training. 

    More from NNC at https://nevernotcreative.org 

    Thanks as always to https://Streamtime.net

  • Welcome to a Never Not Creative podcast mini-series. Creativity and Football. We're talking to men about creativity, football and... who are we kidding? This is an essential listen. A mini-series dedicated to the topic of men's mental health in our industry. We kick-off our first episode with Pete Brennan. Co-founder of Heaps Normal, Electric & Analog and lucky for us, sharer of stories and experiences about his own journey with mental health.

    We're publishing this series because its almost guaranteed that whenever we run something around mental health – we'll see max 10% of males as part of the audience. It's time to chat fellas (and everyone of course, but especially the men). The more open you are, the more honest you are and the more you realise that more than half of this world is feeling something similar, the more we can all help each other.

    Thank you to Pete for sharing, talking and helping others realise it's good to talk and get to know yourself.

    Find out more about Pete, Heaps Normal and Electric and Analog below.

    Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterbrennan/?originalSubdomain=au
    Heaps Normal - https://heapsnormal.com/
    Electric & Analog - https://www.eanda.cc/

    Thanks to Streamtime - https://streamtime.net

  • Asher Oliver didn’t take the traditional ‘qualified’ pathway into the creative industry.

    After graduation from university with a Business Management degree in 2009, he moved back home and encountered a huge struggle in regards to finding employment.

    Like many graduates having to rely on casual work meant Asher became a waiter in an Italian restaurant, but he never gave up what had become a passion on the side for animation.

    While researching opportunities, Asher came across Gary Vaynerchuk and his mantras of:

    HUSTLE - HARD WORK - FOCUS - NO EXCUSES

    When Asher reached out to Gary himself, opportunities appeared. The collaboration opened many doors and he now works full time at Food Fight Studios.

    Thanks to Streamtime for all their support.

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    Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nevernotcreative/message

  • Blair Enns (author of Win Without Pitching and Pricing Creativity) joins Andy to discuss the challenges that creatives have when it comes to business. How our emotional attachment to work can hinder financial success and why we shy away from the grown-up stuff. We also discuss the pro's and con's of unpaid internships and whether mental health issues are naturally more present in creatives. 

    Links:
    Rocket Fuel book

    Win without pitching

    Mentally-Healthy research

    Never Not Creative

    Thank to Streamtime for all their support – project management software for healthier creative businesses.

  • Andy and Sarah are back with another episode on a Never Not International Women’s Day talk with Tom Tapper.  

    Tom is the co-founder and CEO of B-Corp certified agency, Nice and Serious. In 2008, he co-founded Nice and Serious with a clear purpose: to make creative work the world needs. Since then, he’s exclusively worked with pioneering charities and brands to make creative work that amplifies social and environmental causes. From international brands like IKEA, Unilever, Innocent and Ben & Jerrys, to pioneering charities like Greenpeace, WWF, Rainforest Alliance and Parkrun.  

    Constantly aware of being in the privileged position of the white male founder of a successful branding business, Tom is interviewed by Ve on the extra efforts to ensure that Nice and Serious delivers on being a business that strives for equality.  

    Listen to the full podcast ep or watch the talk at https://nniwd.nevernotcreative.org/. 

    The Moral Compass - https://moralcompass.app/ 

    Nice and Equal - https://niceandserious.com/journal/nice-and-equal/

    More at https://nevernotcreative.org/

    Big thanks to Streamtime - https://streamtime.net/

  • Join Andy Wright and Sarah Nguyen in another episode to discuss two powerful talks from Never Not International Women’s Day - ‘Until your fear of me isn’t my problem’ with Tanarra Schneider, and ‘Until we flip the question’ with Andy Polaine.  

    Tanarra is a Managing Director at Accenture Interactive, leading Design in the Midwest. She spills the tea about the outcomes of a system predicated on the fear of women’s success.   

    Dr. Andy Polaine is a designer, educator, coach and writer who helps clients build and grow their own design and innovation capability, transform their organisations and themselves. Andy flips the question from “what should we do?” to “what should we stop doing?” and dealing with the underlying structural issues that create inequity.  

    Watch their talks at https://nniwd.nevernotcreative.org/.
    More at https://nevernotcreative.org/
    Big thanks to Streamtime - https://streamtime.net/

  • Somewhere around 2015, the first of the John genre articles arrived, trumpeting that there are more CEOs named John than women CEOs in their entirety.   In this episode, we have a well-presented talk by Jess Lilley, who focuses on this issue and talks through what we (John) can do about it. Jess is a co-founder at The Open Arms, a creative company that strives to weaponise empathy to help communities thrive.

    After a near 20-year career as an award-winning writer and creative director in some of the world’s most renown ad agencies, Jess realised the culture of the ad world just wasn’t working for her (or her family). She joined forces with a couple of great people to create something a little different. Their goal is to make work with a social purpose that leaves their patch of the world a little better than they found it.

    Listen to the full podcast ep or watch this talk at https://nniwd.nevernotcreative.org/.

    Big thanks to Streamtime - https://streamtime.net/

    Other links:

    https://theopenarms.com.au 

    https://nevernotcreative.org

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  • Jane Duru (Verbal Design Director, R/GA) and Sumita Maharaj (Associate Design Director, Re:) join Sarah and Andy to discuss their recent submission to Never Not International Women's Day. From having to bring a 6-pack to a meeting to get a seat at the table and a constant need to over-prove themselves Jane and Sumi share their stories and experiences from the world of advertising and design.

    You can watch their talk at Never Not International Women's Day.

    More at Never Not Creative.

    Thanks to Streamtime.

  • To make meaningful change in workplaces all around the world, we need to recognise that the gender inequity in our industry and society is a cultural problem. We need to show men what they can’t see all around them - the norm. The norm that has let stereotypes rule and anyone but a privileged white male suffer. 

    Join this discussion with Daniele Fiandaca and Deborah Rey-Burns. By his own admission, Daniele is the very definition of privilege - white, male, straight, middle class and privately educated. As Founder of Creative Social, he often spoke about issues facing the creative industry including the lack of gender diversity. Daniele set up the Token Man community to create a safe space for conversation and get men to improve their education and get a better understanding of the challenges women face. Daniele is Founder of Utopia, a culture change business that re-wires organisations for the Age of Creativity.   

    Deborah, Founder of Propela and Curator-at-large for ReDesign Business and the Future Of_, Deborah has built a global network of moon-shooting experts that can help companies thrive. She helps events and organisations connect with the superhero thinks of today - the thought leaders and change-makers working on the bleeding edge of business and culture.   

    Watch this conversation (as well as others) here: https://nniwd.nevernotcreative.org/

    Other links;

    🔗 https://weareutopia.co
    🔗 https://weareutopia.co/towards-utopia/creative-superpowers
    🔗 https://tokenman.org
    🔗 https://www.propela.co.uk/