Leave the office and wear your heart on your sleeves
Get the hell out of the office! White walls and perfectly lined pieces of paper don’t solve real-world problems. Go out there the favelas, into the indigenous sand forests and be as curious as a documentary filmmaker looking to scoop up his or her next story. Bring your heart – because love and hate can be powerful agents of change. Either because you love something so much you want to protect it – or hate something so much that you want to change it. Take Wunderman Thompson Paris for example. They absolutely wanted to do something about the bad congestion in Paris; because it actually results in lives lost when a doctor gets stuck in traffic. Voila! Out comes doctors on custom-made emergency bicycles. Secondly, if you really love or hate something, there’s a chance others might as well. Love and hate are contagious. McCann Tel Aviv created a collection of 3D printable add-ons to IKEA furniture, “ThisAbles”, to make them more accessible for the disabled – and more accessible for the world.
Measure impact and learn how to count hectoliters
Always think about how you can quantify the impact. It could be by measuring litres of water saved, kilos of carbon emissions, lowered infant mortality rates and so on. A clever initiative, “Inherit his name, Inherit his way” is a measurement vessel that has been designed to get practising Muslim Sri Lankans to save water used when cleansing themselves before prayers five times a day. By changing religious washing habits this initiative can potentially save up to 30-35 litres of water per person. That’s an impact worth counting. Usually, briefs contain business goals, but why not add impact metrics as well?
Change behaviours and make New Year pledges happen
I don’t care about “gaining more eye-balls”, you’re supposed to solve shit! Think about how often you’ve seen a campaign with a malnourished polar bear on an ice flake – but you’re still tramping along with a heavy carbon footprint. Changing people’s behaviour for the better is awesome – but difficult. That’s exactly what Prime Weber Shandwick was trying to achieve by opening a supermarket where the price was labelled as tons of carbon – and the more carbon, the higher the price. Unfortunately, it was only a stunt for two days – so the impact could have been greater. But at least, people’s habits were changed for a day. Doconomy set out to showcase people’s carbon footprint to them, because if consumers don’t know their carbon footprint, how are they going to change? The agency turned into a start-up connecting credit card spending with an estimated carbon footprint and in that way, you can shop more climate-friendly. I want to see more ideas like that!
Avoid fata morganas, create lighthouses for good
These are just a few hacks to improve your creative skills for good. You can watch Thomas talk more about what’s needed to build lasting impact and avoid fata morganas. D&AD is hosting a live session Friday 21 May at 14:00 CET “Insights: Impact – Using creativity to benefit society: explore the work that is driving change”. Or why not improve your creative skills and join Thomas’ live webinar on April 21st “Creativity for good” at 15:00 CET at thomaskolster.com.
Headline Image: “Figure it out” by Karla Hernandez on Unsplash