The Creative Ransom

In May 2010 an aspiring creative from USA used Google to play upon the vanity of some top American creatives and land himself interviews and eventually a job.

Then in July 2011 a Dutch creative team created “The Twitter Hustle” to land a job with a big agency in Netherlands.

Now an Aussie creative team consisting of Andrew Grinter and Lee Spencer-Michaelsen have taken the job hunt to the next level. Their approach was to stand out from the crowd by hijacking the domain names of top creative directors in Melbourne.

The duo went on a URL buying spree, after which they sent ransom notes to their targeted creative directors. The daring move got them their interviews. They wore ski-masks to the interviews and still managed to get a job. The duo are now reportedly working for DTDigital, a division of Ogilvy Melbourne.

Stay tuned for more creative job hunts. 😉

These are your users!!!

I just read a very interesting article on the UX Magazine web site…here is the crux of it…

ReadWriteWeb recently published an article titled Facebook Wants to Be Your One True Login. Being an interesting, timely article, it rose to the top of Google searches for “Facebook login“. Then: chaos and confusion. Lots and lots of the people who use Google instead of their browser’s address bar to access sites began confusing the ReadWriteWeb link with a link to Facebook itself, and began posting angry comments wondering why Facebook had been redesigned and asking when they’d be allowed to log in again.

Google then sent out a rep asking random people, “What’s a browser?” and “What’s the difference between Google and a browser?”. Watch the many responses people came up with…

So now you know why the word KISS (Keep it simple stupid) is so widely used while building any digital asset…i.e. softwares…web sites…etc 🙂