Looking to advance your design career? Aquent recruiters will host live 45-minute Q+A sessions each month online to help respond to AIGA members' most pressing carer-related questions.
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April 29, 2013
As in-house designers, we often become immersed in our companies, causing us to lose perspective on our assignments and, more insidiously, on appropriate behaviors and ethics. Learn to identify if you’ve fallen prey to “brand blindness” and adopted the company culture wholesale, and use your creativity to improve the culture instead.
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May 01, 2013
If instances of self-questioning about working in-house become a catalyst for self-doubt, why not redirect some of that energy toward constructive self-evaluation? We can’t count on having control over everything that affects our design careers, but we can establish focus, build accountability and develop a newfound sense of assurance about our professional trajectory in-house.
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May 01, 2013
Curious about what goes on in-house at ESPN, Design Within Reach and LEGO®? Creative leaders from these teams came together to discuss their work and offer a glimpse of their day-to-day operations for an in-house event organized by AIGA Connecticut and The Creative Group.
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April 29, 2013
It takes a special right brain/left brain blend of interests and skills to succeed as an in-house designer. These 10 strategies will help you develop your expertise, strengthen your reputation and ultimately build a successful career in the “in-house neighborhood.”
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January 24, 2013
Layoffs are a fact of life in the design profession. With unemployment at 7.7 percent nationally, and with firms learning to operate leaner
in order to remain competitive in a very crowded market, I've assembled a
list of warning signs that you might be laid off, and what steps you should take to achieve the most favorable outcome.
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Article by David Airey November 08, 2012
One of my biggest worries in the design business
is where the next client will come from. It was a worry when I started, and
it’s a worry seven years later—albeit to a much lesser degree. When
one approach to bringing in business doesn’t work, you need to learn from the
experience and move on to the next idea.
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