Why Brands Are Becoming Human Again. The last few years belonged to technology. The years ahead belong to people â precisely because technology has become so powerful.
With Human First. AI-backed., we articulate our stance for a future in which AI does not replace humans, but amplifies them. It does not dominate â it empowers.
Human First stands for responsibility. And for radical creativity.
Brands must reconnect with emotion, learn to listen again, and create real meaning. Itâs about empathy, user-centered thinking, and the courage to make clear decisions. Intuition. Imagination. Judgment. These remain fundamentally human.
AI-backed means we design differently â and we advise differently.
We have rethought every step of our workflow: research, strategy, naming, brand voice, design, prototyping. AI changes speed and quality. We have rethought every step of our workflow: research, strategy, naming, brand voice, design, and prototyping. AI changes speed â and it changes quality.
Brands today are built within integrated, intelligent design systems. Strategies become sharper. Brand experiences more adaptive. Agentic AI solutions open up entirely new dimensions of brand leadership.
One thing is becoming unmistakably clear: itâs not the size of a team that matters, but the seniority of the minds behind it. AI amplifies what already exists. It does not replace responsibility.
Thatâs why we invest in experience, depth, and creative excellence â supported by purpose-built intelligent systems. This is how brands become not just more consistent, but more alive. The future of brand leadership is not about choosing between human creativity and technology. It lies in their interplay.
Was fĂŒr ein Abend! Wir haben gefeiert â laut, bunt und voller Energie. Und ihr wart dabei.
15 Jahre think moto â der perfekte Anlass, mit all den Menschen zusammenzukommen, die unseren Weg geprĂ€gt haben â Kund:innen, Partner:innen, Freund:innen, Wegbegleiter:innen. Und natĂŒrlich unser Team â heute und von frĂŒher.
Es wurde getanzt, gelacht, geplaudert, erinnert und nach vorn gedacht. Zwischen Beats, Drinks und inspirierenden GesprĂ€chen war ĂŒberall zu spĂŒren, was think moto seit 15 Jahren ausmacht: KreativitĂ€t, Wandel, Gestaltungslust.
Was bleibt, ist ein tiefes GefĂŒhl von Dankbarkeit. Und Vorfreude. Auf das, was kommt.
Danke an die, die dabei waren und diesen Abend so besonders gemacht habt. Danke, dass ihr Teil von think moto seid â oder wart â oder vielleicht noch werdet.
We look back with satisfaction and motivation on our first exclusive Business Breakfast, which we organized together with our partner Frontify. In a relaxed atmosphere, six experts – Anne BrĂŒning, Holger Zeh, Tina Mushak, Matti Wachholz-Hausmann, Antonia Paul and German Schulz – discussed the topic of brand management and talked about their experiences and challenges in this area. We have summarized the highlights for you to read in this article.
Marco Spies and Katja Wenger opened with a fascinating presentation on “Spherical Brands”, an innovative approach to developing sustainable brand strategies. You can read more about this at thesphericalbrand.com.
In the panel discussion that followed, our six experts spoke on a variety of topics, such as the role of the brand manager as friend and helper, rebranding experiences, challenges in brand management and the use of creativity and agility.
What everyone agreed on: Brand management should never be perceived as the brand police, but more as a helper, coach, advisor or supporter.
Tina from BASF reported on how she manages to communicate the brand to around 100,000 employees with just a small team of brand managers. The so-called “brand champions” play a central role here, communicating the brands and their guidelines to the respective teams and being available to answer questions. Using messaging channels such as Facebook groups, the team offers a solution for sharing updates and responding to questions and concerns.
Holger from Deutsche Welle spoke about the importance of being responsive and adaptable, especially when it comes to news, social media and fake news. For Holger and his team, Frontify Publisher is the ideal tool to make processes simpler, more efficient and more trustworthy.
The ability to react quickly is also very important for German from VfL Wolfsburg, and not just on the pitch. Trust and loyalty are very important in soccer, and fans in particular expect their favorite club to have a high recognition value.
Anne from the Bundesdruckerei reported on how they have created a brand family of seven different brands, in which each one has its own identity and yet a family affiliation can be recognized among them.
Matti from Cornelsen talked about how important it is for his design team to ensure a high return on investment through brand management and long-term strategies, above all to ensure the company’s performance.
Antonia from Frontify emphasized the advantages of giving the responsible team a face and assigning clear roles in the brand management team. These roles can also be mirrored accordingly in a brand management portal such as Frontify and thus create a framework in which everyone can live out their creative potential.
The topic of creativity vs. control was discussed at length. Some ensure the creativity of their employees through best practices and clear communication, others emphasize that creativity sometimes needs to be controlled rather than encouraged in order to maintain brand consistency. Matti from Cornelsen is more concerned with creating a “tone of voice as a recipe”. According to Tina, it’s important not to dismiss employees’ ideas out of hand, but to appreciate that they are thinking while you communicate how and why an idea might need some tweaking.
We would like to thank all the panelists and participants who took part in the discussion. Also many thanks to our partners at Frontify for making this event possible!
Not enough info just yet? Stay up to date with our newsletter and sign up here.
In our “Meet the Motos” series, we introduce you to the brilliant minds behind the think moto team. Today we talked to Jasmin Cziborra. She is a user experience designer and speaks about her work at think moto.
đ Hi Jasmin! It’s wonderful to have you with us. Can you tell us a bit about yourself?
Hello! I am Jasmin, 25-year-old UX designer here at think moto. I started as an intern and working student at think moto and have now been permanently employed for about 2 years. I was born and raised in Saarland. For my studies, I moved to SchwĂ€bisch GmĂŒnd near Stuttgart, where I studied interaction design at the Hochschule fĂŒr Gestaltung (University of Design). During my internship, I fell in love with Berlin and decided to move here.
Your path to think moto began with an internship. How did you discover the agency and what inspired you to join our team?
That was in the fourth semester of my studies. At that time, I was studying interaction design in SchwĂ€bisch GmĂŒnd and was looking for an internship. During this search, a friend recommended the book Branded Interactions to me. I quickly realized that the authors were running an agency. On the think moto website, I then saw that they were looking for UX/UI interns and I applied immediately. The rest is history.
As a UX designer, what kinds of projects do you typically work on?
Actually, I am working here at think moto in a hybrid role. I am a UX designer, but I operate at the intersection between strategy and visual design. I take the concepts from strategy and translate them into concrete concepts for websites or chatbots. My outputs are usually wireframes and descriptions for interaction behavior, which I then pass on to the visual design team. I have also been involved in conversational design projects for the design of chatbots. Overall, I enjoy moving between strategy and concept, understanding the essence of a brand, and then translating that into a concept.
You mentioned that the team is an essential part for you. How would you describe the think moto team dynamic?
A harmonious team culture is just as important to me as the projects and was crucial for my decision to work at think moto. We support each other, appreciate feedback from others, and deal openly with criticism. It’s nice that we can interact so openly, have a beer together after work or play games. We also regularly hold smaller team events, which I personally really enjoy.
What makes think moto stand out for you, besides the good atmosphere?
For me, what distinguishes think moto, in addition to the pleasant atmosphere, is primarily the diversity of projects. We collaborate with a wide range of industries, starting from small companies to very large ones. Our projects are diverse, and we always tailor our process to the clients and their needs. I also like that think moto places great emphasis on sustainability. Everything we develop follows the principle of being smart, simple, and sustainable.
Outside of work, do you also spend your free time with creative activities?
Absolutely! I like to explore the world through my lens. I enjoy photography and often film in my everyday life. I always carry a small camera with me that can record 4K videos. At the end of the year, I then edit a small annual review. I also like sharing these videos with friends and family.
Thanks for sharing your journey with us, Jasmin. Itâs been a pleasure learning about you and your work at think moto.
In early May we spoke with Katja Wenger about her experience at this yearâs OFFF conference which took place from March 23-25 in Barcelonas Disseny Hub. We learned how she came to attend the event relatively spontaneously and what topics and speakers inspired her the most. We also talked about the importance of courage in design, the agency’s interest in showing presence at conferences, and what she thinks makes a successful conference. Join us as we gain insights and perspectives from this exciting conversation.
Hi Katja, you attended the OFFF conference in March in Barcelona… How did you come to participate?
I had participated the OFFF several times in the past, but with the pandemic everything came to a halt. In 2022 we went to the Forward Festival in Berlin in September and to the Paradigms Brand Experience Summit in Barcelona. For the latter, we were invited by our partner Frontify, who organized the conference for the first time. It was a great experience itself.
Can you tell us about interesting topics and speakers at the OFFF?
OFFF offers a wide range of international speakers who are incredibly fascinating. There are big names like David Carson, who inspired me very early in my career, as well as smaller or lesser-known talents like the illustrator and artist Kelly Anna.
It provides lots of input from various design disciplines, including motion design, 3D, interaction design, animation, and illustration. That’s what makes OFFF and conferences like the Forward Festival so appealing â you get to see different things that inspire you to explore new paths and be creatively productive again.
However, what stuck with me the most was the importance of being courageous in design.
What inspired or intrigued you the most at the conference?
Ultimately, the past six months have witnessed the birth of a new generation of AI, especially in conjunction with visual design. At the conference, we saw the cool possibilities that AI offers for visual designers. However, what stuck with me the most was the importance of being courageous in design. Being courageous means breaking out of the traditional ideals of beauty and daring to do new things. The concept of beauty, as I learned and saw it many years ago, is evolving into something different. For example, there was a presentation by It’s Nice That, a website or blog that showcased design trends at OFFF.
Some examples made me cringe because they looked terrible. It seems thereâs a trend towards such “trashy” aesthetics. Of course, we can’t always be so daring when working with established brands. But it’s important to break new ground and encourage clients to incorporate some zeitgeist into their brand. Ideally, we have created a brand design framework that makes this possible. As an agency, we are perceived as trendsetters and are asked to provide insights into where the industry is heading.
So, it’s important for the agency to have a presence at such conferences?
It’s not only in my personal interest to attend these conferences. It’s also important for all the designers and also creative technologists who work at think moto. We give them the opportunity to participate in conferences as well. That’s very important for me. It’s not productive if only I, as the CCO, attend. We can’t effectively share the knowledge we’ve gained, and everyone has their own interests and feelings about different presentations. Everyone takes away something valuable.
I recommend everyone to take part in conferences because they move you forward and allow you to step out of your own bubble and be inspired. There is something very special about listening to a lecture, reading between the lines and hearing the personal stories of the speakers. It’s especially inspiring for young designers, because they learn about a designer’s career, the effort they put into their work, and how chance led them to where they are now.
As an agency, we also actively participate in conferences ourselves. Sometimes it’s about a specific topic. With Branded Interactions, for example, we have been approached several times and have given several presentations at conferences. We’ve been to the CXI, the largest brand conference in Germany, twice so far, once together with a startup client and once with Volkswagen on the topic of Extended Realities.
Most recently, we presented our Spherical Brandapproach at a CX conference in Oslo, a new concept for brand management in the post-growth economy.
I believe it is an opportunity for us to reach out and attract talented people. Being able to showcase our work and agency at these conferences provides an excellent chance to get visibility within the design community
What, in your opinion, makes a good conference or contributes to its success?
Of course, the speakers are key, but it’s not just that. The choice of location is also important. Sure, OFFF in Barcelona is super cool and huge, but last year I had the chance to attend Paradigms, which was the very first conference organized by Frontify. That conference impressed me the most. It’s hard to put into words. It was an amazing conference, especially considering the location, organization, food, evening events, and the international speakers they managed to bring together for such a small conference. It was just mind-blowing! If anyone ever gets the chance to attend, it’s absolutely fantastic! It focused on corporate design, brand management, and brand leadership. Frontify, being a company in that space, had the right tools for it.
Introducing our “Meet the Motos” series, where we showcase the brilliant minds behind the think moto team. Join us as we take a deep dive into the daily work routine, various departments, exciting projects, and even take a sneak peek into the future. In today’s feature, we’re thrilled to introduce Jordi Garreta and explore the fascinating world of creative coding.
đ Hi Jordi, good to have you here. Can you please introduce yourself?
Hi, my name is Jordi, I’m from Barcelona and I am a creative developer. I have lived in Berlin for almost three years and have worked at think moto for the same amount of time.
How did you become a creative coder? I obtained my bachelor’s degree in Image and Sound Engineering in Barcelona, and then I moved to Milan to pursue a master’s degree in Interaction Design. I wanted to apply what I had learned in a more artistic environment and became a creative developer by combining my bachelor’s and master’s education.
What kind of companies have you worked for in the past?
After my master’s degree, I started my career working in a fablab in Milan where I worked on creative projects using machines for 3D printing and Arduino. I later moved back to Barcelona and worked for various startups, mainly focusing on data or interactive installations. I then moved to Berlin.
Sounds good. â How did you find your way to think moto?
Berlin has always been on my mind, and my brother lived here for several years which gave me the opportunity to visit often. It’s also a city with a lot of growth in the creative development field. After my partner found a job here and me being stuck at home during the Covid pandemic, I thought it was time for a change and started looking for job opportunities. That’s how I found my position at think moto.
Can you describe a typical day at think moto?
So usually we start with dailies, which are meetings with your project team. On Mondays, we have a general meeting with the entire team of think moto and twice a week, we have one with the developer team.
Currently, we also have two project-specific meetings to track progress. After the meetings, I usually start coding and working on projects. If I or another developer have questions, we have quick meetings to find solutions.
What kind of tools do you use the most?
It depends on the project, but as a creative developer, it’s important to be multidisciplinary and use as many software as possible. For websites, we use ReactJS, threeJS and for VR or AR projects, we use Unity.
What part of your work do you enjoy the most?
I enjoy working multidisciplinary and having every project bring new problems to solve, as it keeps me from falling into a routine. Occasionally it feels like a puzzle of solving things of the internet. I also like learning about new technologies, their pros and cons, and applying them to projects.
Sometimes creative coding feels like a puzzle of solving things of the internet.
Jordi Gareta
Can you tell us about a project you worked on that you particularly enjoyed?
I particularly enjoyed working on a VR experience where we connected chatbots using Cognigy.AI, which is the tool we use for creating chatbots. We created a virtual environment where a machine stands in front of you and the chatbot tells you how it works. We used hand tracking with the Oculus Quest 2, as well as text-to-speech and speech-to-text to communicate with the chatbot. The project involved applying several complex new technologies, and the end result was very nice.
Sounds cool. How do you stay focused and productive at work, especially since you work from home sometimes?
I feel comfortable working from home or from the office. For me, one way to stay focused is to listen to music. Of course, it depends on what I need to do. If I need to do some coding, then listening to music or a podcast, but if I need to concentrate on thinking, sometimes noise-cancelling headphones work best.
What role do you believe creative coding will play in shaping the future of technology and UX design?
I think that as a creative technologist, it’s important to not just apply technology, but also understand what it means. For example, when applying face recognition technology to a project, there are ethical issues that must be considered, such as obtaining consent from the person being recognized and the use of data. I believe that creative coding will play a crucial role in shaping the future of technology and design by considering these ethical issues when choosing which technologies to apply.
Interesting. What do you think sets think moto apart from others in the industry?
I think that think moto has a strong focus on design quality. We put a lot of effort into creating well-designed results. Additionally, we work on a variety of projects, including websites and VR projects, rather than just focusing on one type of project.
What do you do outside of work to maintain a good work-life balance?
I really enjoy sports like basketball and riding my bike. I also enjoy spending time with friends, drinking, exploring new places, discovering new music and going to concerts. Currently, I’m also going to comedy shows a lot â of course in English because I donât speak German. And also as a creative coder, I like to keep things growing. That is why I sometimes do coding in my free time.
Alright, and do you have any tips for what to do in Berlin?
In winter? I would say go to bars, spend time with friends, drink and enjoy the nightlife in Berlin. Another great plan would be to play board games together. Berlin can be quite lonely in the winter, so try to be as close to your friends as possible.
In our weekly series “meet the motos” we introduce you to our bright minds from the think moto team. We provide insights into different departments, everyday work life, tell you about exciting projects and dare to take a look into the future. Today: Paul Krizsan and the chatbot potential.
đ Hi Paul, glad you took the time. What are you doing at think moto?
I am a design hybrid with a focus on conversational design, i.e. voice and chatbots. My tasks range from visual design to UX design and JavaScript development. Currently I’m working on the rebranding of a German university, our award-winning chatbot Lui and various smaller projects, internally and externally.
That sounds exciting – how did you get into it?
I’ve been involved with technologies and new ways of interaction for quite some time now. My journey has taken me via virtual reality to bots, among other things. The latter in particular is currently undergoing a very exciting development. Previously still considered unreliable, poor customer support and small chat windows in the lower right corner, they now enable new touchpoints for customers to be played with emotionally and also visually.
“Chatbots today make it possible to play on new touchpoints emotionally and also with powerful imagery and storytelling.”
Paul Krizsan
What role do you think chatbots will play for companies in the future? And what do you see as your task?
There are already some brands that have successfully integrated chatbots into their customer journey. Be it in the area of customer service, in customer retention or, as happened with our chatbot Lui, in new customer acquisition. All these examples show that chatbots can already play a significant role. In addition, chatbot technologies are getting better and better. We are currently observing this with our preferred bot platform Cognigy.AI. I therefore assume that in the future, more and more companies will rely on chatbots to reach their customers individually and interactively with brand character.
In this context, I see my task primarily in developing chatbots that create real added value for the customer, but also for the company. In addition, when developing chatbots at think moto, we make sure that the personality of the chatbot goes hand in hand with the attributes of the brand. For this purpose, we at think moto have developed various tools, such as so-called “bot filters”. With the bot filters, we ensure that the personality and tone of voice of the chatbot reflect the brand essence.
Sounds like a lot of work – What does a normal day look like for you?
Our days always start at 9:30 a.m. with a little agency-wide standup, through which you get a good insight into ongoing topics and projects, even if you’re not directly involved. After that, it’s either direct meetings and presentations or my email correspondence for me. Most mornings are more about collaborative tasks, while in the afternoon I can then focus on my topics.
How do you structure yourself and what are your tips for everyday work?
I’m a fan of consistent lunch breaks and take time for that between 12 and 1 pm. After that, it’s off to concrete creative, technical or strategic thinking work and smaller joint reviews until closing time, which is around 7 pm.
What makes think moto special for you?
Besides lovely colleagues, the biggest benefit is the customer selection. There is always something interesting and exciting to throw yourself into. Sometimes you have to hold back đ
If you had to describe yourself, what three hashtags would you use?
#mountainbike #tech #indie
Which film has influenced you the most?
Spike Jonze’s Her (2013) is definitely partly responsible for my current fascination with conversational design and personalization through user interaction.
Finally, how would you describe think moto in three hashtags?
#creative #young #curious
Thanks, Paul!
Do you have specific questions about chatbots? Then visit our page on this topic at thinkmoto.de/chatbots.
Benjamin Apfelbaum is a communications trainer and freelance creative from Berlin. From October 31, Benjamin will be passing on his extensive knowledge of presentation and storytelling as a coach in his two-day intensive course Story Meets Design at the think moto Academy. But we’d rather let the charismatic stage man introduce himselfâŠ
đ Hi Benjamin, please describe yourself in no more than five hashtags.
enthusiasm #stories #ramp #energy
What inspires you? What drives you?
Inspiring people, myself included. That means discovering new things and also constantly rediscovering yourself, pushing and trying new things. And islands. Islands are the best.
Can you briefly tell us something about your career? How did you get to where you are today?
I started as a designer in 2000 and over the years I’ve taken on more and more conceptual and strategic issues. I have always enjoyed presenting in any form. In particular, I found pitches for clients terrific. Later, when I was responsible for larger and larger teams, I was incredibly happy when I could help and watch people grow. Almost two years ago, I decided to get my business trainer license and have been working as a freelance consultant and trainer ever since.
“After all, all theoretical knowledge doesn’t help you if you can’t apply it under time pressure.”
Benjamin Apfelbaum
What can people learn from your training?
In one sentence. You learn how to present better and have fun at the same time. A bit more: You learn what makes a good presentation – and how to get there. From understanding briefings, to developing ideas, to being convincing in front of an audience. What is incredibly important to me: Always based on understandable exercises and methods that can be used in day-to-day business. All theoretical knowledge is of no use if you can’t apply it under time pressure.
Can you give us a must-have tip or an absolute no-go for presentations in advance?
All right đ Must-have tip: If you don’t do dress rehearsals before presentations, you shouldn’t be surprised when things don’t work. Time pressure or not. Absolute no-go: Mega-full PowerPoint slides and then reading everything off.
How did you hear about the think moto Academy? How did the collaboration come about? I bought the first issue of Branded Interactions years ago and worked with it a lot – that’s how I heard about think moto. When I heard on LinkedIn that Marco and Katja had founded the Academy, I simply wrote to them. We met for a coffee, hit it off and now we’re working together.
If people want to know more about you, where is the best place to search? Either on www.benjamin-apfelbaum.com. Alternatively, you can just meet me for a coffee đ . You can also find out more about Benjamin’s course “Story Meets Design” at the think moto Academy.
The time has comeâââI (Isabel Hillenbrand) am on the way to my first design conference in New York. Having secured an Airbnb apartment conveniently close to the venue that is the Lincoln Center, the way to the conference is luckily not much of a challenge. So, despite jet lag, I make it to the opening on time and even have time to grab a coffee and some fruits in the bustling Alice Tully Hall lobby. Much-needed energy for a long and exciting day to come.
This yearâs overarching topic is âThe Creative Futureâ, relating to our hope for whatâs next: a world in which every creative is empowered and equipped to enforce values like empathy, curiosity and purpose.
The conference experience has already started a couple of weeks before the actual event when all participants received a neat pin that picked up the topic and increased the anticipation even moreâ stating âI have seen the futureâ. It is a tribute to a souvenir from the 1939â1940 New York Worldâs Fair where visitors exiting the âFuturamaâ pavillion could proudly claim âI have seen the futureâ.
So here I am, sitting in the packed Starr Theater at Alice Tully Hallââ a concert venue at Broadway and West 65th Street in Midtown Manhattan that is part of the larger Lincoln Center. Together with 1,000 fellow designers, marketers, engineers, educators and artists among others, I am ready to explore two days of leadership, design, collaboration, productivity and more. All talks will be original, none has been given before.
âThere are events around the world where creatives like you are told about technologies coming to take your jobs. This isnât one of them.â
Below I share my takeaways of the following two days of keynotes, master classes and workshops that are everything from being entertaining to thought-provoking and inspiring.
Day 1
The first speaker of this yearâs 99U is Dr. Vivienne Ming, who co-founded Socos Labs, an independent think tank that explores the future of human potential and the influence of AI on it. Alongside an insight into her latest brainchilds like a technological brain support to stimulate human thinking, she underlines the role of human creativity in the context of the increasing possibilities in the field of AI: In this day and age, it is even more important to be brave enough to truly explore new shores and share oneâs unique vision as this will remain an essential advantage of the human being for the foreseeable future. She appeals strongly to our courageâââto put it above the fear of losing our jobs if we want to achieve real change.
âArtificial intelligence is fundamentally a tool and youâre the artists. It is a huge mistake to think AI will solve our problems. But taking creative people that know how to explore the unknown and have the courage to do what they think is right, that is fundamentally what creativity is about.â
Dr. Vivienne Ming, Co-Founder & Executive Chair at Socos Labs
The key message of the next speaker, Zach Lieberman, the co-founder of the School for Poetic Computation that teaches students how to use code as a medium for poetry and art, is to constantly look for opportunities in which we can learn and growâââand help others do the same.
âThe key to creativity is finding a way to listen to yourself.â
Zach Lieberman, Co-founder of School for Poetic Computation
Audience during Liebermanâs talkâââphoto by Ryan Muir for 99U
Zach Lieberman is followed by Kyle T. Webster, a Design Evangelist at Adobe. He makes a point stressing how we entertain our minds from morning to night with ever more screen time although boredom is a blessing and a key driver of creativityâââa means to unlock the place where creative ideas come from. âWe are so bad in being bored. We have to allow ourselves the time and space for boredom. What if we perceive boredom as a blank canvas for our mind?â are some of his central statements.
âWe canât control our subconscious, but we can create the circumstances where our subconscious comes into play.â
Kyle T. Webster, Design Evangelist at Adobe
Kyle T. Webster on the main stageâââphoto by Ryan Muir for 99U
Next, IDEOâsTim Brownis interviewed byCourtney E. Martin about various design topics. In his opinion, it is the best time in history to be a designer.
Similar to Dr. Ming before, Brown also addresses the necessary creative confidence to go into the unknown as well as the necessity in our times to master the design of evolving products when iteration and a constant management of ecosystems comes into play. You canât just design products and are done, ready to move on to the next projectâââthere is no finite moment anymore. Speaking about ecosystems, he makes the comparison with natural ecosystems like rainforests that are diverse, complex and ever evolving.
In addition, he talks about that design is a team sport as well as politics. More ideas fail in organizations than from market rejection so that getting a great idea through the maze is equally important as coming up with the idea in the first place. In this respect, he mentions that mastery in design largely means mastering people and organizations. You have to design for the organization that is the vehicle, for example by creating real experiences as soon as possible instead of bland PowerPoint slides.
Towards the end of the interview, Brown speaks about the necessary ethics of design work â at the same time warning that if you only care about not creating any sort of harm for anyone, you will never create something new. âThe thing about new ideas is that theyâre like a fragile new species. They have to live for awhile before they flourish. If they get killed before that, they donât have a chance to flourish,â he says. Instead, we need a system or agreement to make sure we donât do intentional harm.
âThat confidence to leap into the unknown is a form of mastery.â
Tim Brown, CEO & President of IDEO
Kat Holmes, Director UX Design at Google and Founder of Mismatch.design, takes the opportunity to speak about inclusive design and how it can be a catalyst for design as it opens up your thinking. âWhat if there is no average, no normal?â she asks. She tells us to always ask what is missing in oneâs design and what changes for all users when moving from a human to a digital experience for example. âDisability is no health condition but a mismatchâââa mismatched interaction between the features of a personâs body and the features of the environment they live in,â Holmes says. âDonât expect people to match your design. It should be the other way around.â
âWhat if there was no such thing as normal? How would we proceed in our design?â
Kat Holmes, Director UX Design at Google & Founder of Mismatch.design
In the following talk, Joel Beckerman, Founder, Composer and Producer at Man Made Music, makes us aware that a lot of designers simply forget about sound although it is the experience dimension to which users respond most quickly. âIf youâre afraid of a horror movie, donât close your eyes, close your ears,â he tells us. Therefore Beckerman encourages us to practice better storytelling by using music and sounds and also to keep in mind the reaction you want to create with an experience in a given environment. Can you imagine the beeping sounds in hospitals to promote health and well-being?
âWhen the sound doesnât match the visuals, your brain believes your ears first.â
Joel Beckerman, Founder, Composer & Producer at Man Made Music
In the afternoon, I attend a high-energy workshop run by Disneyâs former Head of Innovation & Creativity, Duncan Wardle.
Following the title âBlue Sky Thinking: Where Revolutionary Ideas Come Fromâ, Wardle speaks about how to spark creativity and come up with new ideas as well as how to share them with your team and the client in a sucessful way.
He shares the story behind the Disney MagicBandâââa plastic bracelet in use at Walt Disney World Resort that provides a way for the system to connect data to guests. âAt the start of its development, the central question was âHow can we avoid standing in lines?â and not âHow can we raise profit by 3%?ââ Wardle says. âStart by embedding new solutions deeply in and financial success will follow.â
Speaking about ideation, Wardle encourages us to get into a subconscious state, something that usually doesnât happen in the office, to encourage playfulness and to regularly break out of our daily habits. Doing things differently every time allows us to access a fresh mind for creative ideas.
Another approach to thinking beyond the usual patterns is the involvement of naive expertsâââto have an outsider in the room in the form of a person from a different country or industry, who asks the âstupidâ questions and brings in new possibilities for solutions. Similarly, he recommends to list all the rules of a challenge and challenge them by asking âWhat if these rules didnât apply? What would our possibilities be?â.
In an attempt to create an open, positive space for sharing new ideas, Wardle reminds us of preferring the phrasing âYes, and âŠâ over the use of âNo, because âŠâ to transfer a concept from âmy/your ideaâ to a group idea and also to grow infant ideas that are still very rough and by no means fully fleshed out yet.
When a new idea is born, Wardle always captures it in a few full sentences right away to avoid not remembering important details the next day.
Presenting the results to clients, he is a big fan of creating an environment with no barriers such as a table as well as of putting the presentation up on all four walls and taking the client for a walk around the roomâââturning the presentation into a conversation.
The subsequent master class is entitled âGathering and Presenting Design Researchâ and is hosted by Paige Bennett, a Design Researcher at Dropbox.
She shares ways to communicate your research results to turn the larger team into advocates of our findings. âYour findings must be able to live on without you as their guardian,â she says. Exhibit pop ups in central office locations, collaterals like fun stickers with key results as well as an informal âbrown bagâ Q&A session over lunch or a coffee are all proven formats to get attention and buy-in from people outside of the core research team.
In addition, Bennett suggests to share intentions and results early and continuously during the process, using formats like a âWhat to expect and not to expectâ summary, dispatches from the field, theme progression insights as well as a highlight reel in the end.
Day 2
My second day starts with a master class on âDesigning Tomorrow, Betterâ with Brian Collins. He is the founder of COLLINS that was named as one of the companies transforming the future of brand building by Forbes.
Collins states that âCompanies are no longer in competition with each other. Theyâre in competition with the future itself.â However, we shouldnât be fighting against the future and all the change it brings, but create a chosen future with maximum love. âThe opposite of courage is not cowardice but conformity,â he says.
In this context, he speaks about recent work of his company that attempts to actively shape the future with meaningâââengaging Spotify listeners, building a LEED-certified gasstation for BP that educates about environmental impact and conservation or a radically new lip balm shape for the skin care brand EOS.
When it comes to execution, Collins mentions the importance of team collaboration as well as courage in visual design that is of particular significance in todayâs times in which design finds its way into all processes. âCreate bold design systems that open up possibilities instead of closing them down,â he tells us.
The following workshop on âPresenting Bold Ideasâ is held by Irene Pereyra from Anton & Irene (Anton is sick that day).
Irene shows us how to prepare for and thrive in any presentation and distills her recommendations down to ten commandments:Be comfortable in your body (Relaxation excercises help!)Be comfortable with silence (Smile!)Be strategic about when you present (Not before or after lunch!)Work on your confidence (55% of what is remembered is body language!)Get rid of filler words (Choose silence instead!)Structure your content like an hourglass (Presenting is storytelling!)Learn not to rely on visual aids (Be ready to present without any slide!)Practice, practice practice (Practice!)Invite feedback from your team (Do they disconnect at ay point?)Smile, and learn to enjoy being the center of attention (You rock!)
Opening slide of the âPresenting Bold Ideasâ workshop by @antonandirene
In the afternoon,Giorgia Lupi, Information Designer and Partner at Pentagram, shows us how to make data more consumable and meaningful by the use of design. She is looking forward to a time when data-driven design is replaced by design-driven data. The examples of her work for the âData Wallâ at the Starbucks Reserve Roastery in Milan and for âBruisesââââa project on the impact the illness of a child has on its familyâââillustrate how data vizualisation has the power to evoke empathy and also personal relevance, especially when music is added for an extra effect. âThere is a world of unexplored, small, and intimate data that we never see,â she tells us.
âOur world is random and messy. Collecting data does not make it more perfect or more controllable.â
âGiorgia Lupi, Information Designer & Partner at Pentagram
Next, Anna Pickard from Slacktalks about what it means to make your brand humanâââa goal most brands strive for today. Her key message is to make people feel seen and not to underestimate the value that a heartfelt error message or a âYouâre doing great!â tweet might have. âItâs not about pretending to be human; itâs about finding the moments when you can connect with people,â she says. You have to show a two-way empathy, meeting the people where they are, and also bring the people behind the product to the fore. In addition, she tells us to put the voice of the brand in everyoneâs hand instead of having a strict guide. In the end, itâs all about being clear, concise and human.
âWords have never mattered more. A single word can elevate something or it can change your perception. Even if itâs just your own perception.â
Anna Pickard, Head of Brand Communications at Slack
Eventually, Michael Ventura, Founder and CEO of the brand strategy and design practice Sub Rosa, highlights the importance of a holistic empathy throughout teams to make them better at their job. He tells us that empathy goes beyond being nice or compassionate but that it brings versatility to the process, knowing when to ask and when to listen, and that it should be accompanied by the will to really find out new truths. âItâs going to slow things down before it speeds things up,â he says. However, it will show positive results in the form of less rework, more sales as well as happier customers in the long run.
âEmpathy requires attention and commitment. Be brave, because this isnât something everybodyâs willing to do. But if you are willing to do it, you will see change.â
âMichael Ventura, Founder & CEO, Sub Rosa
Summary
Looking back on two days full of inspiration, there are several themes and thoughts that were repeatedly addressed or that I particularly remember for other reasons:
Look into the future with a positive state of mind that curiously involves todayâs technological developments instead of fighting them and use your capacities that machines canât imitate so quicklyâââyour unique creative vision as well as the creation of authentic, human relations with consumers.Show versatile empathy and find out about the whole self of consumers by practicing deep listening and observation in a trustful setting, meeting them where they are and being open to really discover something new.Use the power of your team and create an open, positive and supportive atmosphere where people stimulate each otherâs thinking and build on the ideas of other team members to come up with the best results possible.Bring out unique ideas by allowing yourself undisturbed time to let your thoughts wander and break out of routines regularly, be bold enough to share your ideas with the world and think of ways that make it easiest for other people to fully understand them.
More than ever, creativity today demands courage. Letâs be brave and make the creative future bright by taking control of our tomorrow!
Want to design the future with us?
think moto is a digital design consultancy based in Berlin, Germany. You are planning an innovation project? Let us know!
Now in its 11th year, Europe’s largest conference on corporate and brand identity is taking place. The venue for this prestigious event was once again the Bielefeld Lokschuppen, a building from the early 20th century with brick walls and a deeply industrial look.
The CXI is organized by the Fachhochschule Bielefeld, in particular the Faculty of Design. With this educational institution as the organizer, it is therefore hardly surprising that students are primarily represented in the registration and indeed in the audience.
Once again this year, six pairs of speakers and three-person constellations took to the stage to represent agencies and their clients in various brand projects. The aim was to create a unique, comprehensive picture of both parties involved in said projects. After all, otherwise you only get to hear from one side.
FOMO tv | Kurppa Hosk
The CXI_19 kicked off with the conference’s only international speakers. Swedish design agency Kurppa Hosk, represented by Thomas Kurppa, and Stockholm-based gallerist, artist, and jack-of-all-trades Jonas Kleerup shared the highly creative and nostalgic process of finding FOMO tv’s identity.
Kleerup’s idea of a video streaming platform on the topic of FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) might be difficult to understand in its approach and of questionable relevance apart from the artistic approach, but the intensity and quality of the design left nothing to be desired. With impressive showreels of the brand-in-motion, a style reminiscent of VHS tapes and a flexible logo concept reminiscent of MTV’s myriad of logo variations, Kurppa Hosk overwhelmed the audience with visual power.
Kleerup’s idea of a video streaming platform on the theme of FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) might be difficult to understand in its approach and of questionable relevance apart from the artistic approach, but the intensity and quality of the design left nothing to be desired. With impressive showreels of brand-in-motion, a style reminiscent of VHS tapes and a flexible logo concept reminiscent of MTV’s myriad of logo variations, Kurppa Hosk overwhelmed the audience with visual power.
To do so, Kurppa Hosk applied her own snowball-like design process to branding, approaching a finished brand gradually but with increasing speed and complexity. An interesting process, but more akin to the waterfall model than agile design, which made one wonder if this approach might be less suitable for more commercial projects due to inflexibility, at least on the outside.
We had the honor to be on stage with one of our clients again this year as an agency. Between late 2017 and mid-2018, we broke new ground and into new realities with Volkswagen.
To bring Generation X closer to the experience of car dealerships and shiny new cars, Volkswagen developed a series of applications for virtual reality and mixed reality. The basis of the applications was the possibility to bring different car models to the users in a playful and virtual way. The only thing missing was the smell of new cars.
The involvement of think moto started with the dissonance of many interaction patterns within these prototype-like applications. After all, no one had yet addressed the coherence of interactions across different realities. As a rule, there were hardly any applications that had to pass the test of brand conformity in both virtual reality and augmented reality. Our mission, therefore, was to create a unified pattern library to keep existing and future extended reality applications in line with other Volkswagen digital products.
think moto
OSRAM ConÂtiÂnenÂtal | KMS TEAM
When two people move in together, the household goods do not double. This was also the experience of Nadine Schian, Head of Communications, Marketing & Brand at OSRAM Continental. In a tough, three-year struggle, the joint venture between OSRAM and Continental built itself up on the basis of a technological partnership in the field of mobility lighting solutions and faced an important challenge in the process. As the brainchild of two down-to-earth and prestigious corporations, the task of finding its identity was either to follow in the footsteps of its parents or to break completely new ground.
This question was asked even before the actual founding of the joint venture, which for Vera Schnitzlein and the southern German agency KMS Team also meant: How do you build a brand without an existing company behind it? After all, nothing had been fixed yet, let alone signed.
Visually, therefore, basic elements of both brands were used. It was particularly important to find a color scheme for the colors that could stand alone but was derived from the parents.
For OSRAM Continental, however, the advantage of such an early start to finding an identity was above all that the corporation was able to launch on the first day after its official founding with around 1,500 employees on all continents and a fully developed, independent and expressive identity. A flying start for the young joint venture.
How do you tell an absolute Bayern Munich fan that his club’s favorite color is now yellow and green? You don’t. Philipp Mokrohs, the club’s lead brand strategist, and Alexandra Gövert of Interbrand told us about the problems of designing an incredibly emotional brand like the world’s most famous soccer club. In 2017, Gövert and her team were tasked with touching FC Bayern Munich’s identity and bringing it into the 21st century.
For a brand whose core values are all about tradition and heritage, change means putting on kid gloves for design. Major changes would have vehemently fallen victim to the emotions of millions and millions of fans, but at the same time Mokrohs reported a need for change. Evolution instead of revolution, was the motto.
The logo, for example, which hadn’t been touched in decades, was in desperate need of craft help and was first freshened up by Alexandra Gövert’s team. This was followed by the introduction of various key visuals, the gradient in the background, and the cut and contrast of fonts and images. In the end, it became clear that the company also needed its own typeface to ensure a consistent brand presence in the future. This way, Bayern Munich is not only secure on the pitch, but also on the web (and other touchpoints).
Agile, lean and in sprints to success. That’s actually a good recipe, isn’t it? That’s what the Internet telephony provider sipgate and the small DĂŒsseldorf agency g31 thought when they tackled the rebranding of sipgate. Before they got to that point, however, the two partners had already taken a turn.
When sipgate originally came to g31, the talk was of a brand refresh – not a complete rebranding with a new identity. A project that was to be tackled in the classic waterfall approach. After the guys and gals from g31 around Mats Kubiak and Paul Schoemaker had then locked themselves away for two months and worked out a concept to meet this requirement, it was time to present.
However, the concept presented did not seem quite right for Tim Mois and Tobias Ritterbach from sipgate. Instead, they wanted something completely new. To achieve this, they now relied on two-week sprints, lively exchanges and employee surveys. Thus, week by week, the company’s stale body with its dotcom look grew into a sleek bolide in black and white with colorful facets for the Internet telephony provider’s many different products.
The previously almost independent and not at all visually consistent products and sub-brands were now captured and merged into a whole via patterns, uniform logos and a holistic identity system.
After DHL had already completed a tough and elaborate redesign of the brand a few years ago, there was no question of allowing the logo, the colors or even the key visuals to be touched, brought on board Strichpunkt to give the yellow logistics brand new vigor.
Thick tomes of style guides, separate online portals for digital and print media, and a plethora of different layouts and touchpoints from airplane wrappings to advertising posters in the DHL branch, each with its own set of rules, had slowed down the logistics giant and now threatened to be unnecessary ballast for an agile future for DHL.
Strichpunkt recognized this quite correctly and worked to consolidate the visual components of the brand. A UI toolkit for developers now helps keep new digital products consistent across different devices and shortens development time enormously. The two heavily text-heavy and opaque Brand Portals became one with lots of images, examples and help. The font selection, which previously consisted of over a dozen typefaces, was replaced by the new house font “Delivery”.
But probably the most impressive result from Strichpunkt was the creation of a layout generator, via which every DHL employee can easily create brand-compliant digital and print publications and products thanks to templates and guidelines. Just fill in the text fields, select images from the online library and you have a print-ready PDF in the highest quality and conforming to the brand from the choice of colors to the spacing.
Strichpunkt made all these changes under the concept of simplification. There should be flexible and universal principles and elements of design that can be applied across all touchpoints. And this has definitely been achieved. Good job, Strichpunkt!
The presence of flexible identities and living brands was to be expected at CXI_19 and did not disappoint. A simplicity of rules, reusable patterns and visuals, and a break with the separation between digital and print are leading principles of brand building and development in today’s world and in the foreseeable future.
The days of 200-page brand manuals and pixel-perfect media guidelines are numbered. Today’s brands can adapt, grow and survive. The brand is dead, long live the brand.