Saturday 21 June 2008

Reflections at the end of year 1

The Generator has now been running for 12 months

Background.
The Generator was created because the School of Design had identified (through their on-going dialogue with design practitioners) a clear and growing need for design graduates to have more effective business understanding. The School wanted to find ways in which the entrepreneurial spirit might be nurtured among design students and introduce them to the experiences of existing creative businesses. They also wanted to respond to calls from the design industry for new designers who are able to set up their own business successfully or are ready to work with business.
Further, we felt that some creative people, though they may not know it, have the capacity to be entrepreneurs with a natural business sense. The Design School wanted to help bring these latent skills out into the open and help them blossom.

The last 12 months.
The Generator was designed to try to find these naturally creative business people and nurturetheir commercial know-how. Certainly, designers are particularly well placed to develop entrepreneurial skills. They are by definition creative thinkers who in their training often think about and work with the products of business – consumer goods, engineering products, buildings, communications, graphics, etc. They come to the business table from a different angle to most business students in that they come from the creative side, but that’s all to the good, because creativity has never been more important in business than it is today. A designer with a good head for business is very likely to make a good business person, especially capable of generating powerful new product and service concepts and business ideas. It is clear that the Generator has provided a useful model for helping young design entrepreneurs, and has further highlighted the benefits that accrue to design students if they are exposed early and in an engaging way to business training. But there is resistance to business training in design education. Many design students have no immediate desire to start their own business, and many other students consider business training to be either irrelevant or boring. This may partly be because such training is rarely embedded and assessed as part of core design activity. Some design teaching staff share the same negative view of business teaching, feeling that college work should concentrate on developing students’ creativity and improving their conceptual thinking.
Proponents of business education in design schools argue that creative training in design education is obviously vital, but that it should be given a business context since business is most likely to be its end use. Many art and design schools offer business modules. The trick is to make them engaging and useful. The Generator may help show how this can be done.
One of the most important future features of of the Generator will be that members will receive the opportunity to network and to learn to network with peers across all design disciplines, with peers from other design schools, with practising designers, and with mentors,industry gurus and potential employers.

The future?
It is now becoming well established that when students engage with people outside the confines of their own school of study, their learning is amplified, and that breaking down the barriers between the various design disciplines is generally beneficial. One of the most important features of the Generator is that it welcomes graduates with different backgrounds in the creative industries. Another key features of the Generator has been the graduates’ discovery and development of entrepreneurial skills. There is a case, it can be argued, for introducing Generator thinking into business modules and even core courses, this way students could more readily engage with designs commercial context, even if they have no plans to start a business of their own.

Saturday 14 June 2008

Michael Major becomes business mentor for Generator business

Following the recent announcement in the DINZ newsletter regarding the Generator seeking mentors for resident business I am very pleased to say that Michael Major has joined the mentoring team.
The relationship between Michael and Unitec goes back a few years: Michael graduated from Unitec with a Masters in Design Management in 1996. We are excited to have Michael at Unitec, all be it in a very different capacity.

Michael has extensive experience in creating branded environments that give a competitive
edge through enriching the end user’s experience. Michael specialises in helping clients to use
design and branding to position their businesses for the future.
During his time at top London Interior Design Consultants, McColl Associates and The Design
Solution, Michael was the principal retail designer on a variety of projects. These ranged from
food and beverage retailing to large shopping centres throughout the U.K. In 1992 Michael
formed 2MD Design, which became the leading retail design company in New Zealand, with
retail projects in Australia and South East Asia. In 2006 he set up a new retail design division for Ogilvy New Zealand going on to form his own consultancy Michael Major Limited in 2007
specialising in retail 3D brand design.

Michael’s reputation as a professional strategic designer has been enhanced by the numerous
design awards he has received, either professionally or as part of a design team. While in
Britain, he was the principal interior designer for Princes Square Specialty Shopping Centre in
Glasgow, which won the Scottish Design award in 1987. The following year, the Pavilions
Shopping Centre in Birmingham, for which he was the principal interior designer, won the
international shopping centre award. Since being in New Zealand, Michael’s has won
numerous retail design awards.

Michael has worked on a variety of retail and residential precinct high level branding in New
Zealand such as Smales Farm Office Technology Park, Sanatarium Master Planning Feasibility
Site Study, Karaka Lakes Residential Experiential 3D Brand Enhancement & Marketing Launch
Strategy, Botany Town Centre and Remarkables Park Town Centre.
Michael has been a regular judge for the Auckland Top Shop Awards and DINZ Best Design
Awards. He is a member of the Design Industry of New Zealand (DINZ).

Seeking Virtual Members for the Generator

There are two types of Generator memberships available: Residential and virtual (for a list of current member see sidebar below)
Residential members have space in the Generator from where they run their business whereas virtual members run their business from their own premises but can take full advantage of the networking, business courses, open evenings and other services the Generator provides.

IF YOU ARE A UNITEC SCHOOL OF DESIGN GRADUATE AND WOULD LIKE TO BE CONSIDERED FOR VIRTUAL MEMBERSHIP PLEASE CONTACT ROGER BATEMAN. (DETAILS AT THE FOOT OF THIS PAGE)

I am delighted to announce that Lindsay Pemberton who graduated from Unitec with a degree in Art and Design specializing in Object Design has recently joined as a Generator virtual member. Lindsay's business Rekindle focuses on the making and selling of her own jewellery ranges and ceramic designs in New Zealand and potentially overseas.

Lindsay says that "I am interested in creating domestic objects, and the relationship they form with their users. All of my work is functional - not in the sense of time efficiency, but to engage people in everyday rituals. My design approach is driven by tactility, usability and finding a balance between the familar and the element of suprise. My products are designed to challenge our thoughts of our everyday objects and rituals. By reinventing traditional rituals and domestic objects they take on a new reading in each of our lives"

For further information on rekindle click on Lindsay Pemberton in the sidebar below.

Thursday 5 June 2008

Generator Business Courses


The 3rd June saw the first Generator Business course run at Waitakere Enterprise. Delivered by business coach Barbara Joy from Waitakere Enterprise the session focussed on how to grow a small business.
16 attended the course which lasted a full day. Next week sees the second day long course run the focus of which will be on accounting and law.

While New Zealand has recognised that the creative industries are a crucial part of securing the future success of the economy, Unitec School of Design believes there is insufficient high quality support to nurture and develop the next generation of design-based businesses.
The Generator provides a ‘soft start’ into self employment in the creative professions whilst at the same time allowing the school to stay in close contact with its graduates .

The Creative Industries depend, perhaps more than any other sector, on networks and proximity as drivers of creativity and business growth. Individual businesses are small in scale, which makes models like the Generator essential if major projects are to be undertaken. Through the establishment of the Generator small New Zealand based businesses can compete as a network against larger International companies in this field.

The idea of having sector specific business courses delivered grew out of a conversation between Generator Director Roger Bateman and CEO of Waitakere Enterprise John Wadsworth. Roger and John had met when Roger began judging the product and innovation categories of the Waitakere Business Awards in 2005. Both Waitakere Enterprise and the Unitec School of Design wish to see the sustained growth of new businesses and it was from this shared vision that the Waitakere Enterprise/Generator relationship was borne.

Generator Business Courses




Quote

"For me a business plan is a road-map to make your idea happen. Nothing more, nothing less. I’m not sure creatives should be talking about revenue streams and supply chains when they mean income and a network of friends and contacts in various creative fields. "I met this guy and he knows someone who can help out." That’s so underplayed and yet it’s so important to successful business. Terms like ‘supply chain’ are only so much alienating jargon.”

Hugo Manassei
Director, NESTA Graduate
Pioneer Programme

Quote

"Barbara made business seem so relevant. And that made it immediately interesting to me. I really felt that I wanted to understand it better because it’s related to what I am doing"

(Generator resident post Waitakere Enterprise/Generator Business Courses)