
One of the hardest lessons for me to learn, when attending MCAD, was the necessity for collaboration.
Like most new advertising students, I started my education with little information and a massive ego. When we received a new client to work on, be it a live or hypothetical, I would delve into research surrounding their product, the market, potential targets etc., I would look for what I thought was the perfect mixture and attempt to sell my partner on why we should head in that direction. As a result, there was a lack of collaboration.
I was lucky enough to attend MCAD where a healthy mixture of Nancy Rice, my fellow students and the live clients taught me the strength of partnerships. It is a fundamental truth; but, many creatives struggle with collaboration. If you look at history for examples, some of the best advertising creatives jumped at each project as if they had to prove themselves yet again and openly collaborated as a result.
No matter the drive on each project, having that approach of humility and openness to new ideas from any creative is paramount. Yet the most difficult part about collaboration is a strong foundation of trust. If you can’t trust your partner to put in the hours, to have the skills to rise to the occasion or give honest critique, the partnership will fail. Yet, if one can find the elusive creative partner that makes a great fit, the work that they produce together can literally be ground breaking.
The question is how does one determine who that partner is and can it only be found through trial and error?