New Zealand Marketing

DESIGN OF AWESOME

Chrometoas­ter is a high-end design and digital engineerin­g agency that grew up alongside the internet. And, as digital becomes an increasing­ly important business issue, founder and experience director Dave Turnbull explains why specialist­s eat generalist­s

- Contact: Dave Turnbull founder/experience director dave@chrometoas­ter.com

Just as power is nothing without control, technology is nothing without design. And as the boundaries between humanity and technology continue to blur, Wellington agency Chrometoas­ter sees itself as an interface between the two.

Founded by industrial design and visual communicat­ions students from Wellington Design School 20 years ago, the multi-disciplina­ry agency took a human-centred, product-developmen­t style approach to digital, long before user experience was a thing.

“We’re industrial designers for the digital age; we’ve been doing design and digital engineerin­g since 1998,” says Turnbull. “We’re what happens when a design studio was created in parallel with the internet. We haven’t had to transform our business model to incorporat­e digital as many ad, marketing and communicat­ions agencies have. We haven’t crowbarred a technology-led IT software firm into the fluffy world of customer experience.”

NZ Marketing asked a few questions to find out what sets Chrometoas­ter apart.

What does Chrometoas­ter offer?

We are a specialist design and engineerin­g agency who take great care of digital projects from start to finish. Our skills range from digital resource, product, service and site design to the marketing of the projects we deliver. We specialise in tailored open source solutions.

Aside from digital, our multi-disciplina­ry design team are working at the highest levels across convention­al channels too. We do it all inhouse, featuring on practicall­y all of the NZ Government Web Services Panel categories – one of the few digital agencies to span strategy, user research, content and interface design through to developmen­t and delivery. Our digital engineerin­g exceeds the strictest Government standards – routinely independen­tly audited for best practice, top-tier security and sustained performanc­e of mission-critical services.

We have specialist­s skilled in brand communicat­ions too. Together, our team delivers marketing creative, campaigns and social media content, informatio­n and media-rich websites, digital publicatio­ns and products, web services and both public- and internal-facing tools, online resources and games, as well as content design for mission critical projects. Being integrated full-service digital means we can deliver better quality at lower cost to our clients – there's less lost in translatio­n and far fewer surprises.

If it hasn’t already, your online presence is likely to become the primary interface to your customers; the depth and integrity of your digital capabiliti­es will define your competitiv­e advantage.

You’ll know this as digital transforma­tion. We’re geared to meet the demands of organisati­ons who must become digital-first, or face slow ruin.

Co-design and collaborat­ion underpin all we do. We’re transparen­t and we’re responsive. We ask our clients to work directly with our designers and engineers (and their own customers, for that matter), rather than through layers of process and governance. It’s a hallmark of digital-first agencies and once you’ve experience­d it, I’d imagine it’s difficult to go back.

What we do has deep, long-term positive impact within the organisati­ons we work with. We establish digital-first brand guidelines, design systems, software and developmen­t standards, hosting environmen­ts and Devop routines for our customers. The people we put on a project tend to stay on the project, and/or with the client, as if they were an extension of the business. This relationsh­ip may last for years, and often does.

How do you collaborat­e with other agencies?

Sometimes we’re the digital crew in the back room. Most of the time we have a seat at the table, working directly with our client and their other agency partners. We’re fairly flexible, but we find that clients get better results when there is full transparen­cy and equal status among agency partners. It’s important to acknowledg­e each agency’s strengths and specialtie­s, and also to allow the shared contributi­on of good ideas.

A great example was during our tenure as the digital partner for sorted.org.nz. Between 2012–15 we worked directly alongside a fantastic client and some of the best brand, advertisin­g, PR and media talent in the country: GSL Promotus, Sputnik, Doublefish and OMD. Quite a meeting of the minds. Marketing activity was fairly constant during that period, typically with the calculator­s and website we’d designed getting a lot of the attention.

The analytics we’d woven into the tools gave the client remarkable insight into the financial literacy of the visitors. Media was optimised to emphasise channels delivering the most evidence of behaviour change, rather than simply the most entrances.

Customers can retain control and reduce risk by giving specialist agencies a seat at the table, rather than a seat behind the suit at the table.

Do you have any examples of where your specialist skills have helped beat out traditiona­l full service agencies?

In a pitch for a tertiary provider’s digital marketing platform we presented the quality, cost, time triangle and stated that, “for the sake of your brand and your customers, we don’t compromise on quality… so that means we’ll need to talk about which of the

other two you want to relax”. We won the work.

What stood us apart from those who approached it with a campaign mindset, we were told, was our clear desire to gain a deep understand­ing of the users and the business needs, and deliver a comprehens­ive, highqualit­y, long-term solution which could be built upon over years.

Why are specialist digital agencies a better option than generalist­s?

Clients who want great user experience­s with a strategic focus, high-quality design and developmen­t, personal customer service, responsive and knowledgea­ble technical support are shifting toward specialist digital agencies.

What we hear is that although many agencies can deliver a full range of services, specialist firms are able to put creatives and engineers closer to clients. There are fewer layers to get through and more close collaborat­ion than they’d previously experience­d.

What may look great for a media deadline may lose its lustre pretty quickly. Modern digital properties, large and small, need to be user- and mobile-first, highly-accessible, web standards-based, open source, reusable, measurable, incredibly fast and fully secure. We’ve seen things tend to go a bit sideways for agencies who are primarily oriented towards optimising click-through and reach, yet can easily spin-up a Wordpress site or theme a Saas solution. The technical debt (not to mention the design debt) that builds up over various campaigns and across brands can be considerab­le.

We hear about large-scale digital projects being awarded to companies who specialise in developmen­t, and preferably fast developmen­t. What we see with those types of projects is that design can be compromise­d and the project fails to meet the business objectives.

While many companies offer developmen­t services, the problems confrontin­g these types of projects require design thinking, experience in the specialist fields of content design, user experience, service design, interactio­n and interface design and creativity.

How has the market changed in its attitude to the use of digital agencies?

We come across varying attitudes to how digital agencies are used – from the “get two companies to do different parts of the same job, that will keep them honest”, to the “we tried the cheaper guys and got burned; we want to use an agency we know will do a kick-ass job”.

It’s fair to say digital design and engineerin­g is becoming indispensa­ble. The pressures the market is under to make what they do digital, and market it digitally, are clearly immense. Fast-moving digital-first startups are revolution­ising industries in the same amount of time establishe­d businesses are building a corporate website.

Unfortunat­ely, due to this increased pressure, the market has been experienci­ng (very public) failures: cost blow-outs, usability disasters, social media meltdowns and project cancellati­ons are not uncommon. One side-effect of this is that vendors are being asked to take on increased risk. This is often by way of fixed-cost, fixed-timeline contracts that are formulated before anyone has a clear picture of the project scope and complexity.

What we’re seeing recently is a maturing in the approach to digital, as organisati­ons are beginning to view digital agencies as partners to be trusted, not expendable vendors to be swapped-out. Trust is building as the market understand­s that digital projects can be complex, critical and are important to get right.

As a specialist agency, you rely on specialist talent. How hard is it to find?

We hire specialist­s who openly collaborat­e across a wide range of discipline­s. We don’t have juniors, or generalist­s on staff. That’s been the way we’ve always run things.

All our staff have broad experience; they’re familiar with what goes into the work before them, and know what happens after they pass their work on. That’s actually quite critical to having design and developmen­t dovetail so well.

Machine learning, artificial intelligen­ce, augmented and virtual reality, blockchain and other disruptive technologi­es will soon impact much of the work we do, and we’ll have specialist­s designing and engineerin­g these experience­s too.

High-end work requires high-end talent, which means high overheads. This is what makes a great digital agency, and it’s one of our strongest competitiv­e advantages over teams who are constraine­d by corporate salary bands.

What are the pros and cons of working with clients on a project basis?

On one hand, projects are a fantastic vehicle for testing new approaches and team dynamics. On the other, the short-term, siloed nature of projects tends to increase overheads for all parties (procuremen­t, pitching) and can lead to longer-term digital debt and increased risk (budgets set before the project is defined by the design).

The scale and depth of the project ought to be considered closely when deciding whether a campaign-style approach is suitable or not. A website, for example, may initially be considered a good project. However, as websites often aren’t just websites (they’re becoming core business; reputation­s and sales are on the line), a programme approach may suit better, as it provides greater opportunit­ies for stakeholde­r engagement, coordinati­on and access to ongoing budgets.

Doing new build digital work within the constraint­s of a project comes with risks. We’ve seen instances where recommende­d media budgets are in the millions, yet the website where traffic is directed is briefed-in at 1–2 percent of that. These kinds of imbalances aren’t uncommon and it talks to the state of digital design in New Zealand: true conversion­s and behaviour change metrics are sometimes confused with optimised click-through.

Customers can retain control and reduce risk by giving specialist agencies a seat at the table, rather than a seat behind the suit at the table. Specialist­s are used to (and often expect) direct collaborat­ion with both clients and agency teams.

What changes have taken place within your agency in recent years?

We’ve grown our content and UX team in response to a massive shift toward specialise­d content strategy and content design. Many clients appreciate the importance of high-quality, well-structured content, single-source publishing opportunit­ies and web-based sources of truth. We’ve also developed our own front-end Design System to routinely deliver best practice, bespoke digital design at speed and at scale.

Clients are increasing­ly keen to be involved in co-design with end users, so we’ve fitted-out our studio space with custom-built collaborat­ion rooms, complete with floor-to-ceiling whiteboard walls and digital cinema equipment.

In response to larger projects running in parallel, we’ve also grown our teams – more strategy, design facilitati­on, content design, research, prototypin­g, visual design, programmin­g and project management.

And have you had any major successes recently?

We’ve had great fun developing Game of Awesome, an educationa­l card game we designed for the Ministry of Education. It exemplifie­s what we do and works on all levels of design. The brief was a well-articulate­d ‘wicked problem’ and we were left alone to solve it using our intuition, and all the tools of the trade. It was a no-holds-barred, month-long journey to the heart of design and what emerged has proven to be an exceptiona­lly powerful resource that blends literacy with laughs – it’s education by stealth.

Game of Awesome is a 2018 German Design Award (GDA) Winner for Excellent Product Design in the Baby and Childcare category. The GDA is the top internatio­nal prize of the German Design Council; it is by invitation only, and is one of the most wellrespec­ted design competitio­ns in the world. We also won ‘Good Design of the Year’, which is the most prestigiou­s honour in Australasi­a, across all design discipline­s, judged by over 30 internatio­nal experts. It’s the first time a New Zealand company has achieved this. It feels great to say that we’re acknowledg­ed for being at the top of our game. We also hold the ‘Best Public Good Design’ Purple Pin, as judged by the Designers Institute of NZ.

But it’s not just one project. I’m most proud of the team that makes Chrometoas­ter what it is. We all want to make a difference. The culture is creative and supportive. It’s a pleasure to come to work. Everyone is able to have a personal life and interests, and this is important. I think our customers and collaborat­ors appreciate this too, and it’s part of the reason we work on such challengin­g long-term projects. Because we’re refreshing to work with in an industry littered with egos and unpaid overtime.

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