Posts Tagged ‘BDW’

Bidding Farewell To Boulder Digital Works

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

I first read about Boulder Digital Works while sitting in a condo on Maui overlooking a lagoon full of giant turtles. I was drawn into an article by the words Hyper Island, Bogusky and America.

The view from BDW's roof.

As I read the article my eyes welled up and a chill went down my spine. It was as clear as the water outside my room that life was pointing me back to Boulder and I had to be a part of the first class at BDW.

The next day I stood on a beach watching the surf roll back and forth over my feet and said to my wife, “I feel like this is what I have to do.  It’s going to expose me to rock stars in the industry and teach me a ton. It’s going to get me a shot at a major agency and it’s going to be written up in things like Fast Company and The New York Times. I’ve got to be a part of the first class.”

Ten months later and seven months after starting we’ve got our New York Times piece, I’ve met a list of people that looks like an interactive media fantasy team and I’m leaving Boulder to start work as a strategist at Goodby, Silverstein and Partners.

Game. Set. Match.

The Goodby way.

The program is by no means perfect. It is a startup in its infancy striving to find its way. Our New York Times piece was nice, but in my opinion missed what has been the program’s greatest success—its ability to draw the most passionate people in the interactive world to one place.

From the first two classes of 60 Weeks students currently enrolled to the visionaries who lead the three day workshops and the professionals enrolled in the workshops to our Board of Directors, our space in downtown Boulder has become a catalyst where people can share ideas, war stories, inspire and be inspired.

When you fill a room with interactive professionals from some the world’s most demanding shops, 20-something digital native students hungry to get to work, entrepreneurs, folks struggling to grasp the changing landscape and clients from some of the world’s biggest brands you create an amazing atmosphere where titles and salaries fade away. What’s left is an exciting collaboration that reflects the state of interactive media we are all striving to understand and cultivate.

There are some people who need to be recognized for helping to create and foster this atmosphere of exploration and collaboration. That list starts with Crispin Porter + Bogusky. It begins with Chuck Porter and Winston Binch and continues on down the line to many from the agency’s staff. At every turn CP+B has been incredibly generous with its time and knowledge. In addition their effort to bring other companies and professionals into the fold at BDW has been staggering. From Modernista to Mullen and Goodby to BBH we’ve been exposed to some of the best people at top agencies.

Local support has also been incredible highlighted by folks like Robert Reich from the startup community in Boulder and some great local shops like EffectiveUI and Moxie Sozo.

The people I would like to recognize the most are my fellow students in the 60 Weeks Program. Over the past seven months I have watched them struggle, thrive and grow immensely. As the staff at CU and BDW have worked to figure our how the program should actually function, the students have forged ahead seeking out expertise or additional work. The 16 people in the program are all very different. The one thing they have in common is they took a chance on an unproven program because of the passion they have for digital and interactive media.

That will never be true again. I’m leaving for Goodby and soon our other students will have internships lined up at some of the most innovative companies on the planet. BDW will soon transition from an unknown startup with limitless potential to a proven entity. With that will come a different type of student. Though I’m excited to meet the talented and hungry people in classes to come, I’m glad to have shared my time here with people who leapt from a cliff not knowing where they would land.

I will miss Boulder Digital Works. I believe I’ve left my mark. I’ll be back often to make sure that mark remains, but also to share, teach and learn with the best.

Unfiltered Information

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010


Unfiltered Information by Dan Viens

I created this image in a digital design class at Boulder Digital Works. The only direction we had was that it should be inspired by the notion of unfiltered information. At work here are some basic blending and layer techniques in photoshop. People in class dug it.

What a rookie learned about navigating sxswi

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

From March 11 – 17 I lived a life in Austin that stretched my limits, brought me much joy, brought me closer to friends and made Monster an integral part of my diet. Here’s what I learned about navigating Austin at my first SXSWi.

  1. The person next to you at a panel or party may be an app developer or a creative director at a major agency. You can learn something from both so you have to reach out. If you don’t it’s just a missed opportunity.
  2. The “I” in VIP can stand for important, ingenious or innovative. The latter two mean you weren’t on the list, but you made it inside the party. These situations are much more satisfying than just knowing someone.
  3. The swagalanche is disgusting. You can do your part by not taking all the shit people are handing out. All the talk at the airport was about how much shit everyone had to recycle and throw out. It’s preposterous for an interactive conference to produce so much garbage.
  4. Beards
  5. A good seat at a panel can be harder than getting into a packed party. If there’s something you really want to see it’s worth getting there early.
  6. If DEVO is having a panel then go. DEVO, The Internet & You might have been the best pane of the entire thing.
  7. When someone offers to teach you The Hustle, it’s best to oblige. Many thanks to Charlotte from Made By Many.
  8. Go where the hackers and robots go. They have some exciting shit to show. Check out this video of the people from ArcAttack killing it with their tesla coils at SXSW.
  9. If you see @jason eating BBQ it’s best to play paparazzi they way @jefferyjake did. Easily one of the funniest run-ins of the week.
  10. People you spend all of your time with in the real world can be some of the most impressive at sxswi. To see them in the glow of the festival can be illuminating.

I’ll add stuff as it comes to me. Please share what you learned in the comments.

BDW 60 Weeks Post

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Here is a post I wrote for our Boulder Digital Works 60 Weeks blog. It’s about bow the program is progressing and the work everyone involved needs to do to make the program great.

http://bdw.colorado.edu/blogs/60weeks/2010/02/17/boulder-digital-works-but-only-if-you-work-it/

BDW @ CP+B OMG!

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
Crispin Porter + Bogusky's appropriation of the Colorado state flag.

Crispin Porter + Bogusky's appropriation of the Colorado state flag.

For a minute I thought my phone was vibrating. Then I realized it was the air.

Crispin Porter + Bogusky’s Boulder office was literally buzzing when I visited last Tuesday along with my fellow Boulder Digital Works students, the program’s coordinators and one of our interns.

We rode some of their low rider bikes around the entry area, watched a dog piss on a pole and got the grand tour of the place that we had been hearing so much about during the previous six weeks.

The tour was an eye opener. There were people everywhere. In much of Colorado’s Front Range people don’t have big yards so they head to parks, open space and trails to spend time outdoors. At CP+B, a similar principle seems to apply.

All but the top dogs have insignificant workspaces. This spreads people all over the warehouse space to work. There were people on the patio, in the kitchen, in the entry, on the bleachers and everywhere in between.

They call it a factory and in a lot of ways it looks like one. The ducts in the ceiling are exposed, the floor is a smooth grey and there is plenty of exposed plywood. A second “floor” was added as the office grew from the original 40 that started in Boulder to the hundreds there now.

We saw familiar faces, checked out their 3-D printers used for product prototyping and finished our day with a two hour session in one of the conference rooms learning about account management with Acct. Manager Jeff Graham.

Throughout the session footsteps above were audible and outside a constant smattering of voices could be heard. The mildly chaotic scene was a stark contrast from life at Boulder Digital Works.

Things at BDW are relaxed, safe and quiet, like a womb. Seeing that real world out there was important. But equally as important was hitting the snooze button on that wake up call, knowing we have another year to try, trip, fail, succeed, experiment and dream within our safe training grounds at BDW.

Design Thinking: It’s about the people stupid

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Week two was a “Creative” week on the calendar at Boulder Digital Works, although the previous week’s “Business” focus and this week’s “Technology” leaning have brought out plenty of creativity from the 12 of us.

The main focus of week 2/60 was Design Thinking. We started by watching a couple videos from Tim Brown of Ideo, moved on to redesign the water fountain and a system for getting people to drop bottled water and then were exposed to Lane Becker, founder of GetSatisfaction.com and Winston Binch of Crispin, Porter + Bogusky.

Two crucial elements of design thinking that we explored throughout the week were returning design to the big time by using it to create tools and systems not just objects and products and putting the user at the center of everything you do. These notions are changing the world of design and that’s almost hard to believe because they’re so basic. If the user isn’t at the center of design considerations who is? Wouldn’t every system and product be better and more successful if the creative team behind it considered the end user in the design process?

The concept of user centered design doesn’t blow your mind, but the idea that this hasn’t been the norm does. Alex Bogusky and John Winsor explore this in their new book Baked In.

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Crowdsourcing My Bio

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

crowdsourcingI’ve got to put a bio on the student page for Boulder Digital Works. I decided to crowdsource it. I asked acquaintances, friends, family and colleagues to tell me who I am.

I’m in the midst of the book Groundswell and thought this would be a great exercise. Groundswell is essentially about how communities of people have come together via social media and the digital universe and how their contributions determine brand identity as opposed to the it used to be with companies controlling their images unfettered.

The groundswell comments I received varied from “best son-in-law” to “Dan is a fucking loony” and “modern day Rasputin.” They said things I never would have thought of or said about myself. This was a lot of fun.

Here’s the amalgamation from what everyone said that I plan to put on the site:

Dan crowdsourced his bio. He is a storyteller who has told some unforgettable tales, both absurd and true. Dan gets off his ass to do things. He’s the guy in the dance off,  a f@#*ing loony, a modern day Rasputin, the best son-in-law, the worst cook and a little stinker. He’s hilarious, confident, creative, industrious, independent, thoughtful, optimistic and sarcastic. Dan’s got a zest for life and a bit of swagger. He is a fountain of the unexpected and a loyal friend. Olives are his enemy and fresh powder is his ally. A deep curiosity for the world drives him. He’s a passionate multimedia producer, filmmaker and writer. Dan’s a dog lover, traveler and a lucky man to have a wife who deals with him, inspires him and partakes in his shenanigans.

Here’s what they said exactly.

Up to the line below was added on Nov. 4, 2009

You are the same as when you were born. Happy, totally non traditional! Never one for the big block buster, more the sleeper independent film. Happy! The last thing you on your list of things to do was watch TV. A true baseball kid, loved to play the game, watch the game, talk about the game, go to a game and knows the statistics. Happy! Definitely self confident, always an excellent sense of self. One characteristic I never realized was so neat, was your wanting to be a part of something but not needing to be the star. Of course wonderful sense of humor, and a lovely way of connecting with people…and dogs!

One thing you left out is that you are really good at asking questions.  Not just stupid questions like such as “how is your day going” more like you ask thoughtful insightful questions about peoples livelihoods because you truly care and want to learn about them.

You are: Red Sox, Patriots, kind, funny, and creative.  You’re also a listener, smiler, and go-getter.  You make people want to be around you.

Dan Viens is a rare concoction of ambition, cognizance, and bedlam best served at room temperature.

Gives great advice on your wedding day.

Is a Blazers fan. Was there when Brandon Roy hit “That Shot” against the Houston Rockets. Go Blazers.

Knows that a text message reading “are you watching this game” actually means “I don’t want to ruin anything for you, but if you’re not watching this game then turn it on right now.”

funny, witty, fast, sharp, stubborn, realistic, sensitive, creative, serious, dog lover, nature lover, trendy, foodie, drinkie, fun

I think you are someone people can always count on. Someone with a witty sense of humor, someone people trust, someone that cares, someone that makes people laugh. And most importantly someone who likes to have fun and make sure everyone around you is having fun

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