The New Tech Heads
Feb 15, 2010
By Eleftheria Parpis, Adweek
What's the best way to marry content and code? For general agencies that question is being answered by digital technologists, an increasingly critical interdisciplinary position that helps shops create compelling digital experiences for clients. These experts, who come from disciplines including programming, strategy and production, have the digital agility necessary for today's fast-paced times. "We're in a period of transition where more and more people are discovering the need for this role," says Chick Foxgrover, CIO at the 4A's and principal at Web content strategy firm Foxpath IND in New York. "It's about taking a more holistic view of what it means to create for media." Here, a look at four senior agency talents who are redefining creativity in the digital age.
Scott Prindle > Executive creative technology director > Crispin Porter + Bogusky
"Technology fuels great ideas," says
Rob Reilly, co-ecd at Crispin Porter + Bogusky. "It's critical for
agencies like us." The MDC Partners agency has been at the
forefront of digital creativity ever since "Subservient Chicken"
put on its garters for Burger King in 2005. Back then, the agency
was just beginning to build its in-house digital resources and,
after winning the Volkswagen account late that year, it turned to
Scott Prindle, a technical director at R/GA, to help oversee its
digital future. The economics grad from the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, who received his early Web training at the
U.S. Department of Commerce, says, "I liked bringing digital and
technology capabilities into what was then more of a traditional
creative environment. Alex [Bogusky] and I agreed that technology
is a creative discipline." The agency is now armed with 50
technologists who are an integral part of the creative process,
says Prindle, 39, who joined R/GA as a programmer in 1996. There,
Prindle ran the technology side of the Nike and Nokia accounts.
During his CP+B tenure, he's seen the emphasis on talent shift from
the visual -- e.g., Flash designers needed to produce microsites
and banner ads -- to programming. "Someone ... who has a solid
grounding in IT, is comfortable working across a number of
technologies and is a good problem solver is the ideal candidate
now," he says. Reilly notes that the tech capabilities allow for
greater creative experimentation and allows them to comp ideas in
real time, an instrumental tool in selling ideas such as the recent
Facebook facial-profiler app for Coke Zero or the mobile app for BK
that gives users entry into the King's cell phone. "Having Scott
here," he says, "allows us to control our destiny."Chris Kief > Creative technology director > TBWA\Chiat\Day
Chris Kief,
32, a self-described "jack of all trades," is about six months into
his job at TBWA\Chiat\Day in New York, where he straddles all
disciplines and departments. Reporting to CCO Mark Figliulo, the
University of Southern California graduate is working on brands
such as Jameson, Michelin, GSK and Absolut. The shop's Web site for
the vodka features Kate Beckinsale, Zooey Deschanel, photography
and video demos. Kief came to TBWA via Crispin Porter + Bogusky,
where he was an interactive technical director. At Crispin, he
says, he learned the value of "having your developers feel free to
... fool around a bit because you never know what's going to come
out of it." Prior to that shop, he co-founded digital shop
Mindflood. (In 2007, acquisition discussions with MDC Partners led
him to Crispin.) While he says his workload has, in the past, been
70 percent "clean-up" to get projects back on executable courses,
"it's getting better; agencies and clients realize how much
planning [is needed for] an interactive production." 1 |2NEXT PAGE »

