You’ve completed your course and hit the job market hard. What next? Tom May talks to creatives about the best ways to get your dream job.
So you’ve just got your qualification. Congratulations! And smart thinking too, because, quite frankly, you’ve chosen a great profession to enter.
You could have studied, for example, photography or journalism. In a post-digital world, making money from either of these disciplines is increasingly difficult, even for seasoned professionals.
In contrast, there have never been more jobs available for graphic designers, motion designers, animators and illustrators. As Emma Barratt, head of design at WolffOlins in London, puts it: “The demand for new talent and new ways of looking at things is rising across the industry.”
Ben Brears, strategic design director at Leeds studio Robot Food, agrees with Barratt. “For better or worse, we live in a hyper-connected, warp-speed world and everyone’s always looking for the new and the next,” he explains. “Graduates and juniors are a crucial part of bringing that change into our industry.”
ROUGH SEAS LIE AHEAD
But of course, it’s not all going to be plain sailing. While you might have been a star among the few students on your course, you’re now having to compete with hundreds, maybe thousands of others, to get a foot in the door. All the while worrying about how to pay the rent and put food on the table. That’s exactly what Harriet Payler, now a designer at NB Studio in London, went through a couple of years ago, after graduating from Kingston University with a BA in graphic design.
“While looking for work, competition was the biggest challenge,” Payler says. “There were a vast number of graduates in the same position as me. There was also the added obstacle of having to fund living in London. As well as interning through the week, I was also busy working on Saturdays and Sundays, as were most of my friends.”
Denne historien er fra July 2019-utgaven av Computer Arts - UK.
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Denne historien er fra July 2019-utgaven av Computer Arts - UK.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Creative Space
Without’s creative director roly grant on the studio’s hand-crafted ethos
studio profile
A leading light in the branding industry, Wolff Olins wants to harness its scale to help change the world
network
THE CREATIVE COMMUNITY HAS COME TOGETHER LIKE NEVER BEFORE, TO HELP EACH OTHER GET THROUGH THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC
project
ethos for 305 Fitness - Learn how the Montreal identity design studio rebranded one of America’s hottest fitness clubs
rebrand
WHAT’S THE EXPERT OPINION ON PENTAGRAM’S BRAND IDENTITY REFRESH OF THE GLOBAL TOY COMPANY FISHER-PRICE?
opinion
CRAIG BLACK HAS SOME ADVICE FOR SURVIVING THE CORONAVIRUS CRISIS AS AN INDEPENDENT CREATIVE
fresh eyes
DUNCAN BRAZZIL ON HOW THE UK INSPIRED HIS CAREER
artist insight
Cindy Kang on how photography informs her illustration work
ANIMATION NOW
LEADING PRODUCERS AND FILMMAKERS REFLECT ON EMERGING TRENDS AND SHARE THEIR PREDICTIONS FOR THE YEAR AHEAD
Project: Atoll by Studio Myerscough
Morag Myerscough reveals how she and Luke Morgan designed a vibrant biophilic installation in a central London office tower studiomyerscough.com