Ad blitz: CMCI alumni sweep student awards at Denver One Club
By Hannah Stewart (Comm鈥19)
Oliver Pollock is proof that ideas can come from anywhere.
One night, as he was drifting off to sleep, two words popped into his head: 鈥渕ayo moisturizer.鈥 He grabbed his phone, opened the notes app and wrote it down. The next day, he wrote a pitch centering the idea and presented it to his campaign team.
They loved it. And so did judges at this year鈥檚 Denver One Show competition, who awarded the campaign Best of Show and a gold medal at the award show. But 鈥鈥 wasn鈥檛 the only winner鈥攊n fact, 麻豆免费版下载Boulder swept the student category, with 12 CMCI students earning recognition.
鈥淚t felt amazing,鈥 Pollock (StratComm鈥24) said. 鈥淲e stayed up in the studio multiple nights grinding these campaigns out: making videos, scripts and everything as real as possible. Being recognized is so fulfilling.鈥
An important component of CMCI classes is hands-on project work done on behalf of real-world clients and brands, giving students access to professionals and challenging them to apply their lessons in creatively solving problems. Pollock and the other strategic communication students completed these campaigns for various classes, including a portfolio course where students are tasked with taking briefs from real life clients鈥攕uch as Kraft Foods, Velveeta, Dove and NotCo鈥攁nd creating campaigns.
It鈥檚 important for students to develop relationships with their peers and professors alike when taking these portfolio classes. That鈥檚 why they鈥檙e usually taught by professors with agency experience, like听Jeff Gillette, an听assistant teaching professor who worked in advertising for more than 15 years.
Over the course of the semester, after rounds of ideation, feedback and refinement, students submit their campaigns to the听, a national awards competition run by The One Club for Creativity. Since the college was formed in 2015, nearly 40 student projects have claimed national awards from One Club; this year, four campaigns received merit awards: 鈥淭he Beauty Inside,鈥 鈥淒ove鈥檚 Real Beauty Database,鈥 "Mac Couture" and 鈥淐heese-mation.鈥
鈥淚 was happy for the students because it means they will have something that will help them in their job hunt and career,鈥 Gillette said. 鈥淚n the future, we want to push students and ourselves to turn these national merits into medals. At the Denver show, I was impressed that we swept the show."
Finding inner beauty
For 鈥,鈥 students removed the branding from packaged bars of Dove soap, opting to instead showcase artwork to the inside of the box for buyers to find.
Coco Loomis (StratComm鈥24), who worked on 鈥淢ac Couture鈥 and 鈥淭he Beauty Inside,鈥 said she enjoyed working on the Dove campaign 鈥渂ecause it was completely driven by the art direction. One day, someone said 鈥榖eauty鈥檚 on the inside,鈥 and suggested we take that literally. It was so amazing to take conceptual ideas and put them into play.鈥
Both " and 鈥鈥 leaned on nostalgia to promote Velveeta and its 鈥淟a Dolce Velveeta鈥 campaign. 鈥淢ac Couture鈥 reimagined noodle necklaces made by kids in arts classes and as luxury symbols. Cheese-mation went a step further.
鈥淲e were just coming up with as many ideas as possible and thought about how we all grew up with Wallace and Gromit,鈥 said Mateo Perez-Lara (StratComm鈥24). 鈥淲hile we were working on it, we heard about a clay shortage that threatened the studio, and we saw this shortage as a way for Velveeta to come in as a hero to save clay animation.鈥
Of those three campaigns, 鈥淭he Beauty Inside鈥 and Cheese-Mation also won silver awards at the local Denver Awards. Loomis was also part of a gold-winning team, with Pollock, for听. Pollock was also on another Dove team, the听.
鈥淚t鈥檚 cool because now I鈥檓 working on Dove in my job with Edelman, in New York,鈥 Pollock said. 鈥淚n school, I was an art director, and now I鈥檓 a copywriter鈥攕o it鈥檚 a little different, but there are definitely similarities.鈥
Loomis, an art director at Highdive, in Chicago, echoed this sentiment, saying that opportunities to compete in competitions like One Show through CMCI prepared her and her classmates for the real world.
Like in the professional world, competitions like the One Show are key for students looking to boost their resumes and prove their worth. According to Gillete, agencies and individuals alike compete to gain recognition and attract potential clients.
鈥淪imilar to agencies, students competing help 麻豆免费版下载become known as a school that can educate our students at a high level,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd if we鈥檙e known as a school that wins awards and does really good work, that helps with recruitment.鈥
As the only participant still in the Denver area, Perez-Lara鈥攚ho just completed an internship with Fortnight Collective鈥攚as the only one of the award winners able to make it to the October awards show.
鈥淚t was a lot of fun. Being able to win something as a student and be in the spotlight was magical,鈥 said Perez-Lara, who鈥檚 looking to work in major advertising hubs when his internship concludes. 鈥淚 was fortunate enough to be with really smart, creative people, and it wouldn鈥檛 have been possible without a great mentor like Professor Gillette. I love the whole strategic communication community we were able to work with, as well.鈥
Olivia Bransford
Andrew Elliott
Oliver Pollock
Charlotte Garrett
Coco Loomis
Oliver Pollock
Alexis Bayani
Charlotte Garrett
Coco Loomis
Dahlia Nin
Charlotte Garrett
Kelly Haworth
Oliver Pollock
Dahlia Nin
Collin Kendall
Mateo Perez-Lara
Oliver Pollock
Kate Chambers
Kate Chambers
Olivia Bransford
Jessica Lober
Coco Loomis
Cole Nelson