Saved by Thomas and
Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
“Designers are very good at thinking about provocations. After all, they are in the imagination business. They are trained to look at existing systems, spot where stasis lives, and think of ways to make things new. What designers are not so good at, in my humble opinion, is figuring out what happens next, what comes after the provocation.”
Debbie Millman • Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
Coca-Cola knows what they’re doing, and they know that manifesting their vision from large gestures down to the tiniest gestures is a very potent idea. They know how to make it substantial, actual, and both present and compelling in the world.
Debbie Millman • Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
“It is very important for me to produce work that is conceptually ahead of its time.”
Debbie Millman • Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
I think this is when, for me, branding became about recognition and attachment. Now, I think that brands are a reflection of one’s personal compass.
Debbie Millman • Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
Increasingly, we will see brands, or, if you like, cultural phenomena, coming from countries that previously we did not take seriously.
Debbie Millman • Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
Our ability to adapt to so much change and to also be the force for change—both good and bad—is extraordinary.
Debbie Millman • Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
There’s nothing more rewarding than bringing clarity or beauty to something with the scale and influence of a large brand.
Debbie Millman • Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
The design firm has to be able to make the right choices around what’s going to be the most critical thing that will break through to consumers to build that relationship—that familiarity yet distinctiveness that connects with consumers.
Debbie Millman • Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
the quest for fame has become as much of an obsession as the fame itself.
Debbie Millman • Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
People have a more intimate relationship with brands than they do with advertising.