Ogilvy's Young Turks and The Sydney Story Factory help Sydney's disadvantaged youth
Over the next few months 30 Ogilvy Young Turk volunteers will tutor creative writing programs every 6-8 weeks at The Sydney Story Factory including comedy writing, script and screen play development and poetry classes.
The Young Turks program was launched last year to develop Ogilvy's young
talent and to reinforce the company's heritage of training and
nurturing the future leaders of business. It is open to anyone within
the Ogilvy network who is under 26 years of age or has less than three
years of industry experience.
Ogilvy's head of talent management, Dave Sayer who directs the Young Turks program commented on the "tremendous spirit, enthusiasm and passion with which our young people have gone about this activity."
Says Sayer: "One of the Young Turks' pillars is philanthropy - with a mantra to find ways to assist community based organisations using the skills sets they have, and the resources at their disposal within the agency. They identified The Sydney Story Factory as one that very much aligned with what we do as a company - tell stories.
"The natural synergies between a creative agency's background and The Sydney Story Factory will make this partnership a winner and I am delighted we could support our young people to share their skills with some of Sydney's disadvantaged youth."
Says Natalie Mitchell, Young Turks volunteer: "We are teaching children to use expressive language and to find their own voice. Creative thought is a powerful tool for these children to express and communicate their thoughts and feelings."
Mitchell was one of the Young Turks tutors at a recent comedy writing class, and found the experience inspirational.
Says Mitchell: "The beauty of children's writing is they are not bound by the constraints of adulthood, their imaginations run wild and they blend outrageous concepts and form them into beautiful stories."
At the end of each program the children's stories are bound into a book which they can take home to show their friends and family.
Says Mitchell: "The children were so responsive and the results amazing, it was a joy to see them leave with their very own piece of creative writing bound into a book format. Anyone can become a leader with the right development, support and opportunity; by lending our support to the Story Factory we hope to share the opportunities we have been given with children who are less fortunate than us."
(Young Turks: Natalie Mitchell, Alex Gourlay, Sam Tatum)
Ogilvy's head of talent management, Dave Sayer who directs the Young Turks program commented on the "tremendous spirit, enthusiasm and passion with which our young people have gone about this activity."
Says Sayer: "One of the Young Turks' pillars is philanthropy - with a mantra to find ways to assist community based organisations using the skills sets they have, and the resources at their disposal within the agency. They identified The Sydney Story Factory as one that very much aligned with what we do as a company - tell stories.
"The natural synergies between a creative agency's background and The Sydney Story Factory will make this partnership a winner and I am delighted we could support our young people to share their skills with some of Sydney's disadvantaged youth."
Says Natalie Mitchell, Young Turks volunteer: "We are teaching children to use expressive language and to find their own voice. Creative thought is a powerful tool for these children to express and communicate their thoughts and feelings."
Mitchell was one of the Young Turks tutors at a recent comedy writing class, and found the experience inspirational.
Says Mitchell: "The beauty of children's writing is they are not bound by the constraints of adulthood, their imaginations run wild and they blend outrageous concepts and form them into beautiful stories."
At the end of each program the children's stories are bound into a book which they can take home to show their friends and family.
Says Mitchell: "The children were so responsive and the results amazing, it was a joy to see them leave with their very own piece of creative writing bound into a book format. Anyone can become a leader with the right development, support and opportunity; by lending our support to the Story Factory we hope to share the opportunities we have been given with children who are less fortunate than us."
(Young Turks: Natalie Mitchell, Alex Gourlay, Sam Tatum)

Troy Graham.
ARE THOSE GIRLS SINGLE?
No they aren't i know them.
Great work guys :)
nice to see an agency and agency people 'giving back'. great stuff Ogilvy!
That Sam guy is top 3 material FO SHO