Former students display ‘thinking faces’ in ADMA Creative School’s 2015 recruitment campaign

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11.jpgFour students from ADMA Creative School who quickly found work in the industry after graduating are the focus of the new Thinking Faces Work campaign that the Association for Data-driven Marketing and Advertising is using to launch its 2015 Creative School in Sydney and Melbourne today.

In various pensive poses, there’s Ernie Ciaschetti, the former builder who graduated ‘best in class’ and was offered a job at Banjo; Max Thorley, who landed a full-time job at Present Company not long after graduating; Janina Canet, a ‘highly commended’ student who is now interning at MercerBell, and Molly Cathcart who was voted ‘best copywriter’ and was quickly offered a full-time gig at SeventeenHundred.

14.jpgSays Jodie Sangster, CEO, ADMA: “Aspiring copywriters and art directors looking to kick-start a career as marketing and advertising executives can take heart when they see the Thinking Faces Work campaign because it shows our program is successful – our graduates get jobs. We are also now attracting great people to the industry like Ernie, who were working in other professions before. ADMA Creative School is going some way towards addressing the issue around shortages of work-ready junior copywriters and designers in the industry.”

Rob Morrison, executive creative director at OgilvyOne and head of the Creative School lecture series in Sydney, said last year’s crop of students were some of the best that he had 12.jpgseen and he wanted their talents acknowledged in the launch campaign.

Says Morrison: “Thinking Faces Work is a beautifully simple follow-up to last year’s ‘Show us Your Thinking Face’ campaign. The wonderful reality about ADMA Creative School is we genuinely help students get their first break in their industry. If you’ve been thinking about copywriting or art direction as a career, Creative School is the perfect place to start.”

Says David Ponce de Leon, group creative director for McCann Australia, and leader of the Creative School in Melbourne: “Creative School plays a key role in training the next generation of creative talent. There’s a shortage of young creative talent coming up through the ranks and little time to train them on the ground at 13.jpgagencies. Creative School is one way ADMA Is addressing this issue.”

ADMA Creative School starts Thursday, 13 August 2015 in both Sydney and Melbourne and runs until Thursday, 15 October. Students attend two evenings a week, graduate with a portfolio of work-ready ideas, a phonebook of contacts, and typically find full-time agency work within six months.

Click here to enrol or get more information.

Twitter for socialites: #thinkingfaceswork