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One More Question - Aaron Draplin: Draplin Design Co. – Having fun and helping underdogs win

Aaron Draplin: Draplin Design Co. – Having fun and helping underdogs win

Explicit content warning

02/11/21 • 64 min

1 Listener

One More Question

Highlights from the conversation:

  • I like the idea that a couple moves from me help fuck with the people who had 100 moves to make
  • Man, I'm just going to have fun with this. I'm not going to worry about what is and isn't the right thing to you know, to get me into the cool room. I'm just gonna do it
  • If you're just starting out, it's about knowing how to play the deck of cards, when to play them, how to enjoy them, and how to make this stuff fun
  • You look at a brand, you want to trust it, and you want to believe in it. And you don't want them to let you down. If they make lots of profit, a little profit, I don't really care. This helps me make my life better.
  • Brands can just be decent humans, and companies can be decent humans and they can just treat humans the way they want to be treated. That makes for a better world, a better experience, more loyal customers, and, in the long run, more money
  • Slow and steady wins the race, and also feeds the soul

More about Aaron

Bred from the loins of the proud Midwest, this little fucker was squeezed out in Detroit, in the year 1973 to the proud parents of Jim and Lauren Draplin. Growing up on a steady stream of Lego, Star Wars, family trips, little sisters, summer beach fun, stitches, fall foliage, drawing, skateboarding and snowboarding, at 19 he moved west to Bend, Oregon to hit jumps “Out West.” His career started with a snowboard graphic for Solid snowboards and took off like wildfire soon after.

In April 2000, much to the chagrin of his proud Midwestern roots, he accepted an ill-fated art director position with SNOWBOARDER magazine. He won “Art Director of the Year” for Primedia 2000, beating out such titles as Gun Dog, Cat Fancy and Teen. No other awards were bestowed in this period, and like he gives a rat’s ass.

Thankfully, in April 2002, the Cinco Design Office of Portland, Oregon called up and offered a Senior Designer gig which he instantly accepted and rolled up his sleeves to work on the Gravis, Helly Hansen and Nixon accounts.

The Draplin Design Co. finally stepped out on its own four hairy feet in the fall of 2004. All these years, he’s proud to report that he’s managed to “keep everything out of the red.” He rolls up his sleeves for Coal Headwear, Cobra Dogs, Nixon Watches, Bernie Sanders, Patagonia, Target, Chris Stapleton, NASA/JPL, John Hodgman, Ford Motor Company, Woolrich and even the Obama Administration, if you can believe that.

He’s been fiercely independent since 2004, and isn’t going back anytime soon. He lives and works out of a backyard shop in an undisclosed location on the mean streets of Portland, Oregon.

Find Aaron here:

Website | LinkedIn

Show notes

People:

Companies and organisations:

How can you help?

There are four ways you can help us out.

  1. Give us your thoughts. Rate the podcast and leave a comment.
  2. Share this as far and wide as you can - tell your friends, family and colleagues about us (caveat: if you own a family business, these may all be the same people)
  3. Tell us how we can create a better podcast - tell us what you liked, didn’t like, or what you’d like to hear more (or less) of
  4. Tell us who you’d like to hear on the podcast. Suggest someone that you think we should interview.

One More Question is a podcast by Nicework, a purpose-driven company helping people who want to make a dent in the world by building brands people give a shit about.

One of the things we do best is ask our clients the right questions. This podcast came about because we want to share some of the best answers we have heard over the last 13 years. We talk to significant creators, experts and communicators we encounter and share useful insights, inspiration, and facts that make us stop and take note as we go about our work.

Hosted by our founder Ross Drakes.

Subscribe iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher,

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Highlights from the conversation:

  • I like the idea that a couple moves from me help fuck with the people who had 100 moves to make
  • Man, I'm just going to have fun with this. I'm not going to worry about what is and isn't the right thing to you know, to get me into the cool room. I'm just gonna do it
  • If you're just starting out, it's about knowing how to play the deck of cards, when to play them, how to enjoy them, and how to make this stuff fun
  • You look at a brand, you want to trust it, and you want to believe in it. And you don't want them to let you down. If they make lots of profit, a little profit, I don't really care. This helps me make my life better.
  • Brands can just be decent humans, and companies can be decent humans and they can just treat humans the way they want to be treated. That makes for a better world, a better experience, more loyal customers, and, in the long run, more money
  • Slow and steady wins the race, and also feeds the soul

More about Aaron

Bred from the loins of the proud Midwest, this little fucker was squeezed out in Detroit, in the year 1973 to the proud parents of Jim and Lauren Draplin. Growing up on a steady stream of Lego, Star Wars, family trips, little sisters, summer beach fun, stitches, fall foliage, drawing, skateboarding and snowboarding, at 19 he moved west to Bend, Oregon to hit jumps “Out West.” His career started with a snowboard graphic for Solid snowboards and took off like wildfire soon after.

In April 2000, much to the chagrin of his proud Midwestern roots, he accepted an ill-fated art director position with SNOWBOARDER magazine. He won “Art Director of the Year” for Primedia 2000, beating out such titles as Gun Dog, Cat Fancy and Teen. No other awards were bestowed in this period, and like he gives a rat’s ass.

Thankfully, in April 2002, the Cinco Design Office of Portland, Oregon called up and offered a Senior Designer gig which he instantly accepted and rolled up his sleeves to work on the Gravis, Helly Hansen and Nixon accounts.

The Draplin Design Co. finally stepped out on its own four hairy feet in the fall of 2004. All these years, he’s proud to report that he’s managed to “keep everything out of the red.” He rolls up his sleeves for Coal Headwear, Cobra Dogs, Nixon Watches, Bernie Sanders, Patagonia, Target, Chris Stapleton, NASA/JPL, John Hodgman, Ford Motor Company, Woolrich and even the Obama Administration, if you can believe that.

He’s been fiercely independent since 2004, and isn’t going back anytime soon. He lives and works out of a backyard shop in an undisclosed location on the mean streets of Portland, Oregon.

Find Aaron here:

Website | LinkedIn

Show notes

People:

Companies and organisations:

How can you help?

There are four ways you can help us out.

  1. Give us your thoughts. Rate the podcast and leave a comment.
  2. Share this as far and wide as you can - tell your friends, family and colleagues about us (caveat: if you own a family business, these may all be the same people)
  3. Tell us how we can create a better podcast - tell us what you liked, didn’t like, or what you’d like to hear more (or less) of
  4. Tell us who you’d like to hear on the podcast. Suggest someone that you think we should interview.

One More Question is a podcast by Nicework, a purpose-driven company helping people who want to make a dent in the world by building brands people give a shit about.

One of the things we do best is ask our clients the right questions. This podcast came about because we want to share some of the best answers we have heard over the last 13 years. We talk to significant creators, experts and communicators we encounter and share useful insights, inspiration, and facts that make us stop and take note as we go about our work.

Hosted by our founder Ross Drakes.

Subscribe iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher,

Previous Episode

undefined - Carey Smith: Big Ass Fans — The case for really listening to your customers

Carey Smith: Big Ass Fans — The case for really listening to your customers

Highlights from the conversation:

  • You're lucky if you find a name or concept that upsets a certain number of people
  • We did a lot of work to ensure that our customers thought that we hung the moon. And the advantage of that [was] our fans sold for twice what anybody else's did
  • We talked to every single customer that we had — 10s of thousands of people over a period of years — to see how we could make the experience better
  • The product is almost secondary to the experience. The product is your ticket to entry. The experience of receiving the product, buying the product is what people ultimately take away — that’s where your brand comes to life.
  • Prospective customers would call us, and we would answer HVLS fan company and there would be a pause...they'd say, are you those guys that make those big ass fans?
  • The majority of what we got in payment was for the brand, because, I mean — we made money, but honestly, we did not make that much money.

More about Carey

A career entrepreneur, Carey Smith founded Big Ass Fans in 1999 and served as its CEO, or Chief Big Ass as he preferred, for 18 years. While other companies made and lost their fortunes, Carey’s contrarian business practices and relentless pursuit of new markets and high-quality products led to sustained, rapid growth. By 2017, Carey had grown the fan and light manufacturer to nearly $300 million in annual revenue and more than a thousand employees. And he’d done it without any outside investors. Ready for a new challenge, he sold Big Ass Fans for $500 million. The company’s stock appreciation rights program paid out $50 million to more than 100 loyal employees who shared Carey’s work ethic with 15 becoming overnight millionaires. Following the sale, Carey founded Unorthodox Ventures, his Austin-based twist on the business incubator that seeks to provide everything investment firms lacked when they approached him near daily at Big Ass Fans. Carey’s team consists of experts who help founders become serial entrepreneurs by providing support for everything from engineering and marketing to customer service and logistics.

Find Carey here:

Website | LinkedIn

Show Notes

Companies & Organisations

To listen to previous episodes go to https://nwrk.co/omq.

If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a review and share it with your friends.

Next Episode

undefined - Blake Howard: Matchstic – The value of design in building better businesses

Blake Howard: Matchstic – The value of design in building better businesses

Highlights from the conversation:

  • A rebrand doesn't have to be extreme. It could be the right decision to just modernise or refresh
  • We want to give up and coming businesses a fighting chance
  • No one cared about them. They were visual spam all over the city, no one engaged with them. The whole point of them was to inform the public, but no one cared
  • Brand identity really can just attract people in that front door. A lot of those small or mid-sized growing organisations lack that
  • A lot of organisations can't see the obvious right in front of them. And creatives, especially at an agency, have the gift of being an outsider. We can bring a fresh, unique perspective
  • When clients rebrand, they often forget the context out of which they came [...] When you're tone-deaf to where you've come from, it can be quite dangerous from a relationship perspective

More about Blake

Blake is the Creative Director and Cofounder of Matchstic, an Atlanta-based brand identity firm. For nearly 20 years, he’s focused on helping growing companies level up their brand identity by being radically relevant.

Blake has led brand launches for over 200 projects, spanning a broad range of clients, from global heavy-hitters to ambitious startups poised for growth. The most notable of which include, Chick-fil-A, Publix, Mailchimp, Boys & Girls Clubs of America, Spanx, International Justice Mission and the City of Atlanta. His work has been featured in Fast Company, City Lab, and Designing Brand Identity by Alina Wheeler, and has received recognition in Graphis, Communication Arts, and Brand New.

Blake extends his creative vision into thought leadership, having taken the stage to speak on brand identity best practices and creative courage at DesignThinkers Toronto, AIGA-Atlanta, HOW Conference, Plywood People, and MODA.

In addition to co-leading Matchstic, Blake organizes the Atlanta chapter of CreativeMornings, a free monthly lecture series for the creative community. With more than 400 attendees each month, the Atlanta CreativeMornings chapter is the country’s largest.

His podcast, The Creative Rising, features conversations with creative professionals and industry leaders who share their perspective on career, courage and creative leadership.

Find Blake here:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Show Notes

People:

Companies and organisations:

Miscellaneous:

How can you help?

There are four ways you can help us out.

  1. Give us your thoughts. Rate the podcast and leave a comment.
  2. Share this as far and wide as you can - tell your friends, family and colleagues about us (caveat: if you own a family business, these may all be the same people)
  3. Tell us how we can create a better podcast - tell us what you liked, didn’t like, or what you’d like to hear more (or less) of
  4. Tell us who you’d like to hear on the podcast. Suggest someone that you think we should interview.

One More Question is a podcast by Nicework, a purpose-driven company helping people who want to make a dent in the world by building brands people give a shit about.

One of the things we do best is ask our clients the right questions. This podcast came about because we want to share some of the best answers we have heard over the last 13 years. We talk to significant creators, experts and communicators we encounter and share useful insights, inspiration, and facts that make us stop and take note as we go about our work.

Hosted by our founder Ross Drakes.

Subscribe iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, Google Podcasts

Music by: @dcuttermusic / http://www.davidcuttermusic.com

To listen to previous episodes go to https://nwrk.co/omq.

If you enjoyed this episode, please leav...

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