The thing about agencies is that you have to find the right one to work with. I would like to find smaller firms that have specific clients. I think they offer more flexibility and give you a better chance at expressing yourself.
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What is the name of the firm your envolved with by the way? I'm assuming that is your line of work. Thanks again.
I think for you, one of the benefits of working in an established agency or firm would be the synergy you'd develop with other creative types, and the personal learning that goes with that. An agency, as you pointed out, is a bit of a trade off. While your creative scope might be limited by an art director's wishes and financial realities, you'd also be spared from sales, project management, billing and all the other support stuff we all sometimes take for granted, thereby enabling you to focus on just your work. You're absolutely right, though, you'll never really get a creative fix doing corporate work.
As for me hiring you, I really would. However I doubt I could provide you with the environment, or the type work you'd be looking for.
The firm that I'm employed by, technically, is a software development/IT services group called
HunterStone, where my title is Media Director. More importantly, however, I work within a network of friends that reaches all over the US. So even though I'm employed by a small software firm, in a small state, in a tiny town, I do get around. Here's a sample of some of my
flash work. We also have an ancillary creative group called
ViralMedia, but we haven't used that entity for a long while. Since 9/11, I think.
The problem with my work environment, however, is the day to day disparatey in my projects. One day I'm doing 3D, one day I'm doing websites in HTML/CSS, the next day I'm writing website analysis, then print work, then Flash stuff, then developing products from the gournd up, then "here's a new technology, see what you can do with it..." and so on. Also, when I got into the industry, I got a reputation for being very fast and effective and able to insert myself in almost any situation at any level. That has served me well, but has been a bit of an albotros at the same time, as I never really got to develop one skill. I'm telling you all of this in the hopes that my experiences could be of value to your career planning.
**There is a precept in evolution, though, that specialists die, and adapters survive. hehehehe
Anyway, these thoughts are pbly coming across as a bit of a rant, so I'll just leave it there.