I fear my answers will be of no interest to anyone, but I live in Cape Town. I work across both Cape Town and Johannesburg and I don’t think I play that much, except when I’m with my kids.
The fame we create in this industry is so transient that we constantly look for another 15 seconds. It’s part of being perpetually insecure. I am probably the most normal guy in advertising.
Fascinating.
I meet and mingle with people every day who want to be better at everything they do. No person in advertising worth anything is happy to just ‘get the job done’. I love to make stuff and see things happening.6. Describe your average workday, if such a thing exists.
Minds.
Part of the bad smell that is attached to the industry is about the measure for getting it right. Sometimes, we are inwardly focused and measure ourselves only on the awards we win, and sometimes it’s our size.But if the measure is doing great work for clients that are happy with the results of the campaign, then I think King James is an agency getting it right.
Only Gold of the night. Great achievement for my awesome @KingJamesGroup unit for the campaign that keeps on giving. #APEX2018 pic.twitter.com/LkzmtA3H42
— Lesego Kotane (@lsgktn) July 16, 2018
9. List a few pain points the industry can improve on.
Pacing.
SEO, ROI, engagement, storytelling, data, content.
I prefer thinking about people, what drives them, how they feel and how they think.
I don’t have magical moments. Ideas come from working hard, they aren’t things that fall out of the air. For me, that is.
I pour myself into the problem, and I sweat.
I can make people laugh. Even if it’s at me.
A bit of both. I love the democratisation that technology brings, and when it helps us be more human, but I hate technology for technology sake. I don’t believe all the bulls#it that sits at the altar of technology, I believe humans are infinitely more beautiful and impressive than any tech.15. What would we find if we scrolled through your phone?
Don’t lose focus on the fact that our business is about immeasurables; it’s about imagination and dreams. Facts are finite but it takes hard work and dedication, which most aren’t prepared for.
Simple as that. Be sure to follow Gainsford on Twitter and Instagram.
*Interviewed by Leigh Andrews.