Campaign Middle East

This Luddite has been converted

Ramsey Naja is chief creative officer, JWT MEA

“I’m getting fond of technology these days. In fact, I’m not just getting fond of it; I’m giving it hugs and even being seen in its company. Believe me, this is quite a statement from someone who only needs to look at a computer screen for it to go on the blink and who still believes that Space Invaders will never be bettered as a game.

From something that was associated with the military, space exploration or Inspector Gadget, technology has become an all-pervasive presence in our lives and, more to the point, our industry.  From über-nerds, technologists have become advertising’s rock stars, commanding the attention of legions of headhunters and assorted talent managers. A creative technologist is now being looked upon with the same awe as a D&AD award-winning art director used to be, and carrying the salary negotiating power of Lionel Messi’s agent.

For many, this is a natural fallout of the digital age, as we suddenly realised that the dot.coms were not just sources of astronomical income for infuriatingly shabbily-dressed geeks, but part of something huge… and as coherent as a forgetful Glaswegian drunk with a stutter giving a lecture on quantum mechanics. In came the technologists, translators of a language that is deeply foreign to most of us or, at their best, purveyors of technology-based communication solutions to business problems.

And it is this that makes them so endearing to me today. As solution providers, today’s technologists – or at least those with whom we now collaborate – are the democratisers of what we thought was only available to James Bond and Jean Michel Jarre. These guys are not just making NASA-style innovations accessible to the man in the street, they are actually making them useful to him. And, by letting brands – and advertising – virtually sponsor them or work with them, they are adding an extraordinarily exciting dimension to the possibilities at our disposal. One of my favourite pieces of copy comes from a Honda ad that describes technology as “making better, better”. I couldn’t think of a better way to describe their job.”

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