VCU Brandcenter

VCU Brandcenter
(previously VCU Adcenter)
Virginia Commonwealth University
Type Public university
Established 1996
Location United States Richmond, Virginia, USA
Website Brandcenter homepage

The VCU Brandcenter (often called Brandcenter, formerly known as VCU Adcenter) is a graduate program in business, with a concentration in branding at Virginia Commonwealth University . The program won an O’Toole Award in 2009 [1] and by Creativity Magazine in 2007. The VCU Brandcenter offers students a master’s degree to complement the advertising portfolio students create. The program is known within the advertising industry for its intensity. However, students who graduate from the program earn valuable real life experience to develop brands on a global scale.

The program allows students to choose one of five different areas of study in marketing and advertising. These sections or tracks are copywriting, art direction, communication strategy, creative brand management and experience design. Students study within their track for roughly two thirds of their classes. For the remaining third, all tracks combine to teach how to use branding and advertising to solve business problems.

The current VCU Brandcenter building was designed by South African architect Clive Wilkinson.[2]

Tracks of study

VCU Brandcenter, Monroe Park campus

Art Direction

The art direction track is designed to turn students who think visually into art directors in the advertising industry. Art directors apply visual solutions to solve business problems. Art directors often have a background in fine arts, or at least an appreciation for the world of visual art. In the Brandcenter's two-year program, they learn to think strategically and conceptually before beginning to create advertisements. Art directors work closely with copywriters to make ads that could run in the real world. The curriculum teaches art directors to not only how create visuals and logos, but how to think through business problems.

Strategy

Strategists link brand and consumer. They represent the consumer within the agency and conceptual process. Through innovative primary and secondary research, they develop and apply insights. They use these insights to create a specific strategy for a campaign or branding venture, to position the brand within the daily lives of consumers. They then brief the creative team, of copywriters, art directors, and experience designers on the strategy for the creative concept. In addition, they develop a media plan and creative vehicles for advertisements or messages.

Copywriting

The copywriting track teaches how to write advertising copy. The Brandcenter teaches that copywriters are storytellers who must use words to best solve business and market problems. Copywriters learn to think conceptually before launching into words. They go through two years of grueling training, learning to start with strategy and concept before crafting advertisements. They work closely with art directors to make ads that could run in the real world. The curriculum teaches that copywriters don’t just write headlines, tag lines and website descriptions, they must think through a business problem and develop a strategy to solve it.

Creative Brand Management

The creative brand management track combines business and creativity to teach students how to solve problems. On graduating, many student go to work for advertising industry clients instead of advertising agencies. The school developed this track in 2005 to help create clients that better understand how advertising agencies function. At the Brandcenter, creative brand managers are taught to act as the client.

Experience Design

Experience Designers use conceptual skills to advertise brands in digital spaces. They extend brand campaigns past mobile applications and websites by bringing new brand experiences to digital space. The track addresses the changing industry, as the digital world plays a bigger part in advertising and branding every year.

History

The Adcenter opened in 1996, under the leadership of Diane Cook-Tench. Cook-Tench, a former senior vice president and creative director at The Martin Agency, worked with then-president of VCU, Dr. Eugene Trani to create the school. She helped put together a board of directors that included Jay Chiat, founder of TBWA Chiat/Day, and Dan Wieden, president of Wieden & Kennedy, from her contacts in the industry. From the beginning, the program was based on what actually happens in the advertising industry.

The original board of directors wanted the school to focus on diversity, and on the future of advertising rather than its past. In 2003 Rick Boyko, former Co-President and CCO of Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide, took the position of Director. Under his leadership In 2008, the program changed its name from the VCU Adcenter to the VCU Brandcenter. The school felt the new name better reflected the rapidly changing advertising industry, and changes in the curriculum. For nine years Rick was Director and Professor at the VCU Brandcenter.

In 2012, the VCU Brandcenter welcomed new Director Helayne Spivak, former Chief Creative Officer of Y&R and JWT.

Executive Education

The Brandcenter works with advertising professionals in addition to students. The Executive Education program is designed to help advertising professionals to explore innovative methods for consumer engagement, and shows them how to apply this thinking.

Sixty Magazine

Sixty magazine is an annual magazine published by the Brandcenter. The title derives from the sixty weeks that students spend earning their master's degrees. Current circulation is around 8,000. The concept of the magazine is chaos. Content comes from students and faculty, and contains student work, art, interviews, and articles about the advertising industry, the Richmond area, and activities within the program.

Professors

Staff

Board of directors

Advisory Board:

The Brandcenter Board:

References

External links

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