‘Twas the night before deadline and all through the shop. Every creature was stirring…
We know what you’re thinking…”Uh oh, not another holiday letter.” Just read it. Please.
Think of it as our little tribute to 2009. Cheers!
Ant Hill Marketing
And so it begins...
Competition is good…especially when friendly and when it involves a race. We’ve picked up our wooden block and getting ready to transform it into a lean, mean, racing machine for Stumptown 40.
Between our team and our friends at SwellPath, we’re ready to go. Want to join in the fun? Check out the details from the Portland Ad Fed.
Think you have what it takes to win? Bring it.

So here at Ant Hill we have created a new Friday ritual. We thought since Monday’s around here are known as bagel day, that Friday’s should be known as breakfast sammie day. I can’t think of a better way to start your Friday then sitting around the kitchen table with a cup of coffee, consuming a homemade breakfast Egg McMuffin (while having our production meeting of course).
Jon (being a chef in his previous life) runs the kitchen as we all sit patiently waiting for the delicious sammie to arrive in front of us.
Happy Friday Everyone!
Erin

Photo courtesy of www.portlandground.com
I love Portland. We’re not the city that never sleeps. We’re not the windy city. And, we’re not filled with tinsel, bleached hair and botox. But, we are overshadowed by other cities, especially when it comes to creative – and that’s a shame (or a sham depending on how you look at it). Creativity thrives here in our fair City of Roses (regardless of what Fast Company thinks). And with more than 1,500 companies, large and small, in the creative services industry, we contribute a fair share of professional services business revenue and jobs. Yet for some reason, we’re afraid to toot the horn let alone blow a low whistle (a little music once in a while is okay people). Maybe we think we’re great but need proof. Or we’re overly modest. Either way, consider this:
Portland is a great place to be – to live and work. But we know that already. Even though we’re pushing through a rough spot and our state has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country, we don’t have the brain drain other cities are facing. In fact, we’ve got some brain gain going on. More people are moving here from out-of-state than to our western compatriots (that’d be Seattle, Albuquerque, Austin, San Diego, Denver, San Jose, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Sacremento). The region is a magnet for all kinds of talented professionals – a chunk of them in the the creative industry and they’d rather be here than someplace else. Some get the entrepreneurial bug. It’s quite catchy here. Some freelance for local agencies or work directly with clients and supplement with other jobs. Baristas or bartenders are common, but more often they are artists, writers and musicians. Perhaps this is why Forbes dubbed Portland one of the best metro areas in which to ride out the recession. The great coffee, local microbrews, top notch wineries, and growing spirit distillers are definitely a bonus. And innovation abounds (the coffee, beer, wine, and spirits help) with the booming food scene, developing clean/green tech industry, the variety of arts and yes, our creative services industry. There’s no doubt the quality of life here is a big pull for newbies and the anchor for those of us here. But to keep all this quiet, to simply sit idle hoping the great creative work gets noticed, isn’t the best strategy to help grow an industry sector. We all want good clients whether they reside here locally or in other regions – and other regions are touting their creative (some quite loudly).
So, what makes Portland such a great creative place? I posed this question (on Twitter) to fellow Portlanders and here’s a short list of what they said:
Portland is a great creative city because there are no rules. @DanFellini
Because Portlanders are real people. The lack of restriction and openness promotes a more creative and less stifled spirit. @massagepdx
It’s not that I don’t play well with others; I just want to choose where, when and with whom I play. [It's the] PDX attitude. @LogoMotives
Despite local chagrin, the influx of creatives from all over the country converging here brings broad perspective. @Metroknow
I have mixed feelings about it as a creative city. It’s like a college graduate: full of potential. Now it needs to find its way. @swestbrook
PDXers are curious and not too self-obsessed. Our lives are generally balanced and we leave room for non-work projects. We’re generally tolerant and open to new ideas=innovation. We’re risk takers and revel in a good fail-as-learning experience. @thisKat
Portland creativity=cuz we have twice the creative fuel with half the financial pressure. @vizeboogie
Because in PDX, there is life other than work, and that drives us to be more creative and inspired. @KevMurphy
We are passionate about living. We are free spirits. We celebrate…our ability to listen to ideas that we might not hold dear to ourselves. We live our lives out loud. @dtboyd
It’s this last point, living out loud, that strikes home. Portland should take pride in our creative abilities and capabilities and not be afraid to shout them to the world.
In the words of Target: Our mission is to be the preferred shopping destination by delivering outstanding value and an exceptional guest experience by consistently fulfilling our Expect More. Pay Less. brand promise. No doubt in my mind: they do deliver on this promise. Shopping the store this weekend for two advertised items, neither were in stock at the store we visited. Did they let us walk away unsatisfied? No way. A cashier went so far as to shut down her register to go check on the item we wanted; not finding it, she used her hand-held to find another store that had it in stock. And at the second store, a sales associate hiked from his register to a back-store aisle and then hiked back to his station and spent 10 minutes on the phone for us finding a second item we wanted at another store and making sure it was held for us. Granted, we had to do a bit of unanticipated driving around, but these two employees went way out of their way to make sure we came away satisfied with our Target shopping experience. It’s one thing for a store to say it will deliver on its brand; it’s another for each employee we encountered to do it willingly and happily. That’s brand done right. High five to Target.