I believe that the initiative was called Teachers into Industry (TiI) and for a brief spell it received substantial government funding. I jumped at the chance and was able to specify that I wanted to experience work in the advertising industry.
Of course the beating heart of all advertising in Great Britain is London but some advertising agencies do and did exist in other parts of the country. Unbeknown to me, Sheffield was home to a thriving little business called Camel Advertising. They were housed in a big stone house on Queens Road.
I worked there for two weeks and enjoyed every minute. There were no switched off children in sight and every member of the thirty strong team was pulling in the same direction - keeping the company above water and spreading its tentacles into new fields. There was a real buzz about the place. It felt like being a bee in a productive hive.
Outside in the car park, leading members of the team parked their shiny new cars. There was a yellow Ferrari and a silver Jaguar. Camel Advertising was proud and profitable and what I liked best is that it was a hotbed of creativity. There were graphic designers, a photographer and a creative director. They had begun to specialise in promoting computer games.
In the late 1970s I had investigated a potential alternative career in advertising and even sent out speculative letters. Camel was all that I hoped an advertising agency might be and I know this might sound stupid but in my two weeks with them, I sought to make a good impression partly because in the part of my brain marked "Fantasy", I was hoping they would offer me a job.
Then I would be able to get off the treadmill of secondary school teaching and leave behind all the pettiness of school politics and recalcitrant kids who were resistant to education. Drawn from a large neighbourhood of social housing, there were many such pupils. Sometimes it could feel as though you were banging your head against a brick wall. Couldn't I use my energy and natural abilities in a more positive, creative workplace?
Anyway, my ploy did not work but they liked me right enough. I even appeared in our local newspaper "The Sheffield Star" as the project was deemed newsworthy and it reflected well upon Camel.
Amongst other tasks, I wrote the copy for a few double-page magazine spreads, including two computer gambling games called "Casino" and "The Big Deal" - "Enough to get Cool Hand Luke hot under the collar".
On the afternoon I left Camel, they presented me with a framed version of that very advertisement. On the back was a label that read: "To Neil - from your friends in The Camel Group". I received it gratefully but it was not quite as good as being offered a career switch.
Nice to see how the other half lives, even for a couple of weeks, eh?
ReplyDeleteYou are right.
DeleteThis, I believe, is the first time you have mentioned your short stint in the world of advertising on your blog. Funnily enough, while I was considering career options for the time after I'd finish school, advertising was something I could see myself doing, too. And when I left the library, I did indeed apply for a job at an advertising agency in Ludwigsburg, housed in a mansion-like place that used to be a rich businessman's family home in the past. I was invited for an interview and was told I'd left a good impression, but in the end they decided on someone else who apparently had some previous experience. Who knows what course my life would have been taken, had I been offered the job...
ReplyDeleteThe house where "Camel" used to be looks old enough to be listed, not demolished. Shame!
We could have formed an Anglo-German advertising agency jetting weekly between Ludwigsburg and Yorkshire.
DeleteYour post prompted me to remember all of the "teaching initiatives" that came in with great fanfare and then silently withered away after a few years. Some of it was very political. After about three years of teaching, I decided that I needed to do something else as the pay was pretty lousy. I signed up for a course at a local university called "alternative careers for teachers." The course was on Saturdays. We did various activities and took some personality tests, etc. At the end of the course, everyone got their supposed right fit in a career. Ironically, mine was to be a teacher...by far. The second ranking choice (which I don't remember) was light years behind education. So I stayed in education, and looking back I have few regrets. I think advertising would have been a good career choice for you. You definitely have the creativity trait!
ReplyDeleteIf I am totally honest with myself, I feel I wasted my talents in teaching. This is sad to say but it is true.
DeleteAll of the twists and turns in our lives, led us to where we are today. At times it was a bumpy ride, and left a few scars on our beings. But all in all, we are in good places with lives well lived. If you reached one of those kids and made a difference in thier lives, you made the world a better place.
ReplyDeleteOkay. I did "reach" many of those pupils as you suggest but after almost forty years of teaching even "reaching" becomes tiresome.
DeleteProbably my favourite writer Peter Tinniswood once worked and wrote for the Sheffield Star.
ReplyDeleteYou are right.
DeleteQuestion- if you had to do it all over again, would you have gone into teaching?
ReplyDeleteAnswer - A resounding, "No!"
DeleteIndeed you can't keep everything, but digital copies are the next best thing. I digitise nearly everything I throw away.
ReplyDeleteDo you digitise your teabags?
DeletePretty cool that you got your chance to try your hand at advertising. My alternative life to nursing would have been working in a lab, doing research. It would probably have bored me out of my mind:)
ReplyDeleteYou could have been a dancer in Las Vegas Pixie.
DeleteDid you get any of your students interested in advertising or graphic arts? I wonder if any of them were inspired by your stint in advertising.
ReplyDeleteI talked about it and even constructed a short module for the careers programme but there are not very many openings in advertising in South Yorkshire.
DeleteBlogs are a good place to put your memories!
ReplyDeleteHow wonderful that you got to dabble in the industry, even though only for a fortnight. Neil, what an interesting life you've had.
ReplyDeleteThat was terrific to have the opportunity to try a completely different work experience. Is that ad company still in existence? Shame that the building is gone, looks like it had quite an interesting history.
ReplyDelete