Distributed design consultancy Green Stone has brought on industry vet Shantanu Rana as managing director. Rana comes to Green Stone with expertise across production, business development, and operations. He will work closely with founder and CEO Matt Walsh to continue to connect brand clients directly to top-tier talent through its uniquely designed remote model.
After a career spent in traditional agency structures, Rana is drawn to the consultancy’s different approach–a model that draws on a decentralized network of experts rather than the standard processes and hierarchies that have since been upended by the current pandemic. “During these challenging times, everyone’s had to move to a distributed model–with remote working, remote learning, and remote production,” explained Rana. “But Green Stone was built on this model and they’ve been doing it successfully for many years. It’s part of their DNA and overall culture. Would you rather fly with a pilot who has seven years of flawless service, or with one who just learned a few months ago?”
Using finely-tuned collaboration methods, the firm proves out brand promises through innovative customer experiences that earn long-term relationships through the delivering of meaningful value. “Earning loyalty through a better experience is more impactful than buying loyalty,” Rana added.
Prior to joining Green Stone, Rana spent four years founding, and building his own firm, Louder Communications, which worked with brands like Prudential, Bayer, Cox, and McGraw Hill. Before then, he led award-winning digital practices at KBS, Rosetta, and R/GA after starting his career at PwC.
Review: Director John Crowley’s “We Live In Time”
It's not hard to spend a few hours watching Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield fall and be in love. In "We Live In Time," filmmaker John Crowley puts the audience up close and personal with this photogenic British couple through the highs and lows of a relationships in their 30s.
Everyone starts to think about the idea of time, and not having enough of it to do everything they want, at some point. But it seems to hit a lot of us very acutely in that tricky, lovely third decade. There's that cruel biological clock, of course, but also careers and homes and families getting older. Throw a cancer diagnosis in there and that timer gets ever more aggressive.
While we, and Tobias (Garfield) and Almut (Pugh), do indeed live in time, as we're constantly reminded in big and small ways — clocks and stopwatches are ever-present, literally and metaphorically — the movie hovers above it. The storytelling jumps back and forth through time like a scattershot memory as we piece together these lives that intersect in an elaborate, mystical and darkly comedic way: Almut runs into Tobias with her car. Their first chat is in a hospital hallway, with those glaring fluorescent lights and him bruised and cut all over. But he's so struck by this beautiful woman in front of him, he barely seems to care.
I suppose this could be considered a Lubitschian "meet-cute" even if it knowingly pushes the boundaries of our understanding of that romance trope. Before the hit, Tobias was in a hotel, attempting to sign divorce papers and his pens were out of ink and pencils kept breaking. In a fit of near-mania he leaves, wearing only his bathrobe, to go to a corner store and buy more. Walking back, he drops something in the street and bang: A new relationship is born. It's the... Read More