Wednesday 23 October 2019

Why Animation Graduates Need Linkedin

Tiffany Feeny, Ted Ty, Alex Williams, Jan-Bart Van Beek
How do animation graduates break into the industry? At this week's VIEW conference in Turin I was invited onto a recruitment panel hosted by New York's School of Visual Arts, hosted by SVA's Director of Career Development Angie Wojak.

Also on the panel was the recruiter Tiffany Feeney of Talent Outpost, an independent recruitment agency based in Switzerland.

Tiffany's big message to recent graduates looking for work?  "Be on Linkedin".

Escapee Laura Knight, animator at Jellyfish Pictures
Be on Linkedin
Tiffany stressed the importance of students and recent graduates having a well-curated Linkedin profile. As Tiffany put it: "I live on Linkedin"

Linkedin is where recruiters go to find talent, and find out what talent is now available - or will be available soon.  Above all, Linkedin is "your brand". 

Go Fishing Where the Fish Are
Recruiters are on Linkedin every day. If you want to catch a recruiter (metaphorically speaking) you need to go fishing at Linkedin. 

Update your profile - are you available?
You should update your status regularly. For recruiters, availability of talent is key. Are you looking for work right now, in a month's time, or three months? If you are looking for work, make sure you say you are available. If you know you will be free in a couple of months, say so.

"Available for Work"
Recruiters are often looking for talent to begin work on a project a few months down the road. Your status at Linkedin should say that you are "available for work" or, if your contract is coming to an end, "available for work from [date]".

Ted Ty of L"Atelier
Demo Reel & Website
Ted Ty, animation supervisor at L'Atelier in Montreal, explained that your animation demo reel ideally should be hosted at Vimeo, not YouTube (Vimeo is more professional), but please don't password-protect it.  Demo reels should have contact details (phone, email, website) at the front and the back end of the reel, to make artists easy to contact. 

You can have your own blog or website, but both Tiffany and Ty argued it's easiest to host your work at Behance.net or Artstation. But above all, be easy to find - and easy to contact; make your contact details clear. Don't make recruiters work hard to track you down.

Games reel
Jan-Bart Van Beek, Art and Animation Director at Guerrilla Games in Amsterdam, explained that an animation reel for the games industry needs lots of physical actions, as games animators need to be very proficient in body mechanics.

Games Animators are "Stunt Co-Ordinators"
Games animators are not actors, they are "stunt co-ordinators". It takes a while to break into the games industry so you need to be uploading your work to games sites and showing your progress over time; recruiters and industry folks will watch your progress and keep an eye on you.  The key is to be persistent and not give up.  

Embed your Demo Reel at LinkedIn
Always embed your demo reel at Linkedin so that recruiters can quickly access your reel. To see how to embed your demo reel at LinkedIn, follow this link. Or watch the video below:

 


Linkedin profile of Martin Kamminga at Escape Studios
LinkedIn Checklist
  • Be on Linkedin. Sign up now!
  • Make sure your latest demo reel is clearly visible at the top of your profile and easy to find. Remember, studios hire principally on the strength of your demo reel. 
  • Connect to all the animation recruiters you can find. They will connect with you. 
  • Make your LinkedIn profile attractive - design your own custom banner that brands you as an artist - don't use the default blue background. 
  • Upload a nice picture of yourself - not an avatar, not your cat.
  • If you are available for work, say so. Your profile should say "3D animator - available for work". Or "available for work from [date]".
  • Embed Your Demo Reel at LinkedIn

The Escape Studios Animation Blog offers a personal view on the art of animation and visual effects.  

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