08 Mar 2020

International Women's Day 2020

International Women's Day is once again upon us! To celebrate, Helen, our Delivery Director, spent six minutes with six of Catch's irrepressible women from across each of our teams, discussing their experience as women in the tech world and get their views on the future. 

  • Cindy, Design Associate 
  • Michael, Strategist 
  • Omnia, Senior Developer 
  • Gabriela, Developer
  • Gayleen, Senior Project Manager
  • Becca, Delivery Lead

Six Minutes with Six Women

Previously I wrote a post mulling over my thoughts and feelings as to how we try to ensure a safe, democratic and egalitarian working environment at Catch. At the time, the #MeToo movement was garnering momentum and brought the discussion of what it meant to be a woman living an agency life roaring into studios everywhere, including ours. 

For International Women’s Day this year, rather than me waxing lyrical on my own views, we caught up with women from each of our teams, all from wildly different backgrounds and with a variety of agency years under their belts. 

At Catch we focus on working out what drives each team member, so we can help them attain their goals and reach their full potential. For women, often faced with an additional layer of challenges, working out what drives us is key to ensuring we overcome those challenges, so we asked our team about the challenges they feel they’ve faced in the industry and how they overcame them.

There are challenges that I face as a developer but my passion for learning keeps me moving forward

Gabriela Savova, Front End Developer

Gabriela described her first days in the industry, thinking about what’s kept her working in tech for seven years, “I kept thinking ‘Is this for me?’ And, of course, it was. I really enjoy the fact that I work in a dynamic environment where every day I can learn different things. There are challenges that I face as a developer but my passion for learning keeps me moving forward.”

One day, the idea that women need to find a way to push themselves forward should be anachronistic, but, for now, one of our strengths is in the ability to self-motivate, to take strength from adversity. Senior Project Manager Gayleen told us about falling foul of the gender pay gap, noting: “As frustrating as it was, that experience taught me the best way to overcome that sort of challenge was through being extremely prepared to highlight and explain how my contribution has positively impacted the business. I know some people may think ‘you shouldn’t have to work harder for the same reward’, but at least now I am more confident in openly discussing my achievements whenever I need to.”

“I guess the challenge was to be heard and acknowledged in a company which was predominantly staffed by men,” Cindy, the newest member of our Strategy and Creative team said, thinking back to her previous experience.

Twelve years into her tech career, Omnia echoed Cindy’s thoughts, positing that building trust helps ease the way, “I have been working in tech for around twelve years now, and I think it’s always a challenge to work in the tech industry as a woman - it’s still a male-dominated field. You’ll always have to prove yourself, but once you gain trust, you can excel.”

I would love to see more people in senior positions (both men and women) who want to mentor females starting out in their careers. This is critical as we know the positive impact a good mentor can have

Michael Reiss, Strategist

Michael and Becca both touched on the impact of mentorship on their careers, with Becca stressing how important it is for her to pay that support forward to her team, “I’ve had the privilege of being mentored and coached by numerous inspiring and strong women and this has been instrumental in building my career and instilling a sense of self-belief so I feel a great responsibility to provide the same support to my team, to encourage their self-belief and allow them to grow in their careers.”

Michael notes that availability of mentors is one of the underlying issues, “Speaking with other female professionals, availability of mentors is an area where many women face challenges. I would love to see more people in senior positions (both men and women) who want to mentor females starting out in their careers. This is critical as we know the positive impact a good mentor can have.”
 

Despite the bad rap the tech industry (sometimes deservedly) gets, as Gayleen notes, there are massive advantages to working in an industry that’s still fairly young, “Digital agencies often don’t have the same legacies of gender or race inequality so my ambition has been nurtured and always encouraged to the same extent as everyone else in the business, irrespective of gender or race.” 

Change isn’t something that happens overnight, neither is it something that can be tackled on one front only. “Women’s status in the industry cannot be fully addressed by just focusing on the workplace,” Michael says. “How society raises women, from the subjects we’re encouraged to study to the way we’re educated about finance and the social clubs we’re encouraged to join has to improve for us to gain true equality in every industry.”

Two years on from my last post the idea of representation - of equality - in agencies has taken on a much wider context than just the heteronormative gender divide. Equality means equality for everyone and we’re all responsible for making our industry a better more welcoming place for anyone who fancies joining in. With a greater number of events and meetups fostering more open conversation on the issue of equitable treatment of everyone than ever before, we’re seeing an uptick in tangible change and in the hope for more.  

When asked whether she feels the industry is improving for women, Gayleen muses, “I think we’ve still got a long way to go but it’s clear we’re working to take steps to eradicate gender inequality in the workplace and we certainly should keep working towards that because, well, what would the disadvantage of that be?”

To close, we’ll let Gabriela have the last word: “All ladies in tech, be proud of yourselves and happy International Women's Day!”
 

25 Oct 2019

Goodbye Sketch...

Hi, I'm Sam Hainsworth, Design Lead at Catch, and I want to tell you about our Creative Team's recent move from Sketch to Figma and the benefits it has brought us in creating a more collaborative and efficient work process.

It wasn’t so long since that if you asked a designer what software they used to create just about anything, the answer would more likely have included the word ‘Adobe’.

Today, there are so many options to bring creativity to life, that a big question more often than not is: what’s the best design software out there right now? And the answer for a while was Sketch, but not anymore. 

Our hearts have been stolen by Figma.

What’s Figma you ask? In many ways, it’s exactly like Sketch…Invision, Principle, Craft, Google Drive, and Dropbox. It may sound like a Frankenstein's mess of a platform, but it’s possibly the greatest design eco-system ever built to date (my own views here...!)

Figma at heart is a web app - yes, no software needed other than a web browser - that allows Designers, Developers, and Clients to collaborate together to make beautiful creations of any kind. It's the first piece of software that has managed to combine a design tool, prototyping, and animation that allows teams to be able to work together with ease.

For the sake of this article, I’ve split it into 2 key areas (designing and prototyping ) on why we think Figma is the king.


Designing with Figma

As a design tool, Figma is A LOT like Sketch. They’ve certainly done a great job at making the transition from Sketch to Figma easy for us: the interface feels the same, we still have symbols, artboards, etc. But there are some pretty important differences.

Real-time collaboration 

Remember the first time you opened Google Docs and saw someone else typing in real-time, deep down thinking “wow, we really are in the future”, well Figma has taken the idea of real-time collaboration and applied it within their software, allowing multiple people to work on one project at once.

It might sound like you could have the classic hovering Creative Director watching your every movement from the comfort of their own seat, but it becomes such a useful tool. No more do you have 2 Designers working on multiple files and then merging their creative 2 hours later to find they’ve used different fonts weights or having to export assets for each other. This real-time collaboration lets designers have a single source of truth for each project and collaborate in tandem, rather than in silos.

Connected design systems

With many concurrent projects in an agency, one thing that can be a real struggle to keep is consistency. Over the years, projects grow and with that so do the components and styles that build these websites, apps, platforms, etc. Design systems within Sketch (or any other design tool for that matter) are static files that can often get forgotten about or duplicated along the way, creating chaos.

These systems, within Figma, act as your hymn sheet for each client; letting you store reusable assets that can be shared across the design team and projects. Figma transforms these static design systems into live breathing sources of truth (sounds a big deal, well it really is!) that can be worked on together and pulled across many different projects.

 

File management 

Now, this may sound boring, but this truly is such a game-changer: How many times have you been looking for the final creative you worked on 3 months ago, only to find 4 files all with the word ‘FINAL’ at the end of it. Or to not even be able to find where it was saved in the first place?

With Figma, all files are saved within their own cloud eco-system; allowing you to access all your files anywhere, at any time; and with their neat interface, ways of organising and sorting, it's so much easier to access the whole teams’ files.

 

Version history

Last, but by no means least, we have version history: which is again a real lifesaver and means you don’t need to create hundreds of duplicate files anymore. Figma allows you to go back in time and see how your designs have progressed, giving you the option to create key milestones in the project. 

 

Prototyping with Figma

This is where Figma gets really interesting. In the past, prototyping meant uploading your designs to Invision, Marvel, etc. and then adding interactions and repeating every time you got feedback. Figma takes that pain away and lets you prototype and present directly. Essentially, letting you create a clickable prototype and show off fully animated interactions.

Inline commenting

This feature allows anyone to comment inline with the designs you're working on, which sounds like both a blessing and a curse, but it takes the pain out of amends. Now being able to read a comment directly in your design means no more missing feedback and once the amend is done, that’s it: no need to re-upload your prototype, it’s all right there.

Animation

If prototyping wasn’t enough, Figma has recently added ‘Smart Animation’ to the mix, allowing you to quickly create smooth animations and transitions giving your prototypes that extra layer of finish and finesse.

Goodbye Sketch, it’s been emotional

Ok, we still like Sketch and it does still do a few things better than Figma, but right now Figma is in its early days and rolling out features like no tomorrow and we couldn’t be happier with where they’re taking this amazing tool.

So, for now, goodbye Sketch, it’s been emotional.

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