Familiar Creatures

How a Virtual Advertising ‘Camp’ Saved Internships For 200 Students

 

ADAGE | August 6, 2020

When the pandemic scuttled summer programs, Camp ADventure stepped in with speakers, college credit and pitching to a real client

 

By Luke Guilory 

Shortly after graduating from Virginia Commonwealth University in December, 2019, Courtney Foster saw peers at VCU and around the world lose their internships because of the pandemic. Foster, a media buyer at The Martin Agency, wanted to help.

 

What was conceived as a “rinky dink undergrad program” with workshops and portfolio reviews grew into “Camp ADventure,” a virtual summer camp with 200 campers from 64 U.S. and U.K. universities who, among other projects, developed creative to present to the International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children (ICMEC).

 

Foster initially got in touch with Jessica Collins, an assistant VCU professor and faculty advisor of the Ad Club at VCU, and Kevin Nguyen, a strategy intern at MullenLowe Boston who graduated from VCU this spring. They sent out a survey in the first week of May to gauge demand for a workshop and portfolio review program—receiving more than 300 applications.

“I think it just goes to show that like a lot of students were just looking for something to keep them busy, especially since a lot of internships were being rescinded,” Nguyen says. 

Deciding to offer more than a portfolio review, the group hit the accelerator. In May, they lined up guest speakers and reached out to ICMEC, which immediately came on board. 

“I got my MBA once upon a time and participated in something similar to this, and really enjoyed that experience,” Jeff Swingle, executive fundraising consultant at ICMEC, says. “Also getting students focused on cause-related work is always something I want to jump on. I think it's really important to have young marketers looking toward important, mission-driven work.”

‘Small agency’ bunks


At camp—which is run by the Ad Club at VCU—the campers were broken into 28 “bunks” that functioned as small agencies. Foster, Nguyen and Collins made sure every bunk had strategists, art directors, and copywriters. Each bunk worked on one of three RFPs provided by ICMEC. These include a comprehensive rebrand, an awareness campaign for International Missing Children’s Day and a multichannel marketing campaign focused on funding and donorship. 

After working for the past two months, each bunk submitted a five-minute case study video highlighting research, the brief and execution, as well as an in-depth presentation deck to be judged by industry professionals. Ten bunks were selected to go on to client judging by ICMEC, which narrowed the work to three winners—one for each RFP. Winners were presented on a Zoom call with campers, clients and the camp's guest speakers. 

“We're a young organization, in terms of our marketing programs. We've been around for 20 years doing fantastic work, but we're only just beginning in terms of building a public presence,” Swingle says. “So, in that regard we are very open to using anything and everything. If great ideas come out of this, then we'll definitely capture them and run with them.”

The work for ICMEC is pro bono, and ICMEC can take aspects it likes and incorporate them into similar campaigns in the future. As for the campers, the top three bunks won informational interviews with the talent division of major agencies, including The Many, Chiat, Sylvain Labs, Butler Shine Stern & Partners and others. The Best in Show team received invites to the annual ICMEC gala in April, 2021, and were invited to be part of a creative advisory committee for ICMEC.

Side hustles


As more campers joined, Collins says, they made different requests of Camp ADventure, ranging from portfolio reviews to credit for school. Some earned credit working with Richmond, Virginia, agency Familiar Creatures, researching and creating strategic platforms in a rebranding campaign for James Madison’s Montpelier estate. Other worked with Black Woman Owned, an online community using social media to increase revenue and online visibility of businesses owned by Black women. A. Walton Smith, the community’s founder, connected campers with businesses for which they filled a variety of roles. 

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