Skip to content

In a Creative Rut? Refresh Your Energy With These Inspiring Insights

Editor’s note: The following article was originally published in the all-digital debut issue of Chief Content Officer magazine. This new version enables us to share audio, video, and more. Check out the interview below. Or listen to or watch the 5-minute interview in the magazine. (Subscription info at end of this post.)

Dewitt Jones may not be a marketer, but he’s certainly a content master. At Content Marketing World 2018, he received a standing ovation for his inspirational and moving keynote talk.

Read on for his advice, then watch the video to see his advice in action.

CCO: You say that a key part of storytelling is looking at the ordinary and seeing the extraordinary. How do you do this?

DJ: First of all, you’ve got to believe it’s there. One of the things I talk about is there’s more than one right answer. If you don’t believe there’s more than one right answer, you will forever chase the one. And if you, god forbid, find one, you’ll stick with it for the rest of your life. If you want to be creative, you’ve got to believe there are a lot of answers. You’ve got to believe that there’s an extraordinary view out there. And then, you just begin to explore.

Last night I started taking pictures of my coffee cup at the restaurant. And the next thing I knew, there was a little light coming in that made this incredible pattern on the top of the coffee. I could’ve just drunk my coffee and never even knew that I had a cup. But I was in it. I was looking for the extraordinary in the ordinary.

And the thing that is really fascinating is that usually the difference between a good frame and a great frame is that much. (He holds his forefinger and thumb an inch apart.) You’re taking a picture of somebody’s face, they turn, the eye moves a little bit, the mouth turns up, and you’ve got it. It’s just being open and very sensitive to what’s around and believing that the next right answer’s out there.

CCO: There are times when you’re watching your coffee cup and see the magical light, but there are times when inspiration doesn’t come. How do you work through those moments? Do photographers get writer’s block?

DJ: Sure, they do. And as a pro, just like you would as a writer, I have certain things I can do, certain kinds of setups, certain kinds of looking, that I know will give me an adequate product. Not a great product, but an adequate product. I know how to move the lens, I know how to set the lights, I know how to do it. So that gets me in it, gets me working. What you don’t do then is just end there. That’s just to get you back in the game.

CCO: There’s a related concept I find helpful in what I call the quiet work: You’re not trying to get to something that would normally stand out in your world. You’re just seeding the well.

DJ: Yeah, that’s what I mean. You’re back in it, you’re not saying, “Oh, I’m blocked.” But you’re working, and you’re moving, and then you have to say, “But I’m not going to stay mediocre, I’m going to stay open to it.” The hard part is when there are five clients standing behind you. If I’m just off working by myself, that’s a lot easier. I might pick up my iPhone and go shoot for an hour of just nonsense that would get me out of it. It’s harder when there are a bunch of people standing next to you. And they expect results. Now!

CCO: You started your career as a storyteller in photographs and films. You’ve written magazine columns, collaborated on books, and done a lot with multimedia content. When you’re creating, do you start with the medium or the story?

DJ: When I’m working professionally as a photographer, I don’t get that choice. You work for (National) Geographic; you’re going to shoot stills. You do something else; you may shoot multimedia. I go on stage to give a speech, I’m going to give a speech. So it’s chosen for me. If I’m creating in and of itself, or I’m just saying, “OK, I’m going to create something,” if I see something that moves with a beginning, middle, and an end, then it’s probably going to be video. It’s going to be film. If it’s a symbol, if it’s one symbol that I want, it’s going to be a still. It’s going to be something that people will have in their mind forever. If I can link that to a concept, then I’ve really got something because stills, even though they’re really cool, they’re open ended. And the words can come in and just give you the thing that gels and makes it into a symbol.

CCO: One of my screenwriting coaches used to say, “However the idea ultimately expresses itself is how the idea should probably stay.” He wasn’t a fan of novels becoming movies or television shows becoming novels. Do you find that the expression can evolve or can change?

DJ: Sometimes, when you envision it, that’s how it stays. But I’ll come back to a still that I didn’t take for a specific reason, I just took it because it moved me, and find that that’s the perfect symbol if I match it up with words to do something, or it’s the perfect expression of a story or a metaphor that I’m trying to put out.

CCO: How do you work with an editor?

DJ: When you worked at the Geographic, you did work with an editor. And you usually met and talked with them and you worked closely with them, and they were really good at what they did. Now, (you can) look at it on your iPhone. But before, you’d send off film, and you wouldn’t see it. So, he’s telling you if it’s OK. It’s great to have a second set of eyes if you trust that set of eyes.

In advertising, sometimes I would just be the guy who made the art director’s picture come alive. But when I was really in my element, it was the art director who knew how to move me a little bit, just push me that extra bit, because he hired me for my eyes. He knew that he wanted me to do my magic and then he’d just kind of steer me, and it was fantastic.

CCO: What advice do you have for those just starting to explore their abilities as photographers and aspiring storytellers?

DJ: Two things. First of all, we have the most incredible visual sketch pad ever. It’s called the iPhone, or the Android, it doesn’t matter. I’ll shoot 50 to 100 shots a day just to keep my chops up. I’m just playing. I went for a walk yesterday before dinner and shot 50 to 60 photographs. Didn’t matter what they were of, just things that moved me. Just playing. I’ll sit on a plane and play with apps. They’re not going anywhere, they’re just for me to play.

And play is an incredible way to be creative; where you have no goal, no expected outcome, you’re just playing with it. And you just keep saying, “Well, what if I did this? Well, that’s cool. What if I did this? Oh, that’d mess it all up! What if I did this?” And you’re just playing and allowing yourself to go down paths that you never would’ve thought.

And secondly, for god’s sake, go out and look at great photographs. You say, “I want to be a photographer!” You ever look at the Geographic? “No, I never have.” Really? Go look at great photographs.

CCO: When you’re on assignment or just playing around, how do you find that hero image among the 50, 60, or even hundreds of pictures in the same setting?

DJ: I think the ones that are great just leap off the screen. You can go through a bunch of them and go, “No. No. No. No. No. No … Woah!” Now, you may get five “woahs” and then it gets a little harder. You get down to that, “Should the hand be here? Should the hand be there?” But the main setup, that’ll leap out at you. There’ll be one where the head just turned that far, and you’ll go, “There it is, there it is!” So, I don’t find that as hard as I’d thought. It finds you. And that’s gotta be an emotional reaction.

David Harvey at the Geographic said, “Don’t shoot what it looks like, shoot what it feels like,” so that when somebody looks at it, they go, “Whoa,” you know, something happens.

Get more advice from Chief Content Officer, a monthly publication for content leaders. Subscribe today to get it in your inbox.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute