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WeTransfer Ideas Report 2022 / Report

Marcus Collins on theory, practice, and professional growth

Strategy leader emphasizes how deep understanding of creative fundamentals and continuous learning drive both credibility and sustainable creative advancement

Slide 32 of 57

  1. The WeTransfer Ideas Report '22 01
  2. Report structure and section overview 02
  3. Letter from WeTransfer VP of Marketing 03
  4. Rewriting romantic myths of the creative industry 04
  5. Shattering myths about creative jobs and industry perception 05
  6. Research methodology and survey approach 06
  7. Survey of 6,000 creatives across 80 countries 07
  8. Respondent sample across creative disciplines and regions 08
  9. Three sub-groups representing creative work mindsets 09
  10. Employment status of respondents 10
  11. Section: Success definition and professional metrics 11
  12. Dream jobs myth contradicts actual creative success rates 12
  13. Creative sector reality shows hustle and compromise 13
  14. Hard work as success metric divides creative community 14
  15. Joy at work skews by race and professional identity 15
  16. Chantée Joseph on ownership and creative autonomy 16
  17. Section: Motivation, compensation, and autonomy 17
  18. Creatives prioritize purpose and values over salary 18
  19. 60% of creators earn income from social media posts 19
  20. Raven Smith on continuous learning and creative growth 20
  21. About one-third of creatives changed jobs in 2021 21
  22. What matters most for creative success 22
  23. Section: Work culture and professional sacrifice 23
  24. Creatives accept personal sacrifice as creative industry norm 24
  25. Agency staff and content creators lead burnout rates 25
  26. Olivia Lopez on globalized creative work challenges 26
  27. Two-thirds claim burnout experience 27
  28. Creatives want to work on saying no 28
  29. Section: Self-promotion and professional visibility 29
  30. Creatives underestimate accomplishment visibility importance 30
  31. Younger creatives embrace self-promotion more openly 31
  32. Marcus Collins on theory, practice, and professional growth 32
  33. Self-promotion is key to getting ahead 33
  34. Independent study outpaces formal education for creatives 34
  35. Content creators find greatest joy in independent work 35
  36. Section: Emerging technologies and future outlook 36
  37. Autonomy as top allure of becoming content creator 37
  38. Marty Bell on blockchain and crypto funding for creators 38
  39. Content creation may not lead to lasting enrichment 39
  40. 80% of creatives misunderstand emerging technologies 40
  41. Art of touting accomplishments as survival necessity 41
  42. Reality check on creative industry myths 42
  43. How to interpret findings and identify sub-groups 43
  44. Featured creative voices and expert contributors 44
  45. How creatives define success 45
  46. Success perspectives across creative disciplines 46
  47. Technical, tactical, and creative skills creatives want to develop 47
  48. Career wisdom from creative professionals across sectors 48
  49. Experience is the most underrated creative skill 49
  50. Whose career do creatives admire and envy 50
  51. Career insights from creatives across disciplines 51
  52. What gives creatives optimism for the future 52
  53. Hope and fears for the creative industry 53
  54. Cautious optimism despite structural industry challenges 54
  55. The most indispensable career advice creatives received 55
  56. WeTransfer founded 2009 as file transfer platform 56
  57. The WeTransfer Ideas Report '22 closing 57

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