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#it's clear that using 100% original logos is the next big thing in the digital marketing arena
selfmadebd · 2 months
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AI Logo Studio Review: Create and sell logos in 3 easy-click
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AI Logo Studio - Welcome to my deep review article. More than 78% of Fortune 500 companies use attention-grabbing logos to attract audience attention. So, it's clear that using 100% original logos is the next big thing in the digital marketing arena, and business owners across the globe are leaving no stone unturned to use them in their marketing arsenal.
AILogo Studio Brand New, First to Market AI Tech Creates Thousands Of Stunning, 100% Original Logos From Any Keyword For Any Offer In Any Niche In 60 Seconds Or Less. With Zero Designing, Zero Photoshop Skills, and Zero Hiring Expensive Designers.
💥What is AI Logo Studio?
AI Logo Studio is the world's first AI-powered app that creates beautiful, unique logos and icons with just a single prompt or keyword, even for any business in any niche, in 60 seconds. Or Less With Zero Designing | Zero Photoshop Needed | Zero Hiring Expensive.
Designers: Only 3 Quick Clicks: Make $678.82 Daily, Turn Any Keyword Into Incredible Logos, and Sell Directly To Your Clients From Your Own Fiverr-like Marketplace. Click here for more info>>>]💵💵💵💥💥
💥It works in 3 easy steps:
✅Step #1: Login 
✅Step #2: Insert Keyword
✅Step #3: Sell and Profit
💥AI Logo Studio Review - Overview:
***Creator***
Loveneet Rajora
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💹Product: AI Logo Studio
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💹Launch Date: 07th July -2024
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💹Launch Time: 11:00 Am Est
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💹Front-End Price: $17
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💹Contents: Software (Online)
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💹Support: Effective Response
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💹Recommended: Highly Recommended
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 💹Discount Coupon Code:  Yes, Use Coupon Code [VIPLOGOS ] Instant $5 Discount 
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💹Bonus: Yes, Huge Bonuses
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💹Refund: Yes, 30 Days 100% Money-Back Guarantee
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💹Skill Level Needed: All Levels
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💥AI Logo Studio Review: Features
First-to-Market AI Tech Converts Any Keyword Into Eye-Catchy Business Logos In Multiple Niches and Languages In 3 Clicks
Fire Your Expensive Designers and Cancel Expensive Monthly Subscriptions
Zero Grunt Work: Just Insert a Keyword, and Our Engine Does Everything For You
Create thousands of mind-blowing, 100% unique logos with just an idea, keyword, or prompt.
Sell These Amazing World-Class Logos on Your Own Fiverr and Upwork-like marketplace and Stop Paying Huge Commissions
Browse our HUGE library of 1000's of done-for-you, expertly crafted logo templates.
Upload and sell your own logos to tons of hungry customers globally.
Download and use logos in various formats, such as PNG, JPG, SVG, and PDF.
Get 10X More Traction By Using These Beautiful Logos Anywhere You Like
Use multi-industry-friendly logos that force visitors to get hooked on your brand.
Craft a separate entity from your competition without lifting a finger.
Easily Use Yourself or Sell Them To Your Clients Directly For Huge Profits...
Zero logo creation, zero Photoshop, zero third parties, and zero freelancers are needed.
Limited-Time Commercial License Included To Sell Unlimited AI Logos For Top Dollar To Your Clients
Nothing to Download, Install, or Customize: "GGet Started in Seconds.
Limited Time Offer: Get Premium Bonuses Worth $16,458
Iron-Clad 30-Day Money-Back Guarantee Included.
💥💥Read more info>>>>>>>>>
💥AI Logo Studio Review - Benefits
First-to-Market AI Tech Converts Any Keyword Into Eye-Catchy Business Logos In Multiple Niches and Languages In 3 Clicks
Fire Your Expensive Designers and Cancel Expensive Monthly Subscriptions
Zero Grunt Work: Just Insert a Keyword, and Our Engine Does Everything For You
Create thousands of mind-blowing, 100% unique logos with just an idea, keyword, or prompt.
Sell These Amazing World-Class Logos on Your Own Fiverr and Upwork-like marketplace and Stop Paying Huge Commissions
Browse our HUGE library of 1000’s of done-for-you, expertly crafted logo templates.
Upload and sell your own logos to tons of hungry customers globally.
Download and use logos in various formats, such as PNG, JPG, SVG, and PDF.
Get 10X More Traction By Using These Beautiful Logos Anywhere You Like
Use multi-industry-friendly logos that force visitors to get hooked on your brand.
Craft a separate entity from your competition without lifting a finger.
Easily Use Yourself or Sell Them To Your Clients Directly For Huge Profits...
Zero logo creation, zero Photoshop, zero third parties, and zero freelancers are needed.
Limited-Time Commercial License Included To Sell Unlimited AI Logos For Top Dollar To Your Clients
Nothing to Download, Install, or Customize Get Started in Seconds. 
Why AI Logo Studio Deserves Serious Attention
Stunning AI Technology Creates Thousands of Attention-Grabbing Logos in 3 Easy Clicks
Never Spend A Single Dime Extra; Get Tons Of Mind-Boggling Incredible Logos For Your Clients 
No Third-Party Dependency: Our AI Tech Instantly Drives Tons of Targeted Traffic On Your Offers
Use just 10 minutes. Create tons of conversion-boosting logos for any niche.
No Freelancers Needed, This Advanced Tech Creates Mind-Breaking Logos All by Itself
Put AI Logo Studio into action and watch stunning business logos created even when you’re on the move.
💥Watch AI Logo Studio in action. 
Zero Logo Creation Skills
Zero Photoshop usage
Zero Manual: Work Yourself
Zero freelancers are needed.
Zero-Tech Hassles
Zero Extra Monetization Efforts
Zero Third Party Dependency
And the coolest part is that you’re getting launch-exclusive bonuses if you act today. 
💥 AI Logo Studio Review - Bonuses:
💵💵Exclusive Bonus
✅Exclusive Bonus 1: VizualAI [FE + OTO1 + Reseller]: It is an AI graphic editor and content writer. You can generate 66+ content types from text, and you can edit or create any social media post images from 2000+ templates. 
✅Exclusive Bonus 2: VortexAI Studio [FE+OTO1 + Reseller]: Create your own Google stories and make more engagement and sales.
💵💵💵💵<<< Read More…….
Thanks for reading the AI Logo Studio Review till the end, and I hope it will help you make your decision. 
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gourdgirlmagazine · 4 years
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Criminal Minds FanFic- The Interview
You step into the elevator and press the button that says 9. You take a step back as the doors start to close and you take a deep breath to prepare yourself for the jolt when the elevator starts to move. The box slowly starts moving to the 9 floor of the FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit Headquarters.L, 2, 3 The screen shows as the elevator slowly goes up. Today is the interview you have been waiting for ever since the presentation that was held at your college about the bau. You shift awkwardly and adjust your bag, 5,6,7. Ever since then you wanted to become a profiler and today you are finally gonna get a shot at making you dream come true. Although it's not the exact job you wanted, it's the closest you will get. Deep in thought you are alarmed by the ding of the doors before they slowly open to reveal the BAU floor.
You quickly step out before the doors get called to the next floor. You sigh in awe of the sight of the place that you could possibly work at. As the doors close behind you, you start to walk up to the big glass doors that separate the elevators and hallways from the hussle of the offices and cubicles. You pull open one of the glass doors with the bau logo on it and you are hit with the beautiful sound of work. A printer is printing something in the distance. A phone is ringing. People are typing on their computers. An agent is laughing while talking to another agent. And the strong smell of sweat and coffee. You knew you just had to work here.
You were so immersed by the smell, sounds, and sights that you don't see the guy, whose head is stuck in a book, quickly walking to the doors. And you take a step forward, you clash right into him.
“Er um sorry,” he mumbles.
You didn't pick up what he said out of surprise from the impact “Huh? Oh I'm so sorry. I should have watched where I was going. Are you ok?”
“Yah I'm fine. The projectile of our collison was slow enough that it's isn't possible for either one of us to have any physical harm, just embarrassment.” He says. You make eye contact with him and you glance at his id which says, Ried, Spencer which a picture of him slouched and his hair moved to the side. He looked nothing like his picture. His hair was parted down the middle with volume and he was wearing glasses. No to mention the fact of how innocent he looked in the picture compared to the man who you were standing in front of.
“Wow. Way to throw me under the bus.”
“No No No i didn't mean it like that i'm just saying that i am physically fine and you should be too but bumping into someone leads to embarrassment. I know that I am not embarrassed because this has happened to me many times before but from your body langued, I can tell that you are embarrassed or uncomfortable. Can also tell that you are new here”
“How did you”
As he starts to go he touches your lover back to move around you and whispers in your ear, “i can see it in your eyes” And walks away. You inhale and smell aftershave and something sweet but you can't quite put your finger on what it is. “Oh and by the way newbie, Hochners room is 2011”
In shock by your encounter, you recollect yourself and take a deep breath in and out and walk to the room number that was that the mysterious man said- room 2011. You walk up the stairs while being on high alert to not bump into anyone else. Once you reach the room, the door reads, Aaron Hotchner. You knock three times and wait for the sound of approval. Aaron you thought.
“Come in”. A muffled voice says.
You slowly open the door and walk in, closing the door behind you. “Hi Im y/f/n and i am here for the interview to be your new communications coordinator.”
“Ah yes. Please take a seat. Did you bring your resume?” He asks while he pushes the send button on his computer and turns to face you. He was wearing a blue shirt and a green tie. On the shirt there was one spot that wasnt all the way unwrinkle. No wife you thought if he leaves the house like this. Single. 
“Yes sir, I did.” you fumble through your purse and pull out the file which you slide over to the agent. “I just finished academy training for the FBI and I am a graduate of Yale with a major in cognitive science and phycology and sociology and I minored in forecnics and was at the top of my class.”
He cuts you off “Okok no need to show off. I can tell you are very ambitious and that you are a hard worker. That is something that the BAU wants. Our last coordinator was ambitious just like you. She sadly had to be transferred so our digital analysis has been taking over but i feel as though we need an experienced communications coordinator, but i don't see anything about communications on your resume. Tell me more about that.”
“Well I originally was hoping to be a profiler but there were no spots so when i heard that you needed a communications coordinator for a little. I knew i had to try it out because maybe after you can see my skills, you would make an exception to add me to your team.”
“y/l/n, we are looking for someone with experience in talking to the press and police, not a young just out of the academy woman who is successful in school. No disrespect to your desire but if you don't have the experience for this job then you are wasting my time.”
“Wait, I do have experience, i took classes in public speaking and you know by my quick learning and adaptability, that i will do just fine in this job...”
He cuts you off and says “But fine isn't enough at the BAU. Thank you for your time Ms y/l/n.”
“Can you just try?” you fight back the pilling tears and stand up “You said yourself that you had a digital whatever who has been taking over for her and she is a F*CKING TECH LADY. I feel like I can do a lot better than that. I am experienced in so many other things that it would be a big opportunity to pass up.” then the tears release and you start to cry.
Hotchner is speechless and has no clue what to do now. He awkwardly passes over a box of tissues and clears his throat. You reluctantly grab a tissue and wipe the stream of tears away and grab another one to blow your nose. You take a second to catch your breath before making eye contact with Hotchner as he straightens his tie in discomfort. “Not an emotional one, are you?” you smirkingly say sarcastically.
“Most people say i have an aloof, grim or distant personality.” He says.
“Oh sh*t Im so sorry.”
“Watch your profanity, Ms y/l/n”
“Sorry. Um but anyways, I apologize for crying, I am just a very passionate person who strives to reach their goals and i didnt want this opportunity to pass. I am 100% sure I have ruined it all for yelling at my potential boss and then sobbing. What a great first impression. Way to go y/n”
“Well beside that fact that you were yelling, you did make some valid points. I was being a little bit biased and unfair for letting our digital analysis take the spot for a while and not giving you a chance. I too am very passionate about my dreams and one of my dreams is to have a working team and I too don't want to have my opportunities slip. How about we make a deal because I like your work and your passion. Tomorrow we have a briefing for a new case, you can sit in and watch but try to keep it low-key. After you give me a profile on the unsub and how you will address the press and police on what things to look out for. If all goes well, I would like it if you come along with us. You and our digital analyst will work together to notify the press and police and so on. Does that sound good?” Hotchner says.
“That would be better than anything. Thank you for giving me a second chance and giving me this wonderful opportunity. I promise I won't disappoint you.” you say.
“I hope not. In the meantime i think it would be helpful for you to meet our tech analyst, Penelope Garcia.” Says Hotchner as he stands up from his chair and you follow him out the door of his office.
Thank you so much for reading. You can probably tell that this is my first time but hopefully it wasn't that obvious! I will work on part 2 if you want but this is also the beginning of something new so I think this sort of needs a part 2 and the story is a long way from finished. We haven't even meet our favorite techie, Penelope Garcia! Good Night.
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themeshopy · 3 years
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         Get Maximum From WP Theme Bundle At Minimum Spending
This is the ideal guide on how to make money with the WP theme bundle. Whether you’re just beginning out or you’ve been making a livelihood with WordPress Theme Bundle Sale for over a long period, this guide is for you!
There’s a variety of ways to ramp up sales for your digital products, from sales to increased marketing efforts, but creating bundles is one of the most potentially effective ones. They let you sell more products and get a bigger community around your brand, all while bringing in more revenue and giving your customers more value for their money.
The write-up below is all about how to utilize the WordPress theme Bundle in the most effective way for your business. Detailing topics such as how to pick products that are a good match for bundling together and how to price these bundles it’s full of information to get you to sell product bundles in a correct and effective way.
In Customers Way
Bundles are one of the easiest ways to get more of your products into the inboxes of your clients, all whilst giving clients the extra value of their expense. They generally contain multiple products that appeal to certain audiences, cover a particular area of interest or specialty, or offer an enticing content variety. But, what more makes them so effective? Here’s the process to do bundles right.
To help you get the maximum out of your digital products – and get those bundles happening! Keeping this in mind, we’ve put together some tips and tricks to ponder upon.
Repurpose Your Products
If you’ve got products that have been idle on the digital shelves for a while, consider bundling them with newer products to get them on stage.
Since bundles have such a good psychological effect on the customer when it comes to perceived value, they present an opportunity to bring in some money where you might have been stuck behind.
Combine mature products with similar or related newer products, or include them in bigger “extra value” wp theme Bundle. Repurposing doesn’t apply to past products only, though; you can replenish your storefront by building new and different bundles variants containing all types of products in variety.
Combine Similar Products
One of the classic strategies for building product bundles is to sell similar products. This impacts people looking for a specific product type, as they can walk away with a big amount of content that is of advantage to the – content that they will have a lot of use out of! Since these customers are already predisposed to be interested in products of a specific nature, they are more likely to be willing to spend more in a wish to get those products combined value at a reduced price.
Upsell Bundles At The Checkout
Another way to come towards similar (or complementary) products is at the checkout to upsell them, where you can moreover entice customers who have already shown they’re willing to buy your products. Just like product add-ons, bundles permit customers to easily add value to what they are purchasing – and you can present the offer in several ways, from percentage savings to dollar-off amounts and time-bound offers.
Sell Your Most Popular Products Together
Got some highest-sellers that are flying off the metaphorical shelves? You might decide to combine them to magnify the effect even further! A bundle of sought-after products can be one of the greatest appealing offers in your digital store, giving customers a super high-value option that they just surely accept. You could make this an early bird, exclusive offer to stimulate sales quickly or offer the bundle at certain times of the year to cash in on popular holidays and trends.
Create Specialized Or Themed Bundles
Perhaps you create digital art and graphic products, and you need to give incentives to your clients who are interested in learning graphic design. To get started you could create a bundle that contains anything they need, such as Adobe Illustrator project files, how-to guides, vector packs, textures, and fonts – all in one. Maybe you’re selling software and you want to offer your customers more than original deals on related templates, presets, and tutorials.
Get Creative With Different Product Types
Another way to get creative with your bundles is to focus on combining different kinds of products; this could cover a variety of formats like audio, video, images, and text, or add different product types like eBooks, photographs, and digital courses. Different product or media types keep things engaging for the buyer, and can catch traffic from different angles. This strategy could be applied in combo with repurposed products, upsells, or Wp Theme Bundle for extra impact!
Sell One Big “Mega Bundle”
One way to inspire some pretty heavy purchases is to offer a large, comprehensive bundle that includes every product within a certain category – or even all the products in your store. Needless to say, this can give some ridiculous savings to your customers, and your bigger spenders may be specifically motivated to bite!
This was all about how to sell and how to create bundles. Now we will look into the actual Themeshopy wp theme bundle features and functionalities.
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All themes are super responsive and they give you customization options. You can make any modifications as per your need, for instance changing the logo, font, color, images, etc. social media icons are also integrated which ensures you more popularity within less time. In addition, you are provided all these useful WP themes in one bundle.  
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Demo Content: The demo content that is facilitated in each of our themes is for your advantage. You can use these demos readily and set up a web page, as demos are very useful to use as a beginning point of your website. To get started it is an effective way.
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The Life Cycle of Plastic Bottles - Production
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These are my initial ideas and development before creating my motion graphic. I started by creating a mind map to generate some ideas and I picked the ideas that i think would be best and most interesting to make a motion graphic about. From here I started making some sketches on how I could make the logo and text look in it. I also drew a rough storyboard out to visualise how I want my animation to look. I drew each slide I wanted and how I thought it would look best. 
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This is the digital storyboard that I created using Illustrator. In this, I visualise my ideas better to properly show how I imagine it to look, using basic assets and some text. It shows how I want the lay each slide out as I give a brief description under each panel. Some colours I’ve used aren’t my final ideas. I plan to change it depending on the transitions I use. For example, I think the way it goes from a green background to a blue and then back to green seems a bit all over the place. So I may change the background to a dark blue for the Effect slides. 
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After this, I started to develop my animation in After Effects. I started by creating my assets. I used Illustrator for any assets that will already have a background and Photoshop for any assets I want to have a transparent background so I can import it directly into the animation. For example, the title card I did in Illustrator by creating a plastic bottle vector and using it within my letters to make it look unique. I created the letters myself too using the pen tool or shapes. I chose to use a dark blue background as I thought this would be suitable for the theme of plastic bottles as my illustration is plastic water bottles. I used a light blue for the bottle vector and used the same blue for the letters so it blends in and looks like a natural typeface. 
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The next thing I did was create my Earth vector that I had planned to use based on my storyboard. I used the eliptical marquee tool and created a blue circle as the base and water of the Earth. I then used the pen tool to create the shapes of the continents based on images I used as a reference from Google. I chose a light pastel green to go with the blue as I thought these two colours go well together and would look good on the dark blue background I plan to have in the sequence of my animation. 
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Next, I wanted to create a vector for when I talk about global warming. So I thought an obvious vector to represent that would be the Earth vector I used but with fire around it. To create this, I duplicated my Earth vector and drew out fire around it using the pen tool and a bright orange fill colour. I also added a circle the size of the Earth and painted it the same orange but reduced the opacity so I can cover the whole vector and make it look like it’s all on fire.
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Next I created a vector for when I talk about effects and landfills. I decided to create a silhouette of a bin truck and landfill next to it. I used the pen tool to create the shape of the landfill and the shape tools for the truck. I added windows the same colour as the background I will be using in the animation so it looks clear in it. 
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Next, I created the vector for the ocean and fish which I will also be talking about in my animation. I used the pen tool to create the waves and created three versions of it, each in different shades, so that it shows the depth of the ocean and makes it look less simple. I duplicated the bottle vector and used it in my vector and resized it to an appropriate size. I created the fish using the elliptical marquee tool and the polygonal tool for the fins and used the pen tool to create the face. After this I created the six-pack holder using the elliptical marquee tool and kept duplicated it till there are six of them aligned together and used the pen tool to fill in the gap between them. For the fish, bottles and six-pack holders, I reduced the opacity for them all to they look darker. This makes it look like they’re actually underwater and that there is water in front of them that makes them less visible.
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Next I opened up a new composition in After Effects. I created a solid fill layer for the background and chose the colour of the background in my title card so it blends while I animate it.
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After this, I imported my title asset into the composition. I animated the positioning of the asset by making it like a slideshow. It slides up into the screen as if it is being pulled up from above.
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After this I used the type tool and created the sub title for what aspects of water bottles my animation will be about, which is about the best and worst recycling rates in the world and the effects of not recycling. I coloured the text the same colour as the original title card so it stays consistent. I animated this the same way I did for the title card by positioning it so that it moves up along with the title. This makes it look like it’s all one page and makes the animation itself flow better.
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From here, I added the transition for the next slide by using a ripple effect I’ve learned previously. I made four circles, each a different shade, darkest being the biggest and lightest being the smallest, and made them all expand by animating the scale. They all expand at the same time from 0-100% except the final and lightest circle which expands all the way so it covers the screen and is used as a background for the next part of my animation.
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Next, I started the next bit of my animation. I imported the Earth vector and animated the position so it comes in from the corner of the screen. It also moves along with the text I used for the title of what I’ll be talking about next. The 4 rows of the text come from 4 different directions and also disappear from the opposite direction it came from, while the Earth vector shrinks to 0%, leaving the background plain for the next part.
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The next sequence in my animation focuses on the best and worst rates of recycling. For this I used a bar chart to show the stats. I only focused on the best and worst as I thought everything in between wouldn’t matter as much, therefore the bar chart doesn’t involve all the countries and is only used to present the best and worst rates. The bars all rise up from the bottom of the graph to the size I thought would be best. I did this by animating the scale and changing it from 0% to whatever I wanted. After this I added an arrow and animated it using trim paths so it extends out and points at the flag. After this, the opacity of everything on the slide, except the background, reduces to 0%.
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Next, I started talking about what the countries do to get such a good or bad rate of recycling. The flags appear by animating the opacity from 0-100%. After the flag appears, text starts showing up next to it in an effect where it looks it is being typed up. I did this by adding an effect to my text known as “typewriter”. I added the same effect for the next flag and text.
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From there, everything on my page disappears with the opacity so it’s a blank green background. This green background then shrinks the same way it expanded with the ripple effect but in reverse. I did this by arranging the keyframes the same way, but making it go from a high to a low percentage, instead of low to high.
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Behind the ripple effect, there is a new slide with the original dark blue background. On this slide, it begins the next part of my animation, which will be discussing the effects of not recycling. For this, I used the vector I created of the Earth on fire to represent global warming. I also asked the question of what the effects are so the view knows what the next sequence will be about.
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The next transition I added was making the Earth vector expand where the fire is so it creates a new orange background for the next part of the animation. I did this by moving my anchor point to the fire and animating the scale from the original size till it’s big enough the fill up the whole screen. 
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After that I began the next part of the animation where I talk about the actual effects with the orange background. I made the vector of the truck and landfill appear by changing the opacity from 0-100%. As soon as the vector appears, the text shows up talking about landfill. I added the typewriter effect to the text on this slide too. Then, everything on the page except the background disappears by changing the opacity back down to 0%. 
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The vector of the ocean and fish the appears from the bottom by changing the position the same way I did with the logo at the start. This vector comes up about halfway through the screen leaving enough space above it for some text explaining the effects on the ocean. This text also shows up with the typewriter effect as I thought it would keep it consistent with the rest of my animation. 
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The last part of my animation is how it started. The Life Cycle Of Plastic Bottles logo drops down and finishes off my animation. I thought this would be a good idea as it would be sort of abrupt for it to finish on the ocean slide. So I thought finishing it the same way it started would be a suitable way to signify that it is the end of my animation. 
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These are all the sounds I’ve used in my animation. I got all my sounds from freesound.org and used multiple sounds that I thought would be appropriate for each slide in my animation. It starts with simple intro music I found up until the slide with the bar chart. After that, I used a typewriter sound effect for when the text starts to appear. I used an explosion sound for when the global warming vector expands to make it seem like it’s blowing up. I used a reversing truck beeping noise when I talk about landfill and ocean sounds when I talk about how not recycling affects ocean life. 
youtube
This is my final animation. Throughout it, I made sure all my keyframes were set to Easy Ease as this allows the movement of my assets and text to be smooth and more natural. I also ensured whenever text appears on the screen, there is a few seconds pause to allow the viewer to read all the text, before transitioning to the next slide.
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dyernews · 6 years
Text
2019 Pay with GasBuddy Review: Yes, You Can Legitimately Save Money Every Time You Fill
I don’t remember what it was like to drive to new places before I had GPS on my phone — how did I get anywhere? Similarly, I don’t know how I survived road trips before I had GasBuddy to lead me to the best gas stations along the way. Given this reliance, you’d think I would have learned about their Pay with GasBuddy feature sooner. Alas, it was only a few months ago that it was brought to my attention.
Put simply, the value proposition of Pay with GasBuddy is that you can use a special card that’s accepted at most gas stations in order to save a few cents off of every gallon of gas you buy. That sounds good — almost too good, if you think like me. However, after getting a chance to test the service out, I can report that Pay with GasBuddy really does work and could be a great feature for some drivers.
With that background, let’s take a closer look at what Pay with GasBuddy is and how it could save you money on the road.
Signing Up for Pay with GasBuddy and How it Works
The first thing you should know about Pay with GasBuddy is that it is completely free to sign-up and start using the service. All you’ll need to do is either select the Pay with GasBuddy option in the app or go to their website to begin the process. On top of basic information like your name, address, and phone number, you’ll also be asked to link a checking account. Keep in mind that the account you select will be the one that’s charged whenever you use the service.
After you sign-up, a Pay with GasBuddy card will be shipped to (again — this is all free). To the untrained eye, these look like any regular credit or debit cards except that it lacks an EMV chip or Visa/Mastercard/etc. logo. Before using your new card, you’ll also be asked to create a Driver ID number, which will essentially function as a PIN.
Once your card is activated, you’re ready to go. You’ll be able to insert your card at the pump or most stations and automatically save 10¢ per gallon on your first fill-up and 5¢ per gallon after that. Alternatively, thanks to a partnership with Sears, you can elect to earn Shop Your Way CASHBACK points instead, earning 30¢ per gallon in points for your first 60 days and 15¢ per gallon after that. These points can then be redeemed at Sears and K-Mart locations as well as online.
GasBack Offers There is another way to save using Pay with GasBuddy and that is via their GasBack offers. Similar to how Ebates or Dosh offers result in cash back, taking advantage of deals offered by multiple online retailers in the “Savings” section of the app will deliver a percentage (or flat dollar amount) of your purchase in GasBack. For example, current offers include 8% GasBack from Reebok, 3% from Hotwire, $5 from SiriusXM, as well as many others.
To earn GasBack, you’ll want to shop at the participating retailers using the links found in the GasBuddy app. Also note the “Fine Print” for each offer that will list what types of items will be eligible, how long your GasBack will take to process, and more. Once you’ve received your GasBack, you’ll be able to spend it using your Pay with GasBuddy card. Plus, these savings come in addition to the 5¢ per gallon off you’d normally receive.
Personally I have yet to try out any GasBack offers but I will say that GasBuddy does seem to have a pretty decent line-up. Unfortunately, since you’ll need to use their link for purchases, these offers would likely have to take the place of those you’d get from Ebates or others. That means GasBack is just one more thing to consider when you’re shopping for the best deals online.
Using Pay with GasBuddy
On their website, GasBuddy says that their service works at most gas stations — calling out a few where it doesn’t work while showcasing logos of a few that do. Since my local station was not explicitly listed, I was very skeptical when I went to insert my Pay with GasBuddy card for the first time. Since that time, I have noticed that stations that don’t support Pay with GasBuddy are actually noted in the app. For example, next to Sam’s Club, there’s a small icon of a card with a circle and slash through it next to the station’s address. For what it’s worth, Sam’s is one of only a handful of stations in my area that don’t accept the card.
To my surprise, after swiping my card, the pump prompted me to enter my Driver ID. Once that was done, I was good to select my fuel grade and start pumping. Admittedly, at this point, I still wasn’t 100% clear on how Pay with GasBuddy actually worked, so I printed my receipt to keep tabs on the whole process. What I soon discovered was that the price listed on that receipt is not what would end up being debited from my account. Instead — with this being my first fill up — I saved 15¢ per gallon, with the net balance deducted from my checking account (note: Pay with GasBuddy’s site says you get 10¢ per gallon off of your first fill-up, so I’m not clear on why mine was higher). It was like magic!
With my first fill-up behind me, I knew the ropes now — or so I thought. The next station also asked me for my Driver ID but then also asked for an odometer reading. Not wanting to take the time to look at the dead-on reading, I entered a nice, round number and that seemed to work just fine. Unfortunately this may have caused some issue down the literal and proverbial road (more on that later).
Finally, something I noticed when using Pay with GasBuddy is that, while some purchases showed up immediately, others took some time to reach both my GasBuddy and bank account. This wasn’t really a problem but it’s something to be aware of (lest you think you made off with a free fill-up).
The Pros and Cons of Pay with GasBuddy
First, the biggest compliment I can give Pay with GasBuddy is that, to my surprise, it was accepted at every station I tried it at. That said I should note that the service is only intended to work at the pump itself and cannot be used inside (even if it is just to pre-pay for gas). As a result, if you only want to pump a certain dollar amount, you’ll have to do it manually.
Going back to the odometer reading, I later found out that this is a feature GasBuddy is testing in order to eventually be able to offer you tips for improving your gas mileage. That’s all well and good, but the problem I ran into was that, at the station I arrived at, I entered another fake number and was told to see an attendant. This may have been because I added an extra digit (oops) but, either way, I elected to just use another card. While this was a minor inconvenience, I also discovered you can just enter “99” to opt-out of this upcoming service and proceed without issue.
Another feature that’s both a pro and a con is the upgrade to earning Shop Your Way points. At 30¢ gallon back in your first 60 days, you can quickly rack up CASHBACK points on a road trip. Even at 15¢ per gallon, it’s still a pretty good deal. The problem is that these points don’t last forever and expire a couple months after they’re earned. Therefore, if you’re not a frequent Sears or K-Mart shopper, you’ll need to make an effort to use your points on time. Plus, given the chain’s much-publicized financial woes, it’s understandable that some users might not be too interested in holding onto such currency.
When I originally reviewed Pay with GasBuddy, I noted that I was unable to find a clear way to switch back from the Shop Your Way option back to the regular 5¢ per gallon off scheme. Luckily, as some helpful readers have pointed out, the app has been updated to make this process quite simple. When in the “Savings” tab of the GasBuddy app, tap the gear icon in the upper right to access your Settings. From there, under “Account,” you’ll see a “Shop Your Way” option where you can unlink your account.
Final Thoughts on Pay with GasBuddy
Overall, I was really surprised and impressed with the Pay with GasBuddy product. After all, it’s essentially giving users free money. Of course the big disadvantage for people like me is that I’d be missing out on credit card rewards by using this service instead. With one of my cards granting me 4% back on gas, that likely bests the 5¢ off GasBuddy offers after the initial fill-up. Again, the Sears Shop Your Way figure would actually exceed the credit card cash back offer, but I’d also have to redeem my points sooner rather than later.
With all that said, if you don’t have a credit card that puts a premium on gas, Pay with GasBuddy could be a great option for saving at the pump. Given its wide acceptance, ease of use, and now two reward options, I’ll be taking my Pay with GasBuddy card along with me for many future road trips.
The post 2019 Pay with GasBuddy Review: Yes, You Can Legitimately Save Money Every Time You Fill appeared first on Dyer News.
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glenmenlow · 7 years
Text
Ripple Effect: 5 Questions With Co-Founder Adam Lowry
Adam Lowry is trying to do for plant-based milks what he already helped do for sustainabe household cleaning products: bring them into the mainstream and consumers’ refrigerators.
As the co-founder and co-CEO of Ripple Foods, whose first product is pea milk (more on that below), Lowry is well on his way. In addition to raising $44 million in funding from Google and Silicon Valley venture capitalists, Ripple’s plant-based milk has generated more than $20 million in revenue since launching in early 2016.
A mainstay in the refrigerated grocery section at Target stores, the next stage is happening now—expanding its product line beyond milk while expanding distribution and brand awareness.
Lowry (right) co-founded Method Home cleaning products, which was generating $100 million in annual sales by 2012, when it was sold to Belgian CPG company Ecover. In addition to a design-led brand that made replacement pouches for its curvy bottles the norm, Method built a factory on Chicago’s South Side to create jobs while adhering to exemplary environmental standards.
Those lessons are with him today as he helps build Ripple. With its clean taste and ample protein—8 grams per serving, the same as dairy milk and comparable to soy milk while higher than almond milk—Ripple is touting a unique value proposition and product offering versus non-dairy milks and over competitive brands. Hence its bold tagline: “Dairy free. As it should be.”
For a start, sustainability is at the heart of the brand. Each 48-ounce bottle of Ripple saves 3.5 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions and 925 gallons of water versus dairy milk, the company says. Getting the same amount of protein from almond milk would require 66 billion additional gallons of agricultural water.
“Plant-based milks are a $2 billion market that’s forecast to go to $4 billion in a short period of time,” Lowry, a climate scientist turned entrepreneur, told brandchannel. “There’s a profound shift going on for a variety of reasons, ranging from health desires to sustainability benefits.”
As for its core ingredient, Ripple protein comes from yellow peas, the same raw material that goes into Hampton Creek’s faux mayonnaise, Just Mayo. Ripple has taken the extra step of concocting a patent-pending process that strips out the flavor of plant material and leaves almost pure protein, so it doesn’t taste like peas. This gives the product the advantage of a neutral taste, unlike soy or almond milks.
Introducing NEW Ripple Greek Yogurt Alternative! With 12g of pure plant-based protein per serving, now you can enjoy all the benefits of greek yogurt without the dairy. Ripple Yogurt is available in five flavors: Original, Vanilla, Strawberry, Blueberry, and Maple. Find it on shelf now at Kroger stores, and many more regional grocers coming soon. Learn more through our link in profile!
A post shared by Ripplefoods (@ripplefoods) on Dec 1, 2017 at 3:05pm PST
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
Ripple is working on making more products from its proprietary protein, which it calls Ripptein, including a Greek yogurt alternative that it launched on December 1st in beta. It’s taking customers’ feedback (and criticisms) on-board, announcing on December 12th on Facebook that it’s still refining the product and looking to make the non-dairy yogurt creamier and more pleasing.
It’s also looking beyond peas for other sources of plant protein which could be derived from the same process and even cost to produce while maintaining a low-impact environmental footprint.
For more insights from the former Method man who’s looking to make a Ripple with nutritional and grocery buying habits, we spoke with Lowry about his second major CPG startup.
Adam, what do you think will be the tipping point for making Ripple and other plant-based milks mainstream? 
The way I think is, this is our reason for being. Before Ripple came along, dairy alternatives were really terrible alternatives to dairy. Almond milk is thin and watery and chalky. Same with other milks, and 90% of those that are sold have one-eighth the protein of milk—or less—so they’re missing the enjoyment and the nutritional benefits of milk.
As more mainstream consumers want to drink plant-based, that  means more people who don’t have to drink plant-based. What will make it go mainstream is to have a dairy alternative that can stand up to dairy milk in terms of taste and nutrition, and that’s what we’re trying to create. Ripple’s got the same protein level as milk and is creamy and delicious.
Is “pea milk” a hard sell, especially as people might assume it tastes like peas?
Yes, you can say “pea milk” and people kind of chuckle. But at the end of the day, it hasn’t been a huge barrier for us. We’re the first people to make a milk from peas. You want to be 100% transparent about what the milk is made from because that’s the first thing people want to know.
The brand architecture we use, what we really talk about, is Ripptein, and being the purest plant protein on earth. What that’s meant to do is help people understand that what makes Ripple unique is Ripptein, and that comes from peas, but it’s not peas themselves that make Ripple unique. In the future, that might come from something else.
How are you marketing Ripple? Is it all digital/social?
A lot of our marketing, nearly all of it, is digital in nature. That’s a function of who we’re talking to. The average age of a Ripple consumer is 33, much younger than the average age of other brands and consumers in the space. These are people who consume digital media primarily. We are doing a little bit of traditional media on top of that—a broad awareness play, region by region—as we build out our distribution.
And much like my previous business, Method, what we really rely on is storytelling. The media we earn (is) by having a really distinctive product proposition and an interesting brand where there aren’t really a lot of interesting brands and products. It’s supported by our own social media efforts, but we don’t have as many followers as Ellen [DeGeneres] yet. But we’re building that.
You’ve got an unusual logo—with fading letters—and brand name. What can you share about Ripple’s identity?
It’s about the little things we do each day and those adding up to major acts—about ripples, if you will. If you think about other brands in this space, it’s all about the ingredients they came from. The second-biggest brand in the space is Almond Breeze, and it’s clearly about almonds.
The biggest brand is Silk, a contraction of “soy” and “milk.” Ingredients go in and out of fashion, and almond nuts are a terrible thing to make milk out of—it doesn’t have any protein, isn’t any good, and uses insane amounts of water. Cashew milk is even worse. Coconut milk is terrible from that respect; it has no protein at all.
You don’t want to build a brand around a single ingredient because that’s not a very distinctive or enduring brand proposition. We want Ripple to be a brand across the whole non-dairy space that is one way that you create a little ripple effect in your life.
As for the branding, we wanted to create a logo treatment that’s visually interesting. Brand logo treatments have gotten too similar-looking: modern, lower-case approachable things. The Method logo treatment is a lot like that. But we really wanted something more distinctive. So the big innovation there was to create our own font that we thought not only was distinctive but also a visual reminder of what Ripple the word and brand represent, with the swirliness of the font.
Ripple is built on the truth that the smallest actions can have far reaching impacts. We wrote a letter to you, our fans, to show you how impactful you have been in bringing our mission to life. You have created a wave of change simply by choosing Ripple over something else. Click the link in our profile to see why. #RippleEffect
A post shared by Ripplefoods (@ripplefoods) on Oct 12, 2017 at 11:21am PDT
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
How does sustainability inspire and define what you call the Ripple Effect?
I used to be a climate scientist and I went straight out of college wanting to dedicate my career to environmental issues. I worked on the Kyoto Protocol of 1997, for instance. My frustrations there led me to create my first business, Method. The frustrations were feeling like I was preaching to the converted in my science job. The science was really clear but wasn’t leading to policy change, and still isn’t.
Second, realizing as a green consumer at the time, I was always frustrated because all the products frankly sucked. There were sacrifices: they were brown and ugly and too expensive and you had to go to a different store to buy them and they didn’t work.
That was the original idea behind Method: using business to create social and environmental good. We kind of turned the whole green product model on its head. We created a better product and put it in mainstream stores. That’s exactly what we’re doing with Ripple—and it’s also the most sustainable.
Get more insights in our Q&A series.
Subscribe to our free newsletter for more.
The post Ripple Effect: 5 Questions With Co-Founder Adam Lowry appeared first on brandchannel:.
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joejstrickl · 7 years
Text
Ripple Effect: 5 Questions With Co-Founder Adam Lowry
Adam Lowry is trying to do for plant-based milks what he already helped do for sustainabe household cleaning products: bring them into the mainstream and consumers’ refrigerators.
As the co-founder and co-CEO of Ripple Foods, whose first product is pea milk (more on that below), Lowry is well on his way. In addition to raising $44 million in funding from Google and Silicon Valley venture capitalists, Ripple’s plant-based milk has generated more than $20 million in revenue since launching in early 2016.
A mainstay in the refrigerated grocery section at Target stores, the next stage is happening now—expanding its product line beyond milk while expanding distribution and brand awareness.
Lowry (right) co-founded Method Home cleaning products, which was generating $100 million in annual sales by 2012, when it was sold to Belgian CPG company Ecover. In addition to a design-led brand that made replacement pouches for its curvy bottles the norm, Method built a factory on Chicago’s South Side to create jobs while adhering to exemplary environmental standards.
Those lessons are with him today as he helps build Ripple. With its clean taste and ample protein—8 grams per serving, the same as dairy milk and comparable to soy milk while higher than almond milk—Ripple is touting a unique value proposition and product offering versus non-dairy milks and over competitive brands. Hence its bold tagline: “Dairy free. As it should be.”
For a start, sustainability is at the heart of the brand. Each 48-ounce bottle of Ripple saves 3.5 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions and 925 gallons of water versus dairy milk, the company says. Getting the same amount of protein from almond milk would require 66 billion additional gallons of agricultural water.
“Plant-based milks are a $2 billion market that’s forecast to go to $4 billion in a short period of time,” Lowry, a climate scientist turned entrepreneur, told brandchannel. “There’s a profound shift going on for a variety of reasons, ranging from health desires to sustainability benefits.”
As for its core ingredient, Ripple protein comes from yellow peas, the same raw material that goes into Hampton Creek’s faux mayonnaise, Just Mayo. Ripple has taken the extra step of concocting a patent-pending process that strips out the flavor of plant material and leaves almost pure protein, so it doesn’t taste like peas. This gives the product the advantage of a neutral taste, unlike soy or almond milks.
Introducing NEW Ripple Greek Yogurt Alternative! With 12g of pure plant-based protein per serving, now you can enjoy all the benefits of greek yogurt without the dairy. Ripple Yogurt is available in five flavors: Original, Vanilla, Strawberry, Blueberry, and Maple. Find it on shelf now at Kroger stores, and many more regional grocers coming soon. Learn more through our link in profile!
A post shared by Ripplefoods (@ripplefoods) on Dec 1, 2017 at 3:05pm PST
Ripple is working on making more products from its proprietary protein, which it calls Ripptein, including a Greek yogurt alternative that it launched on December 1st in beta. It’s taking customers’ feedback (and criticisms) on-board, announcing on December 12th on Facebook that it’s still refining the product and looking to make the non-dairy yogurt creamier and more pleasing.
It’s also looking beyond peas for other sources of plant protein which could be derived from the same process and even cost to produce while maintaining a low-impact environmental footprint.
For more insights from the former Method man who’s looking to make a Ripple with nutritional and grocery buying habits, we spoke with Lowry about his second major CPG startup.
Adam, what do you think will be the tipping point for making Ripple and other plant-based milks mainstream? 
The way I think is, this is our reason for being. Before Ripple came along, dairy alternatives were really terrible alternatives to dairy. Almond milk is thin and watery and chalky. Same with other milks, and 90% of those that are sold have one-eighth the protein of milk—or less—so they’re missing the enjoyment and the nutritional benefits of milk.
As more mainstream consumers want to drink plant-based, that  means more people who don’t have to drink plant-based. What will make it go mainstream is to have a dairy alternative that can stand up to dairy milk in terms of taste and nutrition, and that’s what we’re trying to create. Ripple’s got the same protein level as milk and is creamy and delicious.
Is “pea milk” a hard sell, especially as people might assume it tastes like peas?
Yes, you can say “pea milk” and people kind of chuckle. But at the end of the day, it hasn’t been a huge barrier for us. We’re the first people to make a milk from peas. You want to be 100% transparent about what the milk is made from because that’s the first thing people want to know.
The brand architecture we use, what we really talk about, is Ripptein, and being the purest plant protein on earth. What that’s meant to do is help people understand that what makes Ripple unique is Ripptein, and that comes from peas, but it’s not peas themselves that make Ripple unique. In the future, that might come from something else.
How are you marketing Ripple? Is it all digital/social?
A lot of our marketing, nearly all of it, is digital in nature. That’s a function of who we’re talking to. The average age of a Ripple consumer is 33, much younger than the average age of other brands and consumers in the space. These are people who consume digital media primarily. We are doing a little bit of traditional media on top of that—a broad awareness play, region by region—as we build out our distribution.
And much like my previous business, Method, what we really rely on is storytelling. The media we earn (is) by having a really distinctive product proposition and an interesting brand where there aren’t really a lot of interesting brands and products. It’s supported by our own social media efforts, but we don’t have as many followers as Ellen [DeGeneres] yet. But we’re building that.
You’ve got an unusual logo—with fading letters—and brand name. What can you share about Ripple’s identity?
It’s about the little things we do each day and those adding up to major acts—about ripples, if you will. If you think about other brands in this space, it’s all about the ingredients they came from. The second-biggest brand in the space is Almond Breeze, and it’s clearly about almonds.
The biggest brand is Silk, a contraction of “soy” and “milk.” Ingredients go in and out of fashion, and almond nuts are a terrible thing to make milk out of—it doesn’t have any protein, isn’t any good, and uses insane amounts of water. Cashew milk is even worse. Coconut milk is terrible from that respect; it has no protein at all.
You don’t want to build a brand around a single ingredient because that’s not a very distinctive or enduring brand proposition. We want Ripple to be a brand across the whole non-dairy space that is one way that you create a little ripple effect in your life.
As for the branding, we wanted to create a logo treatment that’s visually interesting. Brand logo treatments have gotten too similar-looking: modern, lower-case approachable things. The Method logo treatment is a lot like that. But we really wanted something more distinctive. So the big innovation there was to create our own font that we thought not only was distinctive but also a visual reminder of what Ripple the word and brand represent, with the swirliness of the font.
Ripple is built on the truth that the smallest actions can have far reaching impacts. We wrote a letter to you, our fans, to show you how impactful you have been in bringing our mission to life. You have created a wave of change simply by choosing Ripple over something else. Click the link in our profile to see why. #RippleEffect
A post shared by Ripplefoods (@ripplefoods) on Oct 12, 2017 at 11:21am PDT
How does sustainability inspire and define what you call the Ripple Effect?
I used to be a climate scientist and I went straight out of college wanting to dedicate my career to environmental issues. I worked on the Kyoto Protocol of 1997, for instance. My frustrations there led me to create my first business, Method. The frustrations were feeling like I was preaching to the converted in my science job. The science was really clear but wasn’t leading to policy change, and still isn’t.
Second, realizing as a green consumer at the time, I was always frustrated because all the products frankly sucked. There were sacrifices: they were brown and ugly and too expensive and you had to go to a different store to buy them and they didn’t work.
That was the original idea behind Method: using business to create social and environmental good. We kind of turned the whole green product model on its head. We created a better product and put it in mainstream stores. That’s exactly what we’re doing with Ripple—and it’s also the most sustainable.
Get more insights in our Q&A series.
Subscribe to our free newsletter for more.
The post Ripple Effect: 5 Questions With Co-Founder Adam Lowry appeared first on brandchannel:.
0 notes
markjsousa · 7 years
Text
Ripple Effect: 5 Questions With Co-Founder Adam Lowry
Adam Lowry is trying to do for plant-based milks what he already helped do for sustainabe household cleaning products: bring them into the mainstream and consumers’ refrigerators.
As the co-founder and co-CEO of Ripple Foods, whose first product is pea milk (more on that below), Lowry is well on his way. In addition to raising $44 million in funding from Google and Silicon Valley venture capitalists, Ripple’s plant-based milk has generated more than $20 million in revenue since launching in early 2016.
A mainstay in the refrigerated grocery section at Target stores, the next stage is happening now—expanding its product line beyond milk while expanding distribution and brand awareness.
Lowry (right) co-founded Method Home cleaning products, which was generating $100 million in annual sales by 2012, when it was sold to Belgian CPG company Ecover. In addition to a design-led brand that made replacement pouches for its curvy bottles the norm, Method built a factory on Chicago’s South Side to create jobs while adhering to exemplary environmental standards.
Those lessons are with him today as he helps build Ripple. With its clean taste and ample protein—8 grams per serving, the same as dairy milk and comparable to soy milk while higher than almond milk—Ripple is touting a unique value proposition and product offering versus non-dairy milks and over competitive brands. Hence its bold tagline: “Dairy free. As it should be.”
For a start, sustainability is at the heart of the brand. Each 48-ounce bottle of Ripple saves 3.5 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions and 925 gallons of water versus dairy milk, the company says. Getting the same amount of protein from almond milk would require 66 billion additional gallons of agricultural water.
“Plant-based milks are a $2 billion market that’s forecast to go to $4 billion in a short period of time,” Lowry, a climate scientist turned entrepreneur, told brandchannel. “There’s a profound shift going on for a variety of reasons, ranging from health desires to sustainability benefits.”
As for its core ingredient, Ripple protein comes from yellow peas, the same raw material that goes into Hampton Creek’s faux mayonnaise, Just Mayo. Ripple has taken the extra step of concocting a patent-pending process that strips out the flavor of plant material and leaves almost pure protein, so it doesn’t taste like peas. This gives the product the advantage of a neutral taste, unlike soy or almond milks.
Introducing NEW Ripple Greek Yogurt Alternative! With 12g of pure plant-based protein per serving, now you can enjoy all the benefits of greek yogurt without the dairy. Ripple Yogurt is available in five flavors: Original, Vanilla, Strawberry, Blueberry, and Maple. Find it on shelf now at Kroger stores, and many more regional grocers coming soon. Learn more through our link in profile!
A post shared by Ripplefoods (@ripplefoods) on Dec 1, 2017 at 3:05pm PST
Ripple is working on making more products from its proprietary protein, which it calls Ripptein, including a Greek yogurt alternative that it launched on December 1st in beta. It’s taking customers’ feedback (and criticisms) on-board, announcing on December 12th on Facebook that it’s still refining the product and looking to make the non-dairy yogurt creamier and more pleasing.
It’s also looking beyond peas for other sources of plant protein which could be derived from the same process and even cost to produce while maintaining a low-impact environmental footprint.
For more insights from the former Method man who’s looking to make a Ripple with nutritional and grocery buying habits, we spoke with Lowry about his second major CPG startup.
Adam, what do you think will be the tipping point for making Ripple and other plant-based milks mainstream? 
The way I think is, this is our reason for being. Before Ripple came along, dairy alternatives were really terrible alternatives to dairy. Almond milk is thin and watery and chalky. Same with other milks, and 90% of those that are sold have one-eighth the protein of milk—or less—so they’re missing the enjoyment and the nutritional benefits of milk.
As more mainstream consumers want to drink plant-based, that  means more people who don’t have to drink plant-based. What will make it go mainstream is to have a dairy alternative that can stand up to dairy milk in terms of taste and nutrition, and that’s what we’re trying to create. Ripple’s got the same protein level as milk and is creamy and delicious.
Is “pea milk” a hard sell, especially as people might assume it tastes like peas?
Yes, you can say “pea milk” and people kind of chuckle. But at the end of the day, it hasn’t been a huge barrier for us. We’re the first people to make a milk from peas. You want to be 100% transparent about what the milk is made from because that’s the first thing people want to know.
The brand architecture we use, what we really talk about, is Ripptein, and being the purest plant protein on earth. What that’s meant to do is help people understand that what makes Ripple unique is Ripptein, and that comes from peas, but it’s not peas themselves that make Ripple unique. In the future, that might come from something else.
How are you marketing Ripple? Is it all digital/social?
A lot of our marketing, nearly all of it, is digital in nature. That’s a function of who we’re talking to. The average age of a Ripple consumer is 33, much younger than the average age of other brands and consumers in the space. These are people who consume digital media primarily. We are doing a little bit of traditional media on top of that—a broad awareness play, region by region—as we build out our distribution.
And much like my previous business, Method, what we really rely on is storytelling. The media we earn (is) by having a really distinctive product proposition and an interesting brand where there aren’t really a lot of interesting brands and products. It’s supported by our own social media efforts, but we don’t have as many followers as Ellen [DeGeneres] yet. But we’re building that.
You’ve got an unusual logo—with fading letters—and brand name. What can you share about Ripple’s identity?
It’s about the little things we do each day and those adding up to major acts—about ripples, if you will. If you think about other brands in this space, it’s all about the ingredients they came from. The second-biggest brand in the space is Almond Breeze, and it’s clearly about almonds.
The biggest brand is Silk, a contraction of “soy” and “milk.” Ingredients go in and out of fashion, and almond nuts are a terrible thing to make milk out of—it doesn’t have any protein, isn’t any good, and uses insane amounts of water. Cashew milk is even worse. Coconut milk is terrible from that respect; it has no protein at all.
You don’t want to build a brand around a single ingredient because that’s not a very distinctive or enduring brand proposition. We want Ripple to be a brand across the whole non-dairy space that is one way that you create a little ripple effect in your life.
As for the branding, we wanted to create a logo treatment that’s visually interesting. Brand logo treatments have gotten too similar-looking: modern, lower-case approachable things. The Method logo treatment is a lot like that. But we really wanted something more distinctive. So the big innovation there was to create our own font that we thought not only was distinctive but also a visual reminder of what Ripple the word and brand represent, with the swirliness of the font.
Ripple is built on the truth that the smallest actions can have far reaching impacts. We wrote a letter to you, our fans, to show you how impactful you have been in bringing our mission to life. You have created a wave of change simply by choosing Ripple over something else. Click the link in our profile to see why. #RippleEffect
A post shared by Ripplefoods (@ripplefoods) on Oct 12, 2017 at 11:21am PDT
How does sustainability inspire and define what you call the Ripple Effect?
I used to be a climate scientist and I went straight out of college wanting to dedicate my career to environmental issues. I worked on the Kyoto Protocol of 1997, for instance. My frustrations there led me to create my first business, Method. The frustrations were feeling like I was preaching to the converted in my science job. The science was really clear but wasn’t leading to policy change, and still isn’t.
Second, realizing as a green consumer at the time, I was always frustrated because all the products frankly sucked. There were sacrifices: they were brown and ugly and too expensive and you had to go to a different store to buy them and they didn’t work.
That was the original idea behind Method: using business to create social and environmental good. We kind of turned the whole green product model on its head. We created a better product and put it in mainstream stores. That’s exactly what we’re doing with Ripple—and it’s also the most sustainable.
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davisgordonc · 7 years
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Install This App and Watch Your Business Grow Rapidly
Install This App and Watch Your Business Grow Rapidly is courtesy of: http://iphone3gumts.com
The Latest Mobile Applications for Business and Marketing
There are several mobile apps out there that are designed to help businesses grow. Also, these apps being developed regularly to ensure an excellent user experience. Look at this data from statista.com which illustrates the enormous number of available apps in the Google Play Store.
In March 2017, available apps in the Play Store was placed at 3 million apps, after surpassing 1 million apps in July 2013. The app store offers Android users a range applications and digital media including music, magazines, books, film and TV. The majority of the apps available from Google Play are free of charge so millions of users are absolutely benefiting from it.
You’ve seen how huge this growth is and where it potentially lead to. If that trend is maintained, nearly 10 million mobile apps will be available by the next 5 years. And that is because developers will want to innovate more. Business owners and entrepreneurs will always find a better way to generate revenue. Users will continue to find value from these free mobile apps. Not to mention, Apple’s App Store too. As of January 2017, 2.2 million mobile apps were available to download for various iOS devices.
Now, when we talk about downloading and installing mobile apps , the first question that should come into mind is “How the app can help you? Whether it’s for personal, professional or business use, you should be clear on why you chose to install the app. Think about it. You know that the apps are free but in some cases you’ll use mobile data to download them. So you’re also investing somehow.
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Why to Use a Second Phone Number App
There are many reasons why you should use an app to give you access to a secondary phone number. The first is explained above. Sometimes you simply hit your maximum number of uses for a single phone number in order to verify new email or social media accounts.
There are other reasons why a second number is useful. Another big reason is online privacy. Do you really want your personal number or your office phone shared with all of these different properties?
Say, for instance, you have that number listed in the “contact us” section of one of your websites. For one, you could be getting a ton of calls for who knows what, all the time (depending on the popularity of your site). You also don’t know who is calling, or what site they are calling about, so you are pretty much cold answering these calls.
With a second phone number app, you can create as many different numbers as you want and have a line dedicated to each site or account. You can have calls these supplemental numbers then forwarded your personal line. With most of these apps you can have it display the secondary phone number, so you have an idea of which account it is related to.
For all internet marketers, business owners, entrepreneurs, and freelancers, this is a valuable tool to use to continue to grow your businesses, organize all of your assets, while maintaining privacy at the same time. It really simplifies things and protects you and I’m a big proponent of apps such as these when starting new sites.
There are what they call “must-have” apps that truly contributes to the users’ success. People will always want a mobile app installed in their Android or iOS devices that can help them save time, money and effort. Well, install this app and watch your business grow rapidly.
The Second Phone Number app is definitely a must-have. It allows users to set up dedicated phone numbers for their businesses. Users can even get as many numbers they want. Thus, no matter how big or small your business is, this app can help. Wonder where to download this app? Check out the Google Play Store or itunes and search the icon for the dollar digits app, check out the trial period and see how it works and why you should invest the app whether for personal or businesses purposes, it will surely benefit you and protect your primary phone number plus enjoy the amazing features and setting of the app! Get it now and share it with your relatives and partners! 
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brendagilliam2 · 7 years
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Draw a bad-ass geisha
In this geisha illustration I wanted to capture a grungy, dark, urban vibe, laced with elegant traditional Japanese elements. The idea that kept coming up again and again was to make her ‘bad-ass’. That’s the core essence of Geiko – she’s a geisha turned self-serving samurai, a vigilante within a dangerous cyberpunk universe. I got the idea from a competition to design a geisha or samurai character.
Here, I’ll explain how I developed this Geiko illustration, and my whole thought process and approach to the design. You’ll pick up tips on how to push your ideas forward and craft the final details. I want to leave you with concepts and methods you can adapt and use in your own work. So let’s start with the most crucial bit…
How to draw and paint – 100 pro tips and tutorials
1. Visualise the big idea
Geiko is a young geisha doll, driven by anger and revenge, roaming the streets as she takes down all the bad men that hurt people like her (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
The very first step is deciding the look and feel of the character and capturing it all with a rough sketch. The most important thing is knowing exactly how you want your audience to feel about your character, because this will drive your whole thought process from start to finish. My core idea was to design Geiko so that people’s gut reaction to seeing her is: “That’s bad-ass!”
2. Generate thumbnails
Develop initial rough ideas that fit in with the big idea (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
With that clear goal in mind, I jump into SketchBook Pro and use the Triangle brush to sketch my ideas out, exploring and pushing them further while staying true to the original Geiko essence. I keep it loose and gestural at this point, making notes on the ideas that I’d like to take forward. Throughout this process I keep asking myself, “Is she bad-ass enough?”
3. Finalise the idea
Play with your favourite ideas to try out variations (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
This is where I take all my favourite ideas that came out of the thumbnail process and explore how they can better capture Geiko’s essence. I duplicate my favourite thumbnail several times and try out those ideas, mixing more Japanese cultural elements back in with an urban cyberpunk twist. Don’t add too many details just yet. All you want to do here is finalise your big idea.
4. Polish and craft the design
Refine the final character more (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
Everything from this point on is just polishing up. You’ll still be making some design choices, but the core essence shouldn’t change. I usually start with the face, because it’s the most important part of any character. If I get it right, the rest falls into place. There are no secrets here. I sketch with the Triangle brush and Eraser, pressing S to quickly flip between the two brushes.
5. Refine the clothing
Use references to draw realistic clothes (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
The next major element to get right is her kimono. I start by grabbing some references. (But remember: references are just guides, so don’t feel bound by them.) Then I create a new layer and make a rough sketch, focusing on the design and flow of the wrinkles. For the final look, I use the Eraser to follow my initial line work on the black kimono and create the white-on-black effect.
6. Accessories and props
You can build the character’s personality through accessories (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
Using references, I work on the swords on her back, making a quick sketch in red to explore the function of the strap, while also playing with the idea of adding kunai knives. I also try to add clues about her personality, like a Totoro charm at the end of one of her swords. It’s subtle, but it helps make the character seem more well-rounded.
7. Bring in detail on her boots
White highlights create the impression of glossy leather-like fabric (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
Next I start cleaning up Geiko’s boots. In a similar way to how I did the clothing, I use the Eraser to create the line work, which is consistent with the style of the image. Her footwear is inspired by a mixture of high-heeled boots with a sporty twist and Japanese ninja sandals. I want to create a glossy type of material for her legs, so I add white highlights to achieve that look.
8. Create the mechanical gauntlet
Tweaking details like this can bring them to life (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
I want to keep the essence of my sketch, so I use the base silhouette of the gauntlet and start cleaning it up, erasing panel lines in, and drawing exposed wires to make it feel more customised instead of being built in a factory. I flick back and forth with the S key throughout, drawing lines in and erasing where necessary. I realise that the silhouetted gauntlet is blending in too much with her kimono, so I opt for a lighter version that helps to create a better read.
9. Stop… it’s paintover time!
A quick paintover puts the character in context (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
Now that I’m almost done with the design, I take a step back and look for any bits I can push further. A quick paintover enables me to explore how I can exaggerate Geiko’s bad-assery. I add a more well-rounded toolset of weapons including samurai gun-swords and a traditional Japanese umbrella. Then I push the storytelling with dripping blood and bullet holes, along with a smoke trail that adds movement, mystery and depth.
10. Detail Geiko’s primary weapon
Build up details that add to the character’s story (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
From the loose sketch done in the paintover stage, I begin to finalise the main sword design. I don’t want her weapon to be elegant or well-crafted, but to feel more imposing and threatening, so I choose to go with an exaggerated butcher’s knife. I use the Ruler and Lazy Mouse features in SketchBook Pro to create the long, sweeping arcs in the blade, ensuring the line work feels rough and grungy.
11. Add the finishing touches
Even discreet Japanese writing needs to be accurate (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
Before finishing up the design, I take the time to polish it up. I decide to add more details to her mask and sword, tweak the design of her cross-body strap and give her some branding and tattoos, making sure I use the correct Japanese phrases. Details like these count. I also include a shadow pass to add more depth, as well as the juxtaposition of her red demon eyes and rosy red cheeks.
12. Establish the background
The story becomes more believable with a background for your character (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
With the character done, I jump into Photoshop to create the background and atmosphere to round off the piece. I imagine Geiko in a back alley, fresh from a fight. So I add a floor and wall pattern, making these more sci-fi and grungy looking to enhance the cyberpunk feel. I add a quick gradient to them, which helps pop the character from the background and add more depth to the image.
13. Build background details
Custom brushes and textures push the realism (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
I now add extra details and textures to the environment. Bullet holes, dust particles and dripping blood help tell more of Geiko’s story and push the final illustration. I use masks to blend some of the line work out, and use texture on the background and character with custom brushes to help it appear less digital.
14. Bring in action cues to push the mood
Use quick movements to draw puffs of smoke (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
For even more depth and mood, I add action cues like smoke at Geiko’s feet. I use the Lasso tool to create the shape of the smoke, taking into account the wind direction that may tilt it slightly. I do this quickly to capture the motion, instead of lingering on it too long and making it too refined. Once I fill in my selection, to make it appear more like smoke I reduce the Opacity and use a mask to blend out specific parts even more, letting the background elements pop through.
15. Add a brand to your work
Identify your work as yours (Click the icon in the top-right of the image to enlarge the picture)
Branding, like your logo or signature and website URL, helps make your illustration yours wherever it ends up. People will always know whom to credit and future clients can contact you easily. Don’t forget to give it a title, too. It’ll help finish it off and make the piece feel more considered and complete.
This article originally appeared in ImagineFX issue 149. Buy it here!
Related articles:
How to create a comic page
How to draw manga
Draw a figure in under five minutes
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from Brenda Gilliam http://brendagilliam.com/draw-a-bad-ass-geisha/
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