Popping-in?

Our studio is filled with light and music.
There are multiple meeting rooms, a well stocked kitchen, and an indoor garden (with fishpond). Talk to us about access needs, environmental factors and any accommodations we might make to enhance your visit. Pop-in for tea and stay to use a spare desk for as long as you need.

11 Greenwich Centre Business Park,
53 Norman Road, Greenwich
London SE10 9QF

Cog is a Certified B Corporation

Public transport

We’re next to Greenwich train and DLR station. We have a door right on the concourse but it’s different to our postal address. Find us via: what3words.com/hungry.means.author

From Greenwich rail platform

This video shows the route to take from the train that will arrive at Greenwich rail station from London Bridge. There's a gentle slope next to the staircase.

From Greenwich DLR station

This video shows the route to take from the DLR that will arrive at Greenwich DLR station from Bank. There's a lift at the platform level if that's useful.

By car

If you have to come by car, we have a couple of parking spaces. We have a charging point that you are welcome to use if you have an electric car. Call ahead and we'll make sure the spaces are free. Use our postcode (SE10 9QF) to guide you in.

Get in touch

We’d love to hear from you. Use whichever medium works best for you.

11 Greenwich Centre Business Park,
53 Norman Road, Greenwich
London SE10 9QF

Cog is a Certified B Corporation

New project enquiry

It's exciting to chat about potential new projects. We don't have a ‘sales’ team or a form to fill in. Call us or give us a little detail via email and we'll get straight back to you.

[email protected]

Website support

If you're a client then you'll be best served by calling us or contacting us via ClickUp, otherwise you can use this dedicated email that reaches all of the digital team.

[email protected]

Finance questions

This email hits the inboxes of the people who deal with our bookkeeping and finances.

[email protected]

Just want a chat?

Sometimes enquiries don't fall neatly under a heading, do they?

[email protected]

Cultural Calendar

A round-up of recommendations and reviews, sent on the first Friday of each month, topped-off with a commissioned image from a talented new illustrator. Sign-up and tell your friends.

Sign me up Cultural Calendar

Cog News

An irregular update of activity from our studio. Showing off about great new projects, announcements, job opportunities, that sort of thing. Sign-up and tell your friends.

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On the receiving end

On the receiving end

What’s it like to be on the receiving end of your job application? Michael gives his top ten insights into how graduate designers (and anyone else) can make the most of their approach or application.

When I left college I had no idea how to get a job, and I didn’t feel confident enough to try very hard, so I started working for myself. Within a year I had too much work so I employed someone and suddenly I was running a company, like a grown-up.

Twenty-five years later and I must have interviewed close to a thousand graduates, and I receive at least a dozen emails a week asking for advice, placements and jobs.

I always write back but it’s a big investment of time so I can be quite curt if they’ve made little effort. For everyone else, here are my top ten insights into how to make the most of your approach or application.

Michael Smith in 1991

Michael Smith in 1990 when he’d just left college and wasn’t trying hard to get a proper job.

1. You’re contacting a person

This is always top of my list. Your email or letter will be read by a person, a human being with emotions and opinions, and a boss (probably), and work pressures, and home pressures and, and…  Remember that, and use it to inform everything you say, write and do.

To start with, use their name. You might think you’re being ‘proper’ by writing ‘Dear Sir / Madam’ but they think you’re cutting and pasting the same email to dozens of people. Find out the name of the person who you need to contact (a quick phone call or a web search takes seconds) and use it.

While you’re at it, do get the name of the company right, you’d be amazed at how many people don’t even do that.

2. Focus on a few studios

It’s a complete waste of everyone’s time (especially yours) if you just email a long list of random studios with a generic approach. They will all be deleted as soon as they arrive.

Take your time, do your research (do more than just trawling a couple of blogs) and select half a dozen agencies. Don’t just pick the ones you’ve heard of, select agencies where you’d be a really good fit (based on size, structure, ethics, client list or just their visual style). Craft the perfect approach to them. Be brave and confident in your choices but don’t be delusional about your abilities. And if they don’t invite you in, try half a dozen more.

If you are applying for an advertised position then apply for that position, don’t just send a standard email approach. Explain why you’d be the perfect person for that role. And address any concerns that the employer might have – for instance, tell them that you might lack experience but you’d more than make up for it in enthusiasm; and mean it.

3. Show your workings

The person who receives your email doesn’t know how much research you’ve done or why you really want to work there, you need to tell them.

Tell people that you’ve kept an eye on their studio for years, that you really loved X project and you couldn’t believe how much thought went into Y project. Explain how much you’ve thought about it and why you know you’d be a perfect fit for that studio because you have an affinity with their ethics, or clients, or approach, or structure, or something.

4. You are being judged on everything

Someone once told me that it was unfair to criticise the quality of their grammar because I should judge them on the quality of their work. That person failed to understand that, as a designer, the design stuff is just one part of the job. You’ve also got to get on with colleagues and clients, articulate your thinking, understand the context of the work, turn up on time, make the tea, be a pleasure to spend time with, work within conventions, know when to challenge those conventions etc.

Any good employer is looking out for all of those things. They are building a picture of you using every piece of data they have available. And yes they will Google you and look through your social media feeds.

5. Don’t send an infographic claiming you are 100% anything

Almost every CV I receive has a graphic explaining how efficient that person is at using software. You may well be brilliant at using Adobe products but I’ve never met anyone who has used more than 50% of the features of InDesign or Photoshop so how can a recent graduate claim 100% proficiency?

I assume that everyone can use most software, or can pick it up in a few weeks; I’m looking for other skills and attributes. Mostly I’m looking for intelligence, enthusiasm and original thought and you don’t demonstrate that by copying everyone else’s CV examples.

Oh, and despite the anecdotes you’ve heard, fabulously clever packages are rarely more effective than a well-crafted approach and a cleanly designed CV and folio.

6. Employers really want to employ you

This may seem like a revelation but it’s just common sense. Employers aren’t trying to catch you out or trip you up, they are just trying to find out whether or not you are the person they’ve been looking for.

Every time I receive an approach I get excited that this person could be the one, the person that will bring a new dimension to our studio and become a reliable and trusted member of our team for years to come.

But of course, only a tiny percentage of people are the right fit for us. And the rest would be better off finding somewhere that would better suit them.

7. Most of your peers are rubbish

It’s intimidating to think that you are competing against dozens, maybe hundreds of people for every job; it’s a saturated market. But the good news is that it’s a market saturated by people who aren’t very good.

If we advertise a role then at least half of the applications are pointless – applying for the wrong job, missing the application deadline, getting our name wrong, not sending the stuff we’ve asked for, or sending 20Meg attachments of poor examples of work. We’ll dismiss them straight away, usually without even reading them.

Of those that are left, at least half will just be applying to any job with ‘design’ in the title; they won’t have made any effort to show why they really want to work here.

So, you’re already better than 75% of your peers!

8. Be enthusiastic

Don’t be embarrassed to be enthusiastic; there are no marks for being cool, aloof and unemployed. Get over yourself; it’ll make you more likeable and that’s a key factor in whether or not someone wants to spend 8, 10, 14 hours a day in your company.

9. Say thank you and stay in touch

If someone has taken the time to give you feedback, or to invite you in to meet, then be magnanimous enough to say thank you even if you didn’t get the result you wanted. It’s the polite thing to do and it can be a great way to maintain a personal connection with a potential employer. They must have been impressed enough to invest time in you so maybe they will recommend you to a colleague, or maybe they’ll think of you next time they have a role to fill. Or maybe they’ll just be a good person to know as your career progresses.

Timing can be crucial in securing a role. Make it easy for a potential employer to remember you and remember how enthusiastic you are about working with them. Don’t be weird and stalkery but there’s no harm in sending an occasional catch-up email (maybe praising a recent project; everyone loves flattery), or a Xmas card, or just ‘like’ the occasional tweet or Instagram post.

10. Every employer is different

It’s worth remembering that these insights are just my opinions and perspective. Employment isn’t an objective process, it’s often personal and it’s always skewed towards the particular need of each specific employer. You don’t have to agree with anything I’ve written but if you don’t then you’ll need to find an employer who shares your way of looking at the world.