Thursday, 5 June 2025

The Real Cost of AI in Design: A Personal Reflection on Creativity, Freelancers and Efficiency

We recently had a small internal design project come up, something simple that we’d normally outsource to a freelance graphic designer. Instead, we opted to try an AI design tool, specifically Picsart AI. For a one-off monthly sub, we completed the work ourselves very quickly, efficiently and at a fraction of the cost.

From a business productivity standpoint, it made sense. Using this tool was easy and did save time and budget. But I couldn’t help feeling guilty... The work directly went to AI and not the Designer, a real person that is probably relying on that income and I facilitated it. Now multiply this scenario across companies and industries all over...

AI sure is revolutionising workflows and opening up access to tools that were once out of reach and sure I think that’s amazing. But as we move forward, we need to stay conscious of the ethical side of AI. Is it just about what AI can do, or is it about what we lose when we stop choosing people. Is the human worker an endangered species?

This isn’t an anti-AI message. I use it every day and I’m excited by what’s possible. But I believe in responsible AI use and that includes thinking about the humans on the other side of the automation.

Can creativity remain human, even as the tools evolve? What do you think?

Monday, 2 June 2025

AI Isn’t Quiet. We Just Stopped Listening.

People in the media say “AI is quietly moving into our day-to-day lives.”

But I really don't think that's accurate... As an observation, it seems like it’s not quietly moving. It’s sprinting with a view to soon change everything!!!

We now use AI to write emails, plan our lives, design, search online, sell things and even think. AI is in a boom phase fueled by who can get to finish line first as we know there will only be one mainstream super AI brand winner - just look at Googles domination of search, Amazon domination of FMCG, or Apples domination of mobile, because we have history of how this will play out based on the .com boom this 'techbro' billionaire rush is not subtle. It’s not silent. It’s everywhere.

So why as some people not event aware or haven't even used AI yet?

A Tweet from:

Took a few days off from the Internet and realized that normal people don’t even know or care about AI.


AI “productivity” as we know it:
  • A chatbot that writes your reports.

  • An algorithm that interviews job candidates.

  • A design tool that creates a full brand identity in 10 seconds.

  • A personal assistant that sorts your day while you sip coffee.

Just smooth UX and friendly copywriting. How many times have you recommended it to someone because it simplified or enhanced a part of your role or life?

Some people I know do question it, but online when a AI CEO's talk everyone seems to embrace it even though the interviewer or news reporter must be thinking my job is at risk and my kids who are at school, collage and Uni are really at risk???

Sure, we're not being invaded by UFO's but make no mistake, we’re collaborating with an invader and I really hope it doesn't end up being Terminator coming true!

Daily, I'm watching the job market evolve in real-time. Creativity is getting streamlined, commodified, auto-generated. But we’re not fighting it. We're reposting it. Sharing it. Monetising it. Calling it progress, but I don't call someone calling me in panic for their livelihood progress. I now can spot a LinkedIn AI generated post a mile away... Lazy content anyone. 

We’ve labelled the noise innovation or opportunity. But what's the real story? Tractors displaced farmers. Robots displaced the factory workers and now will AI displace the office worker? How many people does it take to change a light bulb or run a small army of sentient godlike robo agents who are powered on nuclear superconductors?

🛑 So what is being optimised out of us? Creativity, critical thinking, original thought, being human? Maybe all of these? I don't see the fun in reading or watching bots talking to bots....do you?🤖🤖🤖🤖

✍️ Digital Dean – Observations on Tech, Talent, and still the Human Edge 
🔗 Subscribe, Connect, Follow and stay frosty!

Friday, 30 May 2025

Human Insights in the Age of AI: Why Depth Trumps Hype

Why "Overnight Experts" Can’t Replace 20 Years in the Digital Trenches!

Hey everyone,  

Drawing from 20 years in our industry, I want to share some observations that might resonate. Every insight here comes firsthand ‘talent meets business’ perspective from the Createch frontline.  

Three patterns worth noting:  

1. The strategic stability shift
When professionals transition to permanent roles during volatile times, it's often a smart repositioning. This approach sidesteps unpredictable turbulence while maintaining career momentum. Some call it the career versus cash conundrum.   

2. The accelerated expertise phenomenon
We've witnessed rapid rebranding in fields like UX, where some reposition as experts overnight. This highlights an important truth:  
"Without solid foundational experience, cracks eventually appear in one's work."
Spotting these gaps is your professional advantage - a skill that separates enduring expertise from surface-level knowledge, also known as good old attention to detail!

3. The expanding role expectations
Clients increasingly expect blended capabilities (multiple roles for single compensation). This sometimes stems from knowledge gaps in emerging fields, reminiscent of when the industry wanted to blend digital design with front-end development. The education process continues, particularly in AI-driven specialisation.  

Reality check
Market volatility favors professionals with:  
- Deep expertise (your multi-year foundation)  
- Adaptive foresight (strategic pivots and skill development)  

Resources for your journey
I've developed material to navigate these challenges:  
• 200+ posts on opportunity spotting  
• Over 100 Career transition frameworks  
• Years of consultations: Personalised navigation  

If you know me professionally I'll reach out when market opportunities align with your profile.
This is my job and my commitment reflects how we rebuild careers: through human connection rather than algorithmic chance.  

Your perspective
- Have you observed the accelerated expertise trend?  
- What strategies are you using to strengthen your professional foundation?  

Share your experiences - let's build resilience together.  

Stay authentic,  
Dean  
digital dean

The Freelance Digital Squeeze: Why This Downturn Feels Different (And How We Weather It)

Rates cooling, processes dragging, roles blending and free work requests normalising. Let's talk about the new market reality.


Hey everyone,


Let's be honest, the freelance landscape right now is... tough. Scratch that. Based on conversations and my own recent experiences, it feels like the most prolonged and challenging market I've seen in years 🤬🤬🤬 It's not necessarily the absolute depth of the dip, but the long and ongoing, dragging nature of it that's taking its toll on the awesome talent community the UK Createch space has within it. 


Gone are the incredibly lucrative days of the post-Covid boom, where demand skyrocketed, rates soared to 10-year highs and freelancers could cherry-pick roles. After digging about and doing quite a lot of research into this it seems the market gone through a period of "correction," and that correction feels harsh. Here's what stands out to me:


1.  The Rate Recalibration: Yes, rates have cooled. Significantly. While a "tough market" was my initial assumption, digging deeper reveals something more structural. This feels like a slight reversal of the boom. Market volatility, client budget cuts and a transition of skill based talent have combined to push rates down. It's not just harder to find work; the value assigned to that work maybe feels slightly diminished in some sectors. 


2.  Running The Job Gauntlet: Remember quick same day booking confirmations? Those seem rare occurrences now. The hiring process has become long, drawn-out and overly full of caution. Clients are scrutinising every hire like never before. Layers of interviews, excessive tests and ghosting have become frustratingly common. This slowdown seems to stem from  uncertainty and government legislation such as the NI employer tax change – widespread redundancies, the looming question of AI taking people’s jobs and heightened administrative burdens within client companies. It's exhausting for everyone involved. I’m bushed just typing this lol. 


3.  The "Blended Role" Burden: Here's a trend that stings: clients are increasingly asking one person to do the job of two (or three!). They've seen it happen during lean times or via overachieving individuals and now it's becoming an expectation. Job descriptions are morphing into Frankenstein monsters of responsibilities. Could it really be a cost-cutting exercise disguised as efficiency? It can set unrealistic expectations and may burn people out.


4.  The Normalisation of "Free": Requests for free work ("just a quick task brief," "a small trial project") nothing new hear and has been going on ever since I started out in the talent space but what has changed is the culture around complaining about it. What was once a whispered taboo topics are now openly discussed, even vented across social platforms. Whether it's intentional content creation or algorithms feeding on our collective frustration, publicly calling out unpaid work requests has become mainstream. We see ourselves reflected in these shared stories, making the issue feel more real and accepted.


So Why Does This Feel Different?


It's the combination and the persistence. It's not just one challenge hitting hard; it's all these pressures ant the same time and lingering. The post-boom correction feels amplified by economic jitters, AI anxiety and a shift in client risk tolerance. The "blended role" expectation and the normalisation of free work requests add layers of exploitation to an already strained environment.


Finding Our Footing: A Note of Resilience


This isn't my first rodeo. Like many of you seasoned Createch pros or long term freelancers, We navigated downturns before. That history is crucial. We've built valuable skills, proven track records and deep resilience. These are our anchors.


This tough phase will evolve. Opportunities will emerge, perhaps in new forms or requiring adapted skills (AI collaboration, anyone?). The key is to:


Protect Your Value: Don't race to the bottom on rates unless strategically necessary. Articulate your worth clearly.

Streamline Your Process: Make applying and interviewing as efficient as possible without sacrificing quality.

Set Boundaries: Politely but firmly push back on unreasonable "blended role" scopes and always say no to doing free work unless it’s essential to land a role. Your time and expertise are valuable.

Sharpen Your Saw: Use slower periods strategically. Learn, network, refine your offerings.

Community is Key: Share experiences and support each other. We're not alone in this.


This market is testing us, no doubt. But the skills and adaptability that got us here are the same tools that will see us through to the next upswing. It might feel like a long haul, but we did it before and can do it again.


What are YOU seeing out there? Does this resonate? What strategies are you using to navigate this prolonged squeeze? Share your thoughts and experiences in the comments – let's learn from each other.


Stay resilient,


Dean

digital dean

Wednesday, 28 May 2025

AI Isn’t the Future... It’s the Present

Let’s just say it: the future showed up early.

AI isn't some distant innovation we’re waiting for anymore it’s already here, shaping our jobs, our creativity, and the way we live day to day. Tools like ChatGPT, Midjourney (which at the time of writing I don't rate) and countless others aren’t just experiments anymore. They're embedded in how we write, design, code, market and think.

Whether you're a creative, a marketer, a job seeker, or just trying to keep up, one thing is clear: ignoring AI isn't an option. It's part of the toolkit now.

But what really gets me is how quietly it’s happening. No watermarks. No disclaimers. No “Trading Standards” equivalent for content generated by machines. You scroll past a video, listen to a podcast, or see an ad and there's no way to know if it was made by a person or a prompt. I don't like that because I don't want to listen or watch synthetic ads. 

I also worry for people whose jobs are being replaced, reshaped, or erased altogether. Writers, designers, voice artists, editors, roles that once took years to master are now being undercut in seconds by tech that’s evolving faster than most people can react.

I’m not anti-AI. I use it. I learn from it. I respect what it can do. But I’m also not pretending it’s all progress without cost. There’s a lack of transparency, a lack of regulation, and a real risk of losing the human touch in industries that used to thrive on it.

Some people are doubling down on their strengths with AI as a multiplier. Others are pretending it doesn’t matter. I’m not here to shout doomsday or hype. I’m here to look at what this shift actually means — practically — and how we can all stay adaptable, curious, and ready for what’s next.

This post is a reset for me too. Digital Dean is back. Less guessing about what’s coming, more focus on what’s already changing.

Let’s make sense of it together.

Tuesday, 29 September 2020

Feedback

As you may or may not know, the job seeking process is made up of an application with 3 potential outcomes: application progression, application rejection, application future consideration.

 

 

Definition of application : a formal request to be considered for a position or to be allowed to do or have something, submitted to an authority, institution, or organization.

 

Definition of rejection: the dismissing or refusing of a proposal, idea, etc.

 

To gain tailored micro feedback requires something sperate - a consultation. Some job seekers expect this and some do not.

 

Definition of consultation: the action or process of formally consulting or discussing.

 

Unfortunately a very low percentage of applications are suitable for the role they apply for, resulting non relevant / non-qualified applicants bottle neck and clog up the system and slow the process for genuine quality candidates.

 


Tuesday, 2 June 2020

The Freelancers' Ultimate Survival Guide during Covid-19

The Freelancers' Ultimate Survival Guide during Covid-19
Some simple, effective and actionable steps that might help 😊
Step 1
Visit the following Websites to find out key information about what support you are entitled to:
Step 2
Get your work/life schedule and routine set up. We all know the importance of a good night’s sleep and regular good habits. https://www.coachingpositiveperformance.com/power-positive-morning-routine/
Daily, weekly, monthly planners can be easily found online.
Step 3
Signup to relevant job alerts and work based social media such as: https://www.creativerecruitment.co.uk/job-search and
@Creative_Rec
Apply accordingly but be mindful of applying for non-relevant jobs as this clogs up the system for quality qualified candidates.
Step 4
Review your CV and folio and follow these principles:
CV – What am I? What do I want to be? How am I perceived? A great way to test this is by sending your CV to 3 or more people and asking them ‘What do you think I am?' without influencing or persuading them in any way. This will give you a true reflection of how and what you are on paper.
Folio – If using a PDF, ensure you have an average of 5 pages that showcase relevant case
studies to the roles you apply for. Always have your strongest work at the
front, middle and last page with either 1 or 2 extra case studies either side.
Remember, if your work isn’t Pintrest quality then it’s probably not strong enough to showcase.
Step 5
Utilise your personal and professional network. I’d recommend at least one WhatsApp, Zoom, Google Hangout meeting or phone call per day - I was Zooming every day, now I recommend quality over quantity - maybe 2 or 3 well placed Zooms per week coupled would a few quality phone calls seems to work best for me. This can be with friends or co-workers. Make sure you are ready for an e-meeting at any time.
Bonus tips:
1.      Don’t watch more than 1 hour of news per day – try to only keep tabs on the positive outcomes. Use apps such as: https://nextdoor.co.uk/ much better for you!
2.      Try and mediate for 5 mins at the start of the day: https://youtu.be/inpok4MKVLM Ideally in a pocket of natural sunlight.
3.      Try to spend at least 5 minutes doing some kind of exercise – dynamic stretches, energy yoga, rotations, high knees, etc. Tune in at 9am for: https://www.youtube.com/user/thebodycoach1 and try to go out if possible for 1 hour of exercise.
4.      Have as much of a nutrient rich diet as possible and get some good background music on if you can. Open your windows and get fresh air circulating.
5.      Be ready for when the market picks up! Now is your chance to research and get ahead of IR35, review your kit and home working conditions. Make an action plan for what you need to have ready and need to upgrade e.g. new software and additional skills to learn for when things pick up (and they will)!
I hope some good comes from the Covid 19. Experience, learning the importance of our health and sensitivity to those in need and more vulnerable. Better work-life balance and more home working for general well-being.
For regular updates you can follow me on: @deancousin
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