Pictodeck is just what it sounds like — a deck of pictograms. It’s a collection of over 700 vector pictograms taken from four different sets: PICOL, Android Icons, Pictoico, and Freshpixel. I have converted all of these sets into graphical assets that exist within a Keynote deck. No need to open them in a program like Adobe Illustrator and import them individually. All you have to do is open Pictodeck in Keynote and copy and paste or drag them into your own decks. You can even drag the entire series of 720p slides into your decks (although I wouldn’t recommended leaving them there, since Pictodeck is rather large at about 30MB).
I created this because I’ve found myself spending a lot of time using Keynote to tell stories. I like telling stories through creative uses of typography and pictograms. I found myself using PICOL (Pictoral Communication Language) a lot last year and decided to formalize my collection and distribute it a way that makes the entire library more accessible to those in advertising, marketing, finance — any industry really. If you work with Keynote, Pictodeck is for you.
Advertising on the third screen in the fifth dimension
This is a deck I built in collaboration with Freestyle Interactive, Heat, and Wieden + Kennedy on trends and innovation in mobile marketing. And in a completely unrelated note, I don’t think I’ll ever get over the jealousy I feel towards W+K for having a two letter domain name.
The purpose of this deck was to delve into advertising on the third screen (mobile) in this new fifth dimension—where data and information exists in a cloud all around you. This fifth dimension isn’t quite tangible without a device, but if you have an iPhone you can look at a restaurant through your phone and see every review that people left on Yelp or all the tweets tagged with that location.
I made extensive use of two things: color and iconography. All of the icons used in the deck are taken from the open source PICOL icon set. I tried to keep the text to a bare minimum. There are also quite a few videos in the deck, which makes the Slideshare version feel a little static; but you get the idea.
You can download this presentation in PDF format through Slideshare here.
Hi, I'm Aaron Richard. You might remember me as that guy from some website who goes by the name "Ralph The Magician."
I'm a digital strategist who lives and works in New York City.
This is one of my blogs. I use this to showcase some of the things I've worked on that I think others might find particularly interesting. I maintain two other blogs: Blogs by Magic & Random Bits of Magic.
You can learn more about me, follow me on Twitter, or send me an email.