One comment I hear from designers is, “there
should be a television show about the design
world.” If there were, everyone would grow to
love the lead character of design client and that
character would be based on Laura Shore.
As senior vice president of Creative at Mohawk Fine Papers, Laura
embodies all of the traits that all of us dream of finding in a client.
She’s smart and creative, has great ideas and doesn’t mind if you
steal them. She’s patient and trusting, fair and measured. Behind
the scenes, in the rough and tough world of a paper mill, Laura
understands her multiple audiences, knows when and what to tell
them and how to balance creative freedom with hard numbers.
Clients can often seem like they are speaking Icelandic and making
decisions based on whims. We all wonder why one firm was
chosen over another or what a client really expects. After some
prodding and begging, I convinced Laura to spill the beans from
the other side of the presentation.
SA: Laura, let’s start with what you actually do. I know you hire
designers and make paper swatchbooks and promos, but what about the
rest of your job?
LS: Is your Icelandic translator here? Hiring designers is actually
a small part of what I do. I manage an incredibly capable in-house
team—10 people if you count the intern, more if you count outsourced
marketing support—who handle everything relating to
PR, marketing communication, advertising, product positioning,
the web, printing, signage, trade shows, events and national design
sponsorships. In addition to that, since the acquisition of the IP Fine Papers brands in 2005, all of our internal processes have been
overhauled. Lately we’ve been working with the IT group to redesign
internal computer systems that relate to publishing product
information and reporting.
We don’t have a formal organization chart in our company, so
each of us wakes up every day and does the smartest thing we can
think of. Our team is complemented by an equally caffeinated
group dedicated to product and another focused on the environment.
We support their initiatives and try to give structure to
their ideas so they can be brought to market effectively. Our team
is always involved at some level in product development, research,
strategy and selling. We bring designers in at various points along
the line in a project, but it’s our breadth of engagement at Mohawk
that allows us to keep the process focused and bring the right level
of information to the design part of the process.

Forty posters for the Yale School of Architecture: When Mohawk learned that Michael Bierut of Pentagram would be receiving the AIGA medal in 2006,
they wanted to do something to
honor their work together over
the years, as well as Bierut's efforts
on behalf of AIGA and the
design community. This small
book is the result; it is black and
white, like the ten years' worth
of posters he designed for the
school. Attendees at the Associated
Gala received this book as
a gift. Copies are now available
through Winterhouse Editions,
with profits going to support
the Winterhouse Award for Design
Writing & Criticism.
SA: I’m going to ask the hardest question first. You see promotional pieces
and portfolios from an enormous number of designers. How do you decide
whom you’re going to work with on a specific project?
LS: If the type looks like I could have set it myself, they’re out.
Times Roman, out. Unintentional clichés, out. Plagiarism, out.
Irony, if I don’t get it, out. Bad writing, out. Is a designer good
at developing stories out of thin air? Do they love information
design? Is their attitude in sync with the intended audience? Do
they avoid jargon? Is the work memorable? Is the work original? Is
it too far ahead of the audience? Is it always the same, regardless
of the client? Do they respect all of our audiences? Do they know how to work with uncoated paper? Are they curious? Are they
interesting? Can we have fun and still get the job done? Do they
make us look smarter than we are?
In the end, it’s a terrifying leap of faith. Each project is so
different—with unique audiences, information requirements, production
budgets. I believe one of the most important things a design
client can do is understand the true capability of the firm they’re
hiring and to match that capability to the project. Get it wrong
and it’s like a bad marriage. Endless changes. Arguments about the
budget. Thinly veiled disdain on all sides. If you get it right, then
everything sails through. Few revisions. Everyone’s a genius.
SA: It’s easy to think that if my work is cool, or clever, or aesthetically
innovative that clients will, of course, be jumping over each other to hire
me. But, unfortunately, the real world doesn’t work that way. Do you find
that designers can put too much priority on what their work looks like?
LS: I actually think how the work looks is really important. Particularly
with a product like ours. Design details and production
excellence matter to our audience. What we deliver has to be
incredibly well made. And if it’s not, I’ll get a phone call within
hours of distributing a new piece.
That having been said—if we’re talking about paper promotions—everything in the process is important. Designers need to
do the homework and get outside their own preconceived notions
about the audience. Designing for a design audience is not the
same as designing for yourself. Research. Back up your assertions.
We operate at a pretty fast pace and while each project is important,
a project manager will have several projects operating simultaneously.
It’s important that deadlines are met. We also bring
a lot of production expertise to the project and are willing to
research almost anything if we agree that it’s interesting. Yet our
budgets are set out clearly up front, and we have a great process in
place to ensure that we come in on time and on budget. Designers
have control over the architecture of the project, so we don’t have
a lot of sympathy for designers who overdesign a project and then
whine about the budget or deadline.
SA: When I’ve judged competitions, a common event is the judging of paper
promotions. Let’s face it: Some are gosh-darn awful, but others are remarkable.
When I’ve voted for a paper promo, one of the other judges will argue,
“Come on, it’s just a paper promo. You can do anything you want.” But the
operative word in paper companies is companies. What are some of the biggest
misconceptions about designing and producing a paper promo?
LS: For many years, it was not uncommon [for us] to receive visual
essays on subjects like toy trains, ducks or vintage fruit labels from
people I’d never met, with the earnest hope that I would use the
work as a paper promotion. Pick a paper, any paper. Thankfully,
that practice has diminished—I suppose with the decline in the
number of mills—or maybe designers are just busier now.
As you know, Sean, you can’t do “anything you want” in a paper
promotion. You have to appeal to a range of audiences, from just-out-of-school designers, to print sales people, to merchant sales
guys who golf. We’re not a publisher, and a paper promotion is not
a book—it’s a conversation starter. Done right, a paper promotion
can energize an entire channel, giving sales people a reason for a
call, creating opportunities for events, bringing a product or brand
to life. Oh, and I gave up on design competitions a long time ago!

Mohawk ad series: High readership scores bear out the strategy recommended for an image advertising campaign developed by VSA Partners. The sophisticated yet whimsical illustrations by Klas Fahlen and thoughtful copy challenge conventional thinking about paper and the paper industry, reinforcing Mohawk's approach to the business.
SA: You’ve pulled together a powerhouse stable of designers. You’ve
worked with the best, from Pentagram, VSA, Vanderbyl Design, the Valentine
Group, Willoughby Design ... almost every well-known name in the
country. First, was this a plan? And secondly, wouldn’t it have been much
cheaper and faster to hire Carol’s Country Copy Shoppe in Albany? Why
take the effort to create this group?
LS: Hey, don’t knock Carol! My first job was at a quick printer
in Albany. … We actually work extensively with a very talented
local designer, Jennifer Wilkerson, and a number of local printers.
However, working with world-class design talent has been one of
the great joys of my job. It’s also a great way to build brand affinity
throughout the community. The more interesting question is, how
do we keep our identity intact, working with designers who are
generally retained by clients who want to reposition their brands?
SA: OK, so how do you keep your brand intact?
LS: I believe that a brand is more than design execution. In our
case, it’s about being interesting to the design community. One of
the ways we do that is by working with amazing people who interest
our audience. We start by keeping identity projects with Pentagram
New York. We’ve worked with them so long that they can
read our minds. After that, we branch out and use leading designers
for specific projects or brands, depending on the attitude we want
to communicate. Good designers are actually incredibly careful
about situating their work within the larger context of the brand.
SA: You have a deep and long-standing relationship with AIGA. You’re
a National Sponsor, and you fund events and exhibitions regionally across
the country. Why does Mohawk think this is important?
LS: Supporting AIGA is essential to our business. We make a premium-branded product that must be specified for us to survive.
For this we need a healthy, educated design community. Organizations
like AIGA and trade journals like STEP are incredibly
important to us. We began supporting AIGA back in the mid-’80s when it was clear that it was the one design organization that
could speak for designers at a national level. As our lives have gotten
more complex, faster and more computer-dependent, the need
for community involvement and real human interaction has only
increased. I honestly can’t understand why any designer wouldn’t
want to be a member of AIGA—or why any supplier wouldn’t want
to support the organization.

Sustainability promotion: Willoughby
Design Group chose rich topical content
to express Mohawk's environmental position in this promotion for Strathmore Script. Designed as carefully and economically as the messages
inside, the book explores issues surrounding sustainable design and features
profiles of six pioneering companies.
Mohawk environmental stewardship brochure: This piece by Jennifer Wilkerson,
Aurora Design, draws visually from both earthy and human connections
to communicate Mohawk's environmental position and practices to business
decision makers, designers and printers.