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Jackie Van Nice

E-Learning Goodness by Jackie Van Nice

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The Stuff That Résumés Are Made Of

April 22, 2014 By Jackie Van Nice 10 Comments

Select Image to Launch Demo

Select Image to Launch Demo

I’d recently been admiring some examples of graphic résumés, but couldn’t imagine how I could ever do one. Turns out Articulate’s resident nudger, David Anderson, keeps an eye out for that sort of thing and his challenge this week is to come up with an interactive résumé or portfolio. So time for me to figure it out.

I haven’t had much call for a résumé since I’ve been independent, but creating an interactive graphic where I could play with the idea of a résumé sounded like fun, so off I went.

Inspiration

My friend and talented freelance e-learning designer Donna Carson gave me edits for a bio I submitted with my DevLearn speaking proposals on Friday. The phrases she used made me want to both laugh and go conquer the world at the same time. Her description of my “fearless flair” in designing training inspired me to come up with “Fearless Designs!” “Bold Voiceovers!” and “Daring Development!” to describe what I do. For graphic inspiration I turned to old movie posters. They had the expressive graphics and cool details I wanted, plus they could handle the dramatic phrases I had in mind.

My Graphic Inspiration

My Graphic Inspiration

Design

Graphics: To start, I pinned old movie posters I liked and chose a color scheme that resonated with me. You can clearly see I used the colors and rough layout of the Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum poster. For text callouts and credits I used elements based on other posters including The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms.

Theme: I chose a detective theme because I was drawn to the idea of Humphrey Bogart’s Sam Spade. He’s on the right side of the law, but still seems a little shady. (His line that the Maltese Falcon is “the stuff that dreams are made of” inspired this post’s title.)

More Graphic Inspiration

More Graphic Inspiration

The Theater: I wanted an entry screen so that, once clicked, the user’s full attention is on the initial visuals, music, and animation when they hit the main screen – and having them click a ticket to get inside made sense.

The way the overall flow works is based on the little theater I practically lived at as an undergrad at Humboldt State University in Arcata, California. The Minor, off the little town square, was an old art house movie theater that changed its double or triple features at least three times a week. I spent a few thousand of the happiest hours I’ve ever spent in my life there, and got to see a gabillion classic movies like the ones that inspired this piece.

The Minor Theater

The Minor Theater

When it was cold out, you’d come off the street through a thick red curtain, get popcorn and admire the old movie posters in the lobby, then go through another red curtain to enter the theater. So I was seeing my résumé as one of those old posters in the lobby.

Audio: I wanted to bring it to life with sound. There are effects for audience buzz, curtains being pulled aside, cheers, applause, police whistles, sirens, screams, breaking glass, etc., but I wanted a theme song. The whole time I was working on this I kept hearing a driving theme somewhere between Peter Gunn and James Bond. Lucky for me I’ve got an “in” with talented songwriter, musician, and freelance e-learning guy Dan Sweigert who was able to write and produce the theme song in no time flat.

Content

EducationRésumé Elements: I kept it simple and included my (boldly-phrased) skill set, education, experience, and the main software I use. The sections for education and experience were by far the biggest creative challenges, but in the end I was happy to find a quick way to blow through them that still maintains the tone and theme.

Brevity: I find it endlessly entertaining that each of the links from the main screen shows just one screen of content (at best) that makes the audience go wild. I wanted to get in, show a glimpse of just a morsel of my work, and get out.

See It In Action!

Enjoy the vintage-inspired goodness right here.

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Filed Under: E-Learning Tagged With: Articulate Storyline, Audio, Characters, Community, E-Learning Design, ELHChallenge, Emotional Engagement, German, Instructional Design, Portfolio, Professional Development, Typography, Video, Visual Design

Previous Post: « My Sketchy Life as an E-Learning Designer
Next Post: Does Context Matter? Here’s a Before & After »

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Comments

  1. Jeff says

    April 22, 2014 at 3:48 am

    Blown away!

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    • Jackie Van Nice says

      April 22, 2014 at 11:36 am

      Thank you, Jeff! I really appreciate it. :)

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  2. Dan Sweigert says

    April 22, 2014 at 11:25 am

    I really loved this one, the look and feel, the humor, and how you made it all blend so seamlessly. A really fun and impressive display. And thanks for giving me the opportunity to write the music, it was a blast.

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    • Jackie Van Nice says

      April 22, 2014 at 11:37 am

      Thank YOU, Dan! The music is perfect!!

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  3. David Anderson (@elearning) says

    April 22, 2014 at 5:07 pm

    Schweet project, Jackie. Everything from the design to the music to the animations makes this a winner.

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    • Jackie Van Nice says

      April 22, 2014 at 6:01 pm

      Heeeey…is that some Bogie in there??
      Thanks so much, David – I’m glad you like it. And, as always, thank YOU for providing the impetus. Looking back at the challenge pieces it’s remarkable that without (a) some community, (b) a task, and (c) a perceived time constraint – none of them would exist. For any of us. So – good job, well done, and thank you!!!

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  4. Muzik & Muzik, LLC — Smarter eLearning says

    April 23, 2014 at 8:00 am

    Fun and creative! Inspiring, too. A résumé doesn’t have to be square any more — really nice to see. I am formerly from Eugene and now living in Vienna. Was funny to see that your journey took you to similar places. Maybe we will be both accepted to DevLearn and we’ll run into each other in Vegas :)

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    • Jackie Van Nice says

      April 23, 2014 at 8:38 am

      Thank you, Donella! I loved living in Vienna – such a beautiful city. And very funny that we have Eugene, Vienna and e-learning in common. Soon we’ll have DevLearn, too. :) Thanks so much for stopping by!

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  5. Justin says

    April 30, 2014 at 10:03 pm

    This is very well put together Jackie! I really like the design elements and using old movie posters as inspiration was a great idea.

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    • Jackie Van Nice says

      April 30, 2014 at 10:15 pm

      Thanks so much, Justin! Glad you like it. Those posters are so funny and cheesy they’re hard to resist as inspiration. :)

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I’m an award-winning instructional designer and proud Articulate Super Hero who creates e-learning for large organizations. I blog to explain my design process, share tips and tricks, and help others succeed. I hope you enjoy my refreshing gallery of e-learning goodness!

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