By Amy Hansen
Originally published by Adweek
As SXSW winds down this week, heed my advice. Whatever you do, don’t move to Austin. I’m serious. Put down that Forbes article that recently named it the No.1 boom town and go back to shoveling snow, or filling out your state income tax returns or listening to your disembodied, recorded music.
Ignore everything you hear about Austin having one of the most educated millennial populations in the U.S. Forget about the double-digit growth rumors. And who really cares if income growth here is way better than the national average? Money can’t buy happiness, right?
Never mind that the University of Texas at Austinhas world-class programs in bioengineering, nanotechnology, bioinformatics and pharmaceutical research. And that the newly opened Dell Medical School—complete with a teaching hospital—is enrolling its first class of future doctors, researchers and medical superheroes. I’m sure it will fail miserably just like everything else in Austin.
Forget that the University’s advertising program is ranked among the top five in the world and is the first to launch a specialty program for healthcare advertising. I guess being a recipient of the exclusive Google Global Social Media award wasn’t enough. Nor was being named the top institution for digital advertising degrees. (Insert #humblebrag here.)
And I haven’t even mentioned yet how crowded and congested this town has become with innovative life sciences companies. You can’t throw a breakfast taco without hitting one. Nearly 200 in all. Bringing with them jobs in biotech, diagnostics, medical devices, R&D, pharma and healthcare marketing. It’s a real cluster. I mean, robotic surgery and proton therapy are pretty cool but with all this advancement, who’s going to believe me the next time I call in sick? Thanks, science.
And then there’s SXSW. Nothing like trying to match your wits against the infinite cognitive powers of a super-robot—or someone with the brains to build one—to make you feel average. But that’s cool. I can grip and turn a doorknob like nobody’s business, which is more than most robots can say. And in a post-apocalyptic zombie world where big, juicy, brains are in high demand, I just might fly under the radar.
This year at SXSW I got to hang out with the geniuses at the MIT HackMed Health Housethat was hosted in part, by HCB Health, the healthcare advertising agency that has anointed me creative director. It’s being heralded as an immersive experience of “human-centric problem solving.” In essence, it’s about asking the right questions, drilling down to a powerful insight and then building and testing—in real-time—prototypes that can help people living with chronic diseases overcome the challenges they face.
Read the original Adweek story here.
Amy Hansen is senior vice president and creative director for HCB Health.