
D&AD has announced the appointment of Naresh Ramchandani as President of D&AD for 2020-21. He has been a member of D&AD since 2014.

Pentagram Partner and a founder of both St Lukeโs and Karmarama, Naresh Ramchandani succeeds Kate Stanners, Saatchi and Saatchi Worldwide CCO. Rebecca Wright, Dean, Academic Programmes, Central St Martins/UAL, has been named Deputy President by D&AD.
In the wake of the pandemic, Ramchandani is expected to โaddress the challenges the creative industries are facingโ. As President, he will help drive existing programmes as well as chart new frontiers for โemerging creatives and under-represented voicesโ.
“Iโm looking forward to exploring how creatives and their agencies can engage with their social impact and do so with the highest standards of creativity,” said Ramchandani.

Congratulating Ramchandani, Tim Lindsay, D&AD Chairman, said, โNaresh’s appointment speaks for itself. He is an industry legend, a positive provocateur and a strong believer in making the right ethical choices for our industry. Rebecca’s appointment โ which is a break with tradition for D&AD โ means she will be our first Deputy President from the academic world, at a time when finding, nurturing, and supporting young talent has never been more important.”
It was in 1990 that Ramchandani started his career as copywriter, then at HHCL, later moving to Chiat/Day where he became the standard-setter by shaping Chiat/Day into St Lukeโs, Britainโs first cooperative agency. In 1997, Ramchandani designed a path-breaking campaign called โChuck Out Its Chintzโ for IKEAโs modern furnishings. It was under his leadership that St Lukeโs became the Agency of the Year in 1999. In 2000, he found Karmarama, where he designed the famous anti-war poster titled โMake Tea, Not Warโ to stop the war coalition.
Ramchandani also went on to create the much talked-about โelite designer Van Den Puupโ for IKEA. Den Puup believed that โdesign should be exclusive, for the few and should, therefore, be very, very expensiveโ, an thinly veiled act of self-deprecation.

With the tagline โPlease be remembering usโ he came up with a nearly-racist campaign in support of the local Asian corner shop which was being literally โshroudedโ by a new Sainsbury. He was also a columnist with The Guardian and wrote 63 thought pieces about how brands need to connect with consumers in a โnew media-fragmented marketing-resistant centuryโ.
Ramchandani is the Co-Founder of โDo the Green Thingโ, a non-profit public service that has inspired as many as 40 million people worldwide to live a greener life. Apart from this he also designed YouTubeโs first ever advertising campaign, “YouTube’s got TV”. Ramchandani also created a “What Type Are you” microsite for Pentagram that got 8 million hits and generated 400,000 type diagnoses. His short film on Henry Ponder, one of Britainโs most thoughtful but underrated poets, was screened at Cannes in 2015.
In 1994, Ramchandani was regarded as the โSecond Youngest Creative Director in Londonโ. He won the โBest Ad in The World at Cannesโ for his second TV commercial, made for Maxwell tapes.
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