DROPBOX
CATEGORY
Customer Stories
PROJECT
Stern Pinball
ROLE
Director, Creative
About this project
Great people, the right tools, and passion for the game, as old-school maker Stern Pinball explains after 36 years of turning out hits.
Founded in Chicago in 1986, Stern Pinball is the oldest continually active pinball manufacturer in the world. Throughout the years, the game has evolved as technology in the world has changed. But one thing remains: the makers’ passion for the game.
I LOVE pinball. Stern Pinball is one of the OG’s of pinball and I had talked to them in the past. When Dropbox approached us for a new customer story I had make the connection that Stern uses Dropbox in really unique ways and Dropbox gave us the green light to tell the story.
Dropbox Blog writeup here.
Westchester Publishing
We were brought on to visually share how a collaborative ecosystem helped Westchester Publishing Services grow, save time, and boost revenue. Westchester adopted Dropbox to streamline collaboration and file management across diverse client processes, significantly enhancing operational efficiency and revenue growth.
Dropbox Blog Writeup here.
Missouri Star Quilt
When the Doan family moved to Hamilton, Missouri in 1995, they had no idea they would eventually build what some people now call the “Disneyland of quilting.” Missouri Star Quilt Co. went from just one building, one quilt machine, and one Dropbox folder to 15 quilt shops, 400 employees, and 100,000 visitors a year.
This is the story of how Dropbox helped Missouri Star Quilt Co. bring a dying town back to life.
Dropbox Blog writeup here.
Tomorrow Lab
Tomorrow Lab is an invention and industrial design studio in New York City—they’re moving forward. But it’s not without an introspective examination of their purpose and craft. Take a behind the curtain look at Tomorrow Lab’s mission to invent products that matter.
Dropbox Blog writeup here.
CIVIC
From the civil war in Yemen to crises throughout western Africa, global conflicts are on the rise over the last 30 years. And yet civilians are the ones who bear the brunt of the violence.
One of these civilian victims was CIVIC’s founder, Marla Ruzicka. In the midst of the Iraq War, Ruzicka spent time in Iraq and Afghanistan to learn firsthand what civilians were facing and what policies might be effective in improving their safety. She was killed in an explosion in Baghdad in 2005.
This is the story of how one nonprofit is honoring—while evolving—the legacy of its late founder.
Dropbox Blog writeup here.