- Nicholas de Wolff
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Nicholas Adams de Wolff (born 1970) is a writer, business strategist and marketing executive, and longtime Media and Entertainment industry pioneer.[1][2][3] His career spans multiple creative and business platforms, including theatrical, film, fashion, retail, TV, and New Media. He recently began working with businesses and governments[4][5] in the field of sustainability, helping to drive policy and reforms in urban design and transportation.
Life and Work
de Wolff was born in Geneva, Switzerland on May 6, 1970. He spent the first 5 years of his life living in Portugal, where he studied at the Lycée Français Charles Lepierre. During the turbulent period of the country’s PREC,[6] de Wolff and most of his family moved to London, England, where he transferred into the Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle to continue his studies. After another 9 years in British boarding schools, de Wolff enrolled at Duke University, where he studied English Literature and was concurrently part of the school’s famed “Actor’s Sequence” Professional Actor Training Program, under Dr. Robert L. Hobbs.
For the past 15 years, he has been deeply involved in New Media business ventures, including Internet, social media,[7] M&E technologies, IP, and mobile communications.
de Wolff has written and been quoted in a diverse array of articles and reviews on business strategy, media topics and marketing trends (with particular focus on social media), in a variety of publications, including the Chicago Sun-Times, Produced By Magazine, Screen Actor Magazine, and The Networker, among others. He is regularly sought after to speak to corporations and associations on emerging marketing trends[8] and brand positioning challenges.[9]
Until recently, de Wolff served as a Chief Marketing Officer at Technicolor (formerly Thomson), one of the world’s largest media and entertainment technology providers. While at Technicolor, de Wolff directed a review of - and implemented new initiatives in - the company’s Corporate Social Responsibility activity, launching a variety of new programs to heighten the firm’s attention to its environmental and community responsibilities, as a global sustainability steward. From there he was elected to serve on the Sustainability Commission for the City of Burbank (Media Capital of the World), where he has been responsible for driving a concerted effort toward redefining municipal mobility and urban design efforts, to accommodate urban density shifts and alternative transportation options.[5] In January 2010, he was elected Chair of the city's related subcommittees on Urban Design and Transportation.
Previously, de Wolff was Vice President and Group Creative Director of Dream Theatre, a leading digital production studio. There, he oversaw some of the earliest promotional campaigns on the Web for clients including Disney, the Jim Henson Company and Sony. Many of the web productions he oversaw are considered groundbreaking in their use (and reverse engineering in some cases) of available technologies, and several received Promax awards for creative direction and interactive production.
de Wolff is a co-founder of the Producers Guild of America’s New Media Council, which published a landmark document in 2010 entitled "The Producers Guild of America New Media Code of Credits". He is also a member of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences and has served several times on the jury for the Primetime Emmy Awards. Additionally, he is a member of the advisory boards of the CMO Institute, the Charter High School for the Arts, National Film Festival for Talented Youth, American Lung Association, and the Business Marketing Association, as well as a founding member of the Digital Watermarking Alliance.
References
- ^ Christopher Rollyson, Socialmedia.biz, 23 February 2010, "17 visionaries predict impact of social on the enterprise", 11 March 2010
- ^ The Global Human Capital Journal, 7 February 2010, "17 Enterprise Visionaries Release 2010 Predictions for Social Networks, Web 2.0 ", 11 March 2010
- ^ Leveraging New Media as a Filmmaker, 8 September 2010, "[1]", 8 September 2010
- ^ Consulate General of France in Los Angeles , 23 June 2009, "French Government Interview", 11 March 2010
- ^ a b Sustainable Burbank Task Force, September 21, 2009 Minutes, 21 September 2009, "Sustainable Burbank Task Force, September 21, 2009 Minutes"
- ^ Wikipedia, "Carnation revolution", 11 March 2010
- ^ Founders Space, Is Your Company Website Socially Optimized?, 16 September 2010, "[2]", 21 September 2010
- ^ Evisors, Careers in Marketing, 17 October 2011, "[3]", 18 October 2011
- ^ Mike Brown, The CMO Summit - Take Aways & Questions for Marketers - Part 1, "The CMO Summit - Take Aways & Questions for Marketers - Part 1", 11 March 2010
External links
Categories:- 1970 births
- American Internet personalities
- Living people
- American bloggers
- American technology writers
- People from London
- American business executives
- People educated at Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle
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