Creative Advertising Student Wins in 2023 Communication Arts Student Showcase Competition
Winning awards takes years for some creatives, but for , creativity flowed naturally from his first portfolio class.
Earlier this year, the student won in the 8th Annual Communication Arts Student Showcase, with his three winning ad campaigns showing in the March/April 2023 Communication Arts Issue. These campaigns were created in advertising professor of practice âs Portfolio I course, and Connerâs win marks the fifth time in a row that Newhouse students have won this competition since the school started submitting work five years ago.
The Student Showcase doesnât just award one advertising campaign in a studentâs portfolio, it awards the entire portfolio of work. According to the Communication Arts Student Showcase 2023 Edition, students are chosen for this award for their âdistinctive approach to creative problem solving and for producing work at a professional level.â
âWinning this competition reflects our curriculum, and it reflects the studentsâ hard work, creativity and talent,â says White. âItâs not just one campaign, itâs a whole portfolio of work, so winning impresses creative directors. Communication Arts is well-respected in the industry.â
Connerâs work takes an interesting angle on the products heâs advertising. In fact, among his three winning ad campaigns, none of them actually show the product itself. Instead, he chose to convey the product benefit through visual solutions.
âFrom an art direction standpoint, I was inspired by ads Iâd seen that use really unique visuals to breathe life into products that otherwise may not have any,â Conner says. âIf you make something interesting that makes people laugh, youâve made a momentâand, in my eyes, thatâs much more impactful than just showing a bottle or listing features.â
Connerâs first campaign, âHomesickâ was created for the Tide To Go Mini, an instant stain remover stick. Connerâs insight was simple and relatableâpeople get clothing stains when theyâre out or away from home. His idea zeroed in on the productâs strength and reliability; the power of a full washing machine in a portable-sized pen.

âThe beauty of this idea is its relatability. Thatâs what makes a good insight,â White says. âRyan did a great job with creating a visual solution that conveyed a clever concept.â
Being adventurous doesnât mean you have to be unprepared. Images of travelers trekking through nature with clunky washing machines strapped to their backs metaphorically explain the power of the Tide product.
Connerâs second campaign, â2,000 Usesâ for WD-40 started off as an in-class activity with his copywriting partner, Mackenzie Murphy â23. By the end of two classes, it had established itself as a competition-winning piece.

The headline-driven solution focuses on Conner and Murphyâs big idea that WD-40 is a product with over 2,000 uses, but most people donât take advantage of this. The cheeky copy insinuates that if other things in your life had this many uses, youâd be ahead of the game by now. For example, if your tutor had as many uses at the WD-40, youâd already be a genius.
For Conner and Murphy, inspiration struck like lightning, and they ran with it from that first brainstorming session.
âI learned to take that first crazy thing I sketch down in my notebook and see where it can go,â Conner says.
âThe synergy that happened between Ryan and Mackenzie was electric,â White says. âThey went above and beyond with the in-class project and created the campaign on the computer. It was like magic. When magic happens with an art director and copywriter team, itâs very clear. And the same happens in the industry.â
Connerâs third campaign, âAuto-Pilot,â also relied heavily on a visual solution without any actual pictures of the 2022 Hyundai Sonata with Lane Keeping Assist. Conner reflects on his creative process behind his headline: âAccidents happen when you lose focus.â
âInstead of focusing on the feature, or the benefit it serves, I wanted to take a stab at the opposite. Cars need something like Lane Keep Assist in the first place because people canât focus when theyâre driving,â Conner says. âInstead of showing how cool the car is, I showed whatâs wrong with the people driving them. I wanted to tap into that human error element in a much less intense, comical way.â

âHe explored exaggeration and opposites, and the execution is flawless,â White says.
Even though cars and hammers donât seem to have much in common upon first glance, they share the same risk of an accident happening. Thatâs the beauty of a visual solutionâmerging two unlikely situations and letting your audience forge the connections.
âRyan soaked up everything like a sponge, and he was always there to learn. And when youâre a student, thatâs important,â White says.
âWinning this competition means I get the chance to represent my school, Newhouse and my professors, who helped make opportunities like this possible,â Conner says. âAnd it means that someone out there somewhere can recognize all the hard work that goes into a student perfecting their craft.â
Conner has a lot to be proud of during his time at Newhouse, especially after winning the Communication Arts Student Showcase, but his career is just getting started.
Story by Emily Bright â22