FOR OUR PEOPLE, OUR CLIENTS,
THEIR CAUSES & FOR THE PLANET.
Our mission is to design for a difference. From nonprofits and third-sector heroes to healthcare organisations and environmental warriors, we've got a soft spot for anyone doing a little good. Together, we create stories that inspire, designs that captivate, and campaigns that ignite change.
We're not just into design for charities; we're about making every penny count. Teaming up with charities across the globe, we help spread awareness, spark empathy, and gently nudge everyone towards making a positive impact — all without blowing the budget.
We get how crucial design is when it comes to healthcare. Our approach is simple, it is about improving the patient journey, creating visuals that makes the tricky stuff easier to understand, and of course, supporting the healthcare hero’s at every opportunity.
Our mission is clear: design for good. We love to contribute to projects that create positive change in the world around us, whether this be in society or in the environment. If you're working to uplift communities, doing your bit to help the planet, or championing social justice, we’re with you 100%.
To help with global beach clean week, we set off to Shoreham-by-the-sea for the morning. During this week coast lines all over the world have volunteers collecting rubbish that will then be analysed and the data used to determine what is found on our shores and polluting our ocean. We were given a 100m stretch of what looked like a very clean pebble beach. We were instructed to record every bit of litter we found, no matter how small.
Did you that more people in the world have a mobile phone than a toilet? Which is around 40% of the global population. 289,000 children under five die every year from diarrhoeal diseases caused by poor water and sanitation. That's almost 800 children per day, or one child every two minutes. Enter Who Gives A Crap.
We moved to Oru Space in Sutton in September 2023. And I wont lie, I think it is the best decision we ever made. After years of covid we were kind of all working from home which was a bit sad as we enjoy each others company (genuinely).