Grew magazine ad revenue by turning biannual magazine into quarterly editions
Ventured into a new line of businessβconferencesβthanks to workflow efficiency
Elevated the brand through strategic projects and classic art direction processes
Gear PatrolΒ is devoted to discovering new products and the stories that surround themβwhat they call βproduct journalism.β They produce an award-winning publication, weekly videos, launch events, and daily product reviews, and in 2019 they introduced a conference calledΒ Stocked. It brought together the makers, advertisers, and designers behind amazing products, featuring brands like Hill City, OXO, The North Face, and Herman Miller.
Gear Patrolβs Art Director, Joe Tornatzky, works with a 10-person team of creatives who produce photography, video, and designβand at a time when the company would grow from 25 to 50 people in a year, they had no scalable project management tools in place to help.
Poorly defined creative processes and feedback loops made collaboration messy:
At times, teams would stumble through complicated projects that required multiple rounds of review and feedback. Sometimes assets even had to be reshot or reworked.
Discussions and feedback were hidden in private Slack conversations, preventing other teammates from learning from them.
Creatives spent more time on reactive work than on proactive and strategic projects that developed the brand.
Gear Patrol wasnβt alone in this. According to theΒ Anatomy of Work Index, skilled workers spend so much time on coordination that they only dedicate 40% of their efforts to their skill-based job and strategic thinking.
Joe and team were ready to streamline βwork about workβ so they could focus on moving the brand forward.

The standard of our creative team, for a while, was just to react to work. But weβll never do the best work we possibly can without a clear process.β
Joe is a βsystematic creativeβ who loves building workflows to help people succeed. He looked for an all-encompassing work management platform that supported individualsβ daily tasks, like photoshoot scheduling and designing emails, as well as company-wide collaborations, like the Stocked conference.
Asana fit the bill with flexible workflows, a calendar view for tasks, and a central home for feedback and files so theyβre visible to everyone on the team.
Joe partnered with Caitlyn Shaw, Gear Patrolβs Consumer Marketing Manager and a champion for the platform, to build out conventions for managing work in Asana. They trained the company on how to use it, developed documentation, and created test projects to experiment with. Then, team leaders set up their own workstreams, which created a sense of ownership.
Gear Patrol now tracks everything in Asana, using tasks to start and end a project in the right place, andΒ TimelineΒ to record due dates in fine detail. When they planned their first Stocked conference, they captured all the moving parts in Asana, down to the branded napkins. Teammates could work through their tasks while understanding the project as a whole.

Using Asana has allowed us to take historically complex and challenging projects and turn them into seamless inter-departmental collaborations.β
Today, Gear Patrol runs leaner, is more communicative, and less reactive. This has freed up resources for projects that elevate their creative work overall.
Last yearβfor the first timeβGear Patrol's team was able to shoot a custom cover for their print magazine, which required a complex art direction process that resulted in an iconic image. Not only did it represent a higher-level vision for that issue, but now they had a concept to anchor promotion and positioning.
Efficiency has also generated new revenue sources. Gear Patrolβs biannual magazine is now quarterly, which has significantly grown its ad revenue from print. And they were able to venture into the world of larger events and conferences.

Our shift in workflow allowed us to make a conceptual magazine cover, an iconic image. The value goes beyond βNow weβre organized.β It becomes, βNow we have a better product.β
The first Stocked conference was such a hit that Gear Patrol announced a second one for 2020. Theyβll use last yearβs Asana template for faster planning, and update it based on learnings.
They also have ambitions to continue to expand the GP100βtheir awards for the top 100 products of the yearβby launching physical awards and potentially expanding across their integrated platforms including in-real-life experiences, with Asana at their side. After all, the only thing better than amazing products is coming together to celebrate them.

We were able to launch entirely new lines of business and grow the ad revenue generated by our magazine by turning it from a biannual to a quarterly edition.β
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