David J. Adams
We help founders, leaders, and creators make work that matters more.
I see patterns. I make connections. I go deep - creatively, emotionally, intellectually, spiritually, strategically. I connect what is disconnected.
David J. Adams
Founder, Great Voyageurs Creative Studio
I'm David J. Adams. Based in Toronto. Founder of Great Voyageurs Creative Studio.
I work with founders, leaders, and creators on what they're carrying, what isn't landing, and what wants to come into the world. The work draws on a methodology I've developed over more than two decades called Inside Out - a way of designing from inside the actual human experience, outward into form.
For over two decades I've been the one who can parachute into the unfamiliar, assess what's needed, see the pivots others don't, understand the vision, politics, personnel, and procedures that sway decisions - connect the right people, and do the unglamorous work that makes success real.
The methodology has worked across organizational strategy, technology, community health, and creative development. It has shaped programs and pivots, organizations and teams, brands and creative works moving toward the world. The domains keep widening. The approach doesn't change.
I also write and produce. A slate of original IP in film and television in active development - an animated feature, multiple series, original scripts. Audio plays broadcast on the CBC and on Deutschland Radio Berlin. Co-author of the bestselling children's books Good Night Vancouver, Good Night Canada, and Good Night Vancouver Island, and creative consultant on Good Night Ontario.
On one track: organizational and individual transformation - corporate, product and experience design, health systems, government initiatives, creative development, strategy. The work that makes organizations and products matter more to the people they're trying to serve.
On the other: original IP - ideation, scripts, treatments, series bibles, produced content. A slate of projects designed from the inside out, each one a world built to matter.
In both tracks the question is the same: what's wanting to emerge from inside, and what does the design need to be to reveal that truth?
The person who wants their product to resonate and the producer who wants to make something that lasts - they share the same underlying conviction. That depth produces better outcomes. That there's a level underneath the obvious where the real work lives.
Let's solve what's in the way.
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