AOL

Before most people had heard of the web, America Online had a thriving business as the leading provider of online access and exclusive branded content to America's households. There was a time when there was more content in AOL then on all websites combined. With the proliferation of web-based content, however, AOL was forced to profoundly shift their business model. While they still saw significant revenue from customers who had held on to the familiar service, it was clear that the web would eventually kill this traditional core business. They decided to take a bold step and join the inevitable trend: they would no longer charge for access, instead making AOL services freely available. AOL would become an open web portal like Yahoo! and MSN, with a revenue model centered on online advertising. To support the new business model, AOL had to re-imagine its online offerings, making its properties more advertising-friendly and competitive in a crowded online market. The company asked Method to help it create some of those properties, including AOL RED, a site for teens, the Stylelist fashion blog (shown here), and sites for special events such as the Grammy Awards. Method provided branding, user experience, and website visual design for Stylelist, a destination site for fashion and beauty programming. The pages, built to accommodate AOL's proprietary blog format and to provide ample locations for in-line ads, use a restrained color palette that allows content and photography to shine. The design carefully balances the company's goals of creating credibility with a fashion-oriented audience, while still staying true to the navigation and graphic conventions of the AOL brand.

Method

Working at MethodContact Us
As the largest provider of cable TV and broadband services in the U.S., Comcast has direct relationships with millions of households. Fancast extends Comcast's reach into the next entertainment frontier: direct delivery of video entertainment over the Internet.
Comcast
2007 marked the 50th year of the San Francisco International Film Festival, the first American film festival to reach this benchmark. The design goal for the festival, therefore, was to develop a campaign worthy of such an historic anniversary.
San Francisco International Film Festival

Microsoft Zune

Microsoft

boxee

boxee

AOL

AOL

Ugobe

Ugobe

SuperCollider

SuperCollider

San Francisco International Film Festival 49th

San Francisco International Film Festival

TED Conferences

TED Conferences

Time Warner Cable Advanced TV User Interface Concepts

Time Warner Cable

Microsoft Software Development Kit

Microsoft

Time Warner Cable On Demand Website

Time Warner Cable