Youth With A Mission Orlando
A throwaway piece becomes a
treasured guide for volunteering.
Covenant Communications
Creative director: Justin Ramb
Project manager: Faith Hopler
Designer: Brian Marschall
Client: Youth With A Mission
Contact: www.covweb.com
800.994.3844
Youth With A Mission (YWAM) is a youth-oriented
ministry that concentrates on international service
projects and leadership development training.
Volunteering abroad can be a major life decision, so
YWAM’s brochure has to include a large amount of
copy; yet the piece also needs to be fresh and upbeat
to reach an adventure-seeking youth market.
“YWAM wanted a look that communicated
fun, adventure and world travel,” says designer Rob
Bullock of Covenant Communications. “They also
had a lot of content and text to use, along with great
pictures. We designed a brochure around their pictures
of young people in exotic destinations, working
the background into a travel-worn brochure.”
YWAM is a nonprofit organization with a
limited budget, so the brochure needed to be high
quality, yet economical. “The client wants to use this
piece for some time to come,” explains Bullock. “So
they [chose not to] print each program’s dates and
prices in the actual brochure. We designed a front
diecut pocket for a half sheet of paper that will be
printed at various times of the year and inserted with
the appropriate dates and pricing. They also want
this brochure to be a good reference piece for people
who are seriously interested in their programs, so we
used a heavy, uncoated cover stock that felt substantial
and will wear well.”
Bullock says the design came from YWAM’s
desire to have a travel brochure look and feel to the
piece: “We worked [YWAM’s bright, new brand
colors of blue, orange and green] in with the dusty,
creased and worn look of the background to communicate
both an upbeat and youth-oriented friendliness,
as well as a focus on world travel and outreach.
The group is both family-focused and adventuredriven,
and we feel that this piece communicates that
very well, with its focus on faces and photos, and the
distressed textures and layers.”

