1st Edition

How Not to Hate Advertising A Creative’s Guide to A Long and (Dare I Say) Happy Career in A Remarkably Silly Industry

By Nick Sonderup Copyright 2026
150 Pages 68 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

150 Pages 68 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

150 Pages 68 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

Written by an award-winning Chief Creative Officer (CCO) and featuring insights from agency and freelance advertising pros, this book is the creative professionals’ guidebook, self-help book, and halftime speech/pep talk book all wrapped up in one. It's written for working creatives to help them sustain and succeed in an industry that has plenty to hate about it. This is not a “how to break... Read more

Foreword by Jeff Kling. A note on hate. Preface. Chapter 1. How not to hate advertising. Chapter 2. How not to hate the creative process. Chapter 3. How not to hate your own brand. Chapter 4. How not to hate being the adult in the room. Chapter 5. How not to hate your current job. Chapter 6. How not to hate your portfolio. Chapter 7. How not to hate going freelance. Chapter 8. How not to hate the way we work now. Chapter 9. How not to hate the shiny new object. Chapter 10. How not to hate awards. Chapter 11. How not to hate yoga and tofu. Chapter 12. How not to hate other random stuff you never thought you’d hate about advertising. Chapter 13. How to be okay with hating advertising a little. Acknowledgments

Biography

Nick Sonderup is an award-winning creative leader with 23+ years of experience. His work has been recognized by nearly every industry awards show, including Cannes Lions, ANDYs, One Show, Clio, Effies, D&AD, and the ADC. His work for General Electric earned an Emmy nomination, and his film 100 Bands in 100 Days was a Grand Jury award nominee at the 2010 SXSW Film Festival. Nick is currently Co-CCO at StrawberryFrog, responsible for leadership across multiple accounts, the creative department, and the StrawberryFrog brand. Over the years, Nick has lent his expertise to a broad range of brands, including MTV, ESPN, American Express, MINI, AT&T, Nike, Anheuser-Busch InBev, State Farm, Midea, Northwell Health, and more. He also created powerful, soulful work at many of the industry’s most celebrated creative agencies, like Wieden+Kennedy (W+K), BBDO, Ogilvy, and Translation, after starting his career at MTV. Outside of agency life, Nick has worked as an Adjunct Professor teaching copywriting.

"Nobody likes a hater, and Nick Sonderup can show you how to avoid being one. (Or how to stop, if you're already there.) Written with wit and verve and loaded with real-world examples, practical advice and hard-won wisdom, How Not to Hate Advertising will delight anyone who wants to fall back in love with their own creativity."

- Jeremy Egner, New York Times TV editor and author of Believe: The Untold Story Behind Ted Lasso

 

"Nick’s book is a no-nonsense playbook for creatives in advertising, zeroing in on career pain points that can derail you. Drawing from years in the trenches, he dishes out practical wisdom to turn obstacles into opportunities. It’s super powerful—don’t miss this one."

-  Scott Goodson, Founder of StrawberryFrog

 

"When you truly love something, you’ll do anything, even write a book, in order to save it. How Not to Hate Advertising is a must read for the next generation of creative leaders looking for invaluable insights cosplaying as humorous, humble advice." 

- Julie Rutigliano, Executive Creative Director

"...Author Nick Sonderup is here to tell it straight: this job can grind you down and steal your weekends but still, bafflingly, be the thing you keep coming back to...Throughout the pages, Sonderup throws in some very useful survival hacks: how to sit through a creative review without questioning your career choices, how to stop treating awards like emotional support animals and how to lead without becoming the very boss you once swore you’d never be. By the end, you’ll be reminded that, despite the circus, the egos and the endless decks—so many decks—it’s all worth it for the moments when we make something that breaks through."

- Dave Kuhl, Communication Arts