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February 26, 2025

The state of in-house creative teams? Overcommitted

By Kae Neskovic Executive Creative Director
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TL;DR

We wrote a report.

But: Some of you are probably too busy to read it.

While 97% of creative leaders say they’re happy with the status quo, burnout's at an all-time high. Workloads are crushing, staffing's hit-or-miss—and there’s never enough time for great work.

See what else we found and get your copy of the Overcommitted Report.

Throughout my career—first as a designer and now as Executive Creative Director—being “creative” has meant many things, especially in business. Working with brands like Adobe, Pinterest, Sony Music and Fendi, you learn from the best. You also experience the pressures of sky-high expectations, mammoth workloads and minuscule timelines.

You choose your profession because of your talent and passion for creative—but your day-to-day is just admin and juggling deadlines. We know this truth. We live it. We feel it every day. But, how do you prove it? More importantly—how do you fix it?

So, we asked 200+ creative leaders how they’re handling the chaos—what’s working, what’s not and what’s next.

Here’s what we found:

Everyone’s burned out

While 97% of creative leaders claim they’re satisfied with how their teams work, beneath that confidence—burnout is reaching a flashpoint.

  • 76% felt burned out in the past year.
  • 78% said their teams felt the same.
  • 78% said their teams can’t keep up with increasing demands.
 
 

Staffing is so-so

Do creative teams have enough people? It depends on who you ask. While two in five say their team is understaffed, we found that less-experienced creative leaders might just accept overcommitment as the norm.

  • Nearly half of leaders with 10+ years of experience said their teams are understaffed.
  • But, only 32% of those in the field for 10 years or less agree.
  • Less-experienced professionals were more likely to say they were staffed “just right” (61%) vs. 44% for veterans.

Talent takes time

Most leaders believe they have the talent to execute big ideas. What they don’t have? Time. There are just too many tasks and priorities—they want to do as much of the right work as possible, but they can’t.

  • 79% want to create bolder work but are strapped for time.
  • 77% said they could have a greater impact if not bogged down by low-priority tasks.
  • 85% had to focus on admin work over creativity.

Outsourcing? It’s complicated

When you can’t do it all, you get help. Half of creative leaders (52%) outsource. But, it isn’t as simple as it sounds.

  • 85% said they need to do a better job outsourcing.
  • 41% relied on just one agency—only 13% felt this was going well.
  • More than half have completely lost faith in agencies.

AI’s a game changer

For creative leaders and business leaders, the transformative power of gen AI isn’t up for debate.

  • 96% believe AI will accelerate creative production.
  • 93% feel that AI will improve quality.
  • 89% said their executive team understands the impact.

It’s time to do less

Creatives are at a tipping point. From new channels and formats to the rapid adoption of AI, overcommitment is the default setting.

But creatives are also notoriously resilient. We can prioritize relentlessly, push AI further—and find better partners to share the load. We can do our best work, take care of our teams and drive growth. It’s what we do—and we’ve always known how to do it well.

What 200+ creative leaders had to say
What 200+ creative leaders had to say
The state of in-house creative teams

What 200+ creative leaders had to say

There’s a reason we called it the Overcommitted Report.
But, is there light at the end of the carpal tunnel?

Kae Neskovic Executive Creative Director

With 15+ years of experience shaping brands like Adobe, Pinterest, Sony Music, Fendi and other big names—Superside Executive Creative Director Kae Neskovic knows a thing or two about branding and design. She’s also got a pretty great LinkedIn profile.

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