Neal Nagau is a designer and graphic designer and puts his talent at the service of written press magazines but also communities and private and public companies. A business that he hopes to expand beyond the borders of Guadeloupe.
Neal is a man in a hurry. In life, as when he draws… After the baccalaureate, he went on to a Master’s degree in graphic design.
Last year, he studied at the Beaux-Arts in Belgium. Six months ago, back in Guadeloupe, he started his own business as a designer and graphic designer.
I like it when things go quickly and that’s why I went into press cartooning. It’s fast, the audience is engaged quickly. We have the emotions… It’s funny… The speed of the line is really what I like.
Neal Nagau, designer, graphic designer
His pencil stroke has already hit the mark. Every week, his drawings are published in a magazine. He meets regularly with the editor-in-chief to prepare the next issue.
It’s good for us too to have someone who comes, but who isn’t completely in the newspaper. Who has distance, who has his business outside, who sees the world differently. There is a gap that interested us and that brings terrible freshness for the newspaper. This also places us differently, for another audience.
Jacques Dancale, editor-in-chief “Nouvelles Semaine”
Neal also works for town halls and public or private companies. He creates playful illustrations and various visuals.
When I arrived, I told myself that I had to develop the mindset of the person who is capable of creating a company. So, I didn’t say to myself: I’m just going to create a company that works. I told myself: I am going to become a successful entrepreneur. So, if I really want my financial freedom, I have to learn things, I have to speak the right way, I have to dress the right way. I need to improve, become the “best version of myself” to operate the best version of my business.
A business that they run together. To go further, Neal works with Bryce Duplessis, also 24 years old. A specialist in the audiovisual field. They share the same office. But right now his partner is in Thailand. They communicate by video. For both, it is important to go and see what is being done elsewhere.
For me, it’s super important to travel. This allows you to meet people who are super interesting. Entrepreneurs who have a lot of experience. I just met entrepreneurs who have 30 employees. They give me advice that I would never have had in Guadeloupe or even in the West Indies. And this removes a lot of limiting barriers. When I talk about all these projects, for example, to my aunts, they don’t understand. But they see the result. And seeing people who understand, who are in the business, who are in current things, it really does a lot of good.
Bryce Duplessis, production
For Neal, the workday ends at the gym. To stay in shape and keep your ideas clear, every day, at the same time, it’s obligatory. A routine that will lead him, he hopes, to success.
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