Hi, I currently work at a small studio and have been wanting to revamp my website/portfolio. I've done a great deal of work at this studio that I would like to be able to show to potential employers. What I'm confused about is what the general practice for showing this work is(if there is one).
Most of the work I would want to show isn't in publically available screenshots (because it's concept art, or because the amount of screenshots online are sparse). I'm sure I signed some sort of nda when first started there, but I don't remember the specifics. I'm hesitant to ask around at work because it would probably look like I'm looking for a new job (which I kinda am....)
Anyway, I was wondering if anyone that's been in a similar position has any advice. Sorry for the long post
Replies
If thats going to put you in a dangerous position, then don't make it public and just attach the stuff to an email or make another sub-site.
Always get approval first/read what you signed before...and if you get the green light...put on a watermark somewhere to label it clearly...like mentioned.
Ideally you cannot publicly show any work under NDA until after the game has shipped. They want to announce their game their way. It's dick but it happens.
If you're looking for a new job, I'd just show the work privately at an interview. I personally would hesitate to ask a manager for permission giving that reason unless I trusted the Company. Some companies run things pretty strictly and may end your employment before you wanted to. It's dick but it happens.
One thing I would encourage is that you do NOT discuss it with your company, unless you really trust them or there are some unusual circumstances (such as the company announcing it is going to close down). The legal point of view is, you signed an NDA, they own your work, you showing your work is illegal and breaking your NDA. There is really no grey area around it. Let's say you show your work and somehow the company finds out, and gets mad. Argh!, they say, naughty! But let's say you asked for, and were denied, permission. The company is much more likely to be really upset, because when they denied your request you lost any sort of deniability or ambiguity or ethical right to show your work.