Archive for April, 2009

Graphic Design Business Tips

Monday, 27 April, 2009

design_business

There are a lot of things that can turn an exciting new design project into a nightmare for a graphic design business. Many graphic design businesses have experienced these issues below, including myself. The best way to avoid stress and problems with clients is to educate yourself about what can go wrong ahead of time and take steps to protect your yourself.

Below are 3 common problems that can go wrong and while they may sound simple and the solutions are simple, thousands of designers fall victim to these pitfalls.

1. Clients Who Won’t Pay

We all want to get paid and there are several ways to protect yourself against not getting paid. The first big mistake is to not require a down payment. Many designers do the work on spec or let the clients pay at the end, which is a big mistake. There are a few ways you can bill clients, but I prefer to simply bill half upfront and half when done, or get the full amount upfront for smaller jobs.

You should also use invoicing software or fill out an invoice template and a contract and have them all signed by the client so you have the project and payment details in writing. This will give you more power if you have to actually use the law to get your money, but hopefully it will not come to that.

2. Endless Revisions

This is an easy one to forget. You may be a great designer, but its an inside joke in the design community that the client always picks the worst design so they may not pick the design you worked hardest on, which means lots of possible revisions.

Many clients can be very picky and detail oriented, which is fine because they want to be happy, but if you do not limit revisions your project could turn into a nightmare where you actually don’t make any money because you had to put in so many extra hours.

As an example, you could offer 3 initial concepts for a logo design and then 3 revision rounds once they have picked one of the initial concepts to move forward with. You should also specify the price for additional revision rounds in case they want more.

3. Poor Planning and Timing

If you don’t plan out a project to the last detail and set a time frame you will run into major issues as well. For example if you are doing a website you need to know EXACTLY how many pages you need to create, what each page will have on it and so on. Talk about this with the client and make sure they give you everything you need before you start and get it in writing.

Creating a wire frame can be really helpful. A wire frame is basically a quick outline of what a design or website will look like and what will go where. This way you don’t miss anything and wont run into spending more time adding missing items later, which could cost you money.

Many clients also have very tight deadlines so you need to be able to gauge how long a project will take you and you need to get this in writing as well. For example you could say the estimated time to complete the project will be 3 weeks, but it could take a week more depending on extra revisions and such. Its better to add a few days or more to your estimated project deadline to give yourself a buffer.

Taken from YouTheDesigner.

Ideas For Getting Out of a Creative Rut

Friday, 24 April, 2009

We’ve all been there, when we don’t feel motivated or creative enough to get going and make masterpiece-like photos or projects. Eventually you run out of ideas, don’t know where to go, or what to shoot. Try these quick ideas, maybe they will help you out. They helped me!

  1. Going for a photo walk. This has helped me numerious times. No clients, no pressure to deliver, no need to produce something. Just take your camera and shoot things as you go. I tend to walk for about 45 minutes and just shoot. It’s fun and you will be surprised at what you get!
  2. Look at your previous work. Try looking back as far as possible and bring up some of your old design work or photos. Analyze it and rip it to shreds! Note how you would do things differently and perhaps make a notebook of all of your thoughts. How would today’s tools help change the look? How would your experiences change the way it looks?
  3. Browse other people’s work. Check out the tons of designer portfolios online. Check out Flickr and browse through the zillions of great shots. See what catches your eye and try and replicate or even just collect things you like so you can refer to it later. Networking via these online communities is also valuable.
  4. Write down all your thoughts! Get a pad of paper, get a blog, scribble on something whenever an idea hits you. It may never come back!

Chase Jarvis -> iPhone Photography

Tuesday, 21 April, 2009

Man, this guy is one of my favorite commercial photographers just keeps on astounding me. I think his work with big time cameras like the Nikon D3, Hasselblad and other expensive equipment…but this is a side that really surprised me. Reinforcing the fact that it’s not a camera that can be the most influential part of the equation, but rather the mind. He uses his iPhone and doesn’t do any photoshop work to it.

Follow the link here to see what I am talking about.

Creep and Printing

Monday, 20 April, 2009

So here’s something new I learned. I hadn’t had problems with this before because I would always just hand off my files to the printer and they would handle it. Today, I had to set up an annual for print. It was to be saddle-stitched and was about 20 pages with cover. When I went to take a look at the proof, the margins were really close to the outside cuts and even being cut off! This is what happens with saddle stitched and perfect bound books.

Creep adjustment fixes this by accounting for the stock weight and size as it wraps around itself in the entire book. Here are some more resources if you are interested.

Inspiring Advertising

Sunday, 19 April, 2009