every week at the office's status meeting, we all catch up on each other's projects, the theory being that we all have a rough idea of what's happening that week with the 150+ jobs our office handles a week on average.... i suspect that job X, being a very small run, probably only took up a single box, and somehow got mixed in with one of the five other jobs that printer delivered on friday. we start calling every client who came and picked up one of the other four jobs on friday, asking them to go through their boxes and check for an extra.
Read Morewebsites for $30?
i'm willing to do work for friends and acquaintances that i would never dream of doing for clients i don't know -- because i know them, know of them, or know where they live and can come collect in person.... those type of clients, i've learned the hard way, are a Royal Pain In My Ass. those are the clients who are either decent people who really have no idea what they're asking and can be trained to be good clients; or they're clients who really just want you to work for them for free.... It is committed to improving conditions for all creators of graphic art and raising standards for the entire industry.… The Guild is a union that embraces creators of graphic art at all levels of skill and expertise who create works of graphic art intended for presentation as originals or reproductions."
Read Morehelpful hints from your friendly neighborhood design professional
i just got off the phone with a client who was appalled that i had asked her to decide how many flyers and posters she wanted. "i didn't think it mattered at this point," she said.
um… yeah. i explained to her that both the quantity and the method of printing mattered a great deal. if she wanted to print a 4-color flyer on a press, i'd need a substantially higher-resolution image than the 72dpi one she'd snagged off the internet. if, however, she only wanted five copies run off from our color laser printer, it would be fine.
feh.
so, when you call up a design professional, please:
- either know what you want, or tell them right away you *don't* know, so they can help you decide.
- "a couple," and "some" are not considered quantities for bidding purposes. and yes, there is a difference between two and three.
- -get permission to use the photo you want included in the project, because when your design professional sees a watermark or copyright notice, they're going to ask about it. i don't want my stuff being used without my permission, and i extend the same professional courtesy to others.
- -"oh, just do something creative," is going to elicit groans and sighs. if you want something to look a certain way, say so. preferably <em>before</em> the designer starts designing, not <em>after</em>. if you are specifically asked about color preference, layout preference, typeface preference, or any other spec, and you say you don't care, you better be damn ready to accept the entire thing being set in nambypamby narrow and done in florescent ink.
- -do not try to use the jargon of a design professional unless you are one. you will be mocked. or worse, called on it by being asked very industry-specific questions.
i have that sinking feeling about this client that says, 'trouble.'
sigh.