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Your Brain on Design: A Graphic Design Blog

Enter the May Contest!

May 24, 2008

It’s back! I may have missed April (oops) and May is nearly over, but the contest lives.

Enter to win your own copy of The Doodle Diary

Enter the May Contest - The Doodle DiaryDoodles are as unique to each person as handwriting. Celebrate your doodle individually and try this untraditional and extremely revealing approach to journaling with the Doodle Diary. Inside you’ll find graph paper pages and doodle-inspiring designs, plus a dictionary for deciphering hundreds of doodles. Fill up a page every day and learn what those lines, circles, squares and squiggles say about you! Just doodle it! Imported. Wipe clean.

This is the kind of thing I can’t resist. Doodling and insight into myself? I’m in!

If you’re in, enter by leaving a comment below. Tell me what you like to doodle (does that sound dirty?), and I’ll enter you twice. The contest ends at 12pm on Friday, May 30th. Good luck!

Filed under: Contests

Where do you get your clients?

May 8, 2008

When I talk to people who are thinking about setting up shop, graphic design and otherwise, this is the question I’m asked most often. My answer is three places:

Word of Mouth. As far as I’m concerned, this is the best way to get new clients. When someone has heard good things about you from a source that they trust, your job of selling yourself and your services is 80% easier. They’re not looking for reasons to hire you, they’re looking to see what you can do for them. It may sounds like the same thing, but it’s not. When someone comes in cold, there’s a credibility hurdle you have to get over — who am I and why should you trust me? When a word of mouth client comes in, the trust is basically established. So and so recommended you, and I trust them, so I’ll trust you.

Of course, this is the hardest way to get clients at first, because it’s a catch 22. You have to have clients to get other clients by word of mouth. It also serves as a good reminder that the design world is small and your reputation will start to spread. Make sure it’s a good one.

Networking. There are countless groups to join: your local Chamber of Commerce, Design Groups (like the AIGA, GAG, or SPD), Networking Groups (like BNI), user groups (Hidden-Tech is a local group) and clubs (The Ad Club of Western Massachusetts is another local organization). Depending on your availability, the list can be endless. But here’s the secret: once you join, you have to get involved. It’s not going to be good enough to show up at a meeting or event once in a while. Volunteer. Get to know the officers of the group. Make yourself indispensable. It may take a while to start seeing results, but they will almost certainly come.

Advertising. This is important, but the returns are much fewer than in the other two options I’ve mentioned. When I get a potential client through word of mouth or networking, I end up getting the job 7 or 8 times out of 10. When someone contacts me because they’ve seen an ad of mine or found me on the web, it’s more like 2 or 3 out of 10. Why? The person who comes through an ad is typically just starting the process of hiring a designer. They’re looking at other companies, comparing prices and services, and figuring out what they want. There’s nothing wrong with any of that, of course. But the person who knows you (or knows someone who knows you) is usually ready to go, and have basically already made the decision to use you, or have significantly narrowed the field by the time you speak to them. Advertising is important, but if you rely on it to account for more than 50% of your business, you’re going to spend a lot of time in interviews and writing proposals that never turn into paying jobs.

Do you have any secret weapons to find new clients? What works for you?

Filed under: Know How, Re: business

Good Ideas from FPO Magazine

May 5, 2008

Like many designers, I am a sucker for a good magazine. I read all sorts, but design magazines, when done well, really ring my bell. That’s why I was very excited to get a complimentary copy of FPO Magazine in the mail two days ago. And that’s their first good idea — the magazine really was free. Not “free with subscription, cancel if you don’t like it.” Not “free with the purchase of 11 other issues.” Free free. They’re giving me a chance to check it out, no obligations, no need to cancel. I don’t know how I got on their mailing list, but score.

FPO Magazine Spring 2008 Table of Contents

Inside, there was quite a bit to like. My favorite articles were the short and dirty ones. “Snark Attack” (evaluating the questionable design of Cosmopolitan), “Retouchy Subject” (which chose the month’s most heavily retouched cover photo), and The White Stuff: Disguising a Mess (design tips). I also really liked two longer articles a lot: Health & Unhappiness: Why a Daring Redesign Went Bad (the inside story on Health’s redesign) and SOS: Too Much Space (more design tips).

So will I subscribe? I’m still on the fence. I definitely enjoyed my free issue, but I suffer from over-subscriptionitis. I already receive more magazines in a month then I have time to read, and at $55/year I’m not sure I’ll be able to spend enough time with FPO for it to make sense to spend that much money on FPO. I’ll keep you posted.

Filed under: Links, Know How

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