April 20, 2010 say something

The designer-comic artist hybrid (7 strips you should be following)

Blame it on the need to express oneself in as many avenues possible, or the tendency for this community to navel-gaze out of narcissism or frustration, but you can’t deny how comic strips are a brilliant outlet for these designers. Each carries a different subject, sense of humor, and illustration style that you’ll want to subscribe to all of them.

Brad Colbow: The Brads

Test How Your Site Looks on the iPad

Brad’s also been tapped to create more informative strips such as Learning About Contrast in Design and Misunderstanding Markup: XHTML 2/HTML 5.

Kyle Weems: CSS Squirrel

Push To Dispense Free Cheese

I’ve mentioned CSS Squirrel when he announced his branching out to podcasting, but poking fun at the latest industry developments and insider info is where he shines.

N.C. Winters: Freelance Freedom

The Design Process

NC goes through the ups and downs of freelancing at Freelance Switch’s Freelance Freedom.

Business Guys on Business Trips

Client De-briefing

BGOBT tells the most awful office tales in detailed narrations but minimal line art.

Matthew Inman: The Oatmeal

How a Web Design Goes Straight to Hell

The man behind Mingle2 and SEOmoz, Matthew has gone on to create humorous quizzes and infographic-style comics at the very viral The Oatmeal.

Phil Thompson: The FrontEnders

Should Web Designers Code HTML?

Phil does a front-end spin on the British soap The Eastenders.

Ricardo Gimenes: Behind the Websites

Front-End design conference

Ricardo creates a fleet of colorful characters to represent different websites, and now makes strips for Smashing Magazine’s The Smashing Cartoons.

July 7, 2008 4 replies

“Stop being hired by clients and start hiring them”

Raining Umbrellas

Tom Martin from Advertising Age has an excellent piece of advice for all the professionals out there:

Stop being hired by clients and start hiring them. Stop waiting to receive an RFP or mailing hundreds of clients four to six times a year to stay “top of mind.” Instead, pick the folks you really want to work with, regardless of how big they are or what agency they currently work with.

The author is a little more concrete in the next paragraph, but if you want a second opinion, try this on for size: The Secret to Landing Clients Nearly 100% of the Time.

This is just another facet of what seems to be terribly wrong with business, which shapes our cynicism and despair over what we are getting paid to do. I hope that for you, it started out as a job you would have loved to do for free.

I think adopting this mentality of hiring clients instead of getting hired has a something to do with fulfilling your goal of being your own boss. That phrase is said a lot when it comes to freelancing, but applies to the rest of the industry as well. Even larger companies start somewhere. Somewhere small, in which they often compromise their true worth just so they can earn something. Something that really isn’t enough.

Whether you work alone or in a group, whether you’re a big name in the business or just starting out, stick to your guns. If that client does not understand why they have to spend the right amount of money for their venture with you, make sure that before you drop them you’ve done all you can to explain the numbers.

But if this request for proposal hoopla is hurting your operating costs and, more importantly, preventing you from doing your actual job, ask yourself: are they worth it? Have they earned what it takes to be part of your portfolio? You’d want to be proud of every single project you’ve done, wouldn’t you?

January 15, 2008 one reply

The Problem with Groundbreaking Design Decisions

Groundbreaking DesignA little while ago I had a brief discussion with an online contact over at Pownce. It was about web design, and how he felt that it was something that had totally degraded. In his point of view, designers just didn’t try hard enough, they just went with the current flow, sporting a pretty one-sided canvas.

I agree to some extent, that’s why I bashed the rounded corners in one of my first posts here at Wisdump. It’s not that I hate rounded corners, if they’re warranted in a design then that’s fine, but more that I think that too many uses them just because that’s the current craze. Just like the fresh Web 2.0 pastels and whatnot, we all know the look, and we like it. If all aimed to achieve it, the web would be a bit boring, however.

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