 |
 |
CREATIVE THOUGHTS OF BUSINESS SUCCESS
Top 10 Lies to Beware Of
© 2008 dezignbiz.com
While advertising my creative services, I
know that many fellow artists and designers
who are surfing on the net will come across
my website - so I like to offer the occasional
information that might help others to learn
the business of creativity. The article listed
below is not written by me, but by Mark W.
Lewis, and when I seen this - I thought I
might add it to my site and share it with
you. |
Top 10 Lies told to Trusting Artists and
Designers
by Mark W. Lewis
1 "Do this one cheap (or free) and we'll
make it up on the next
one."
No reputable business person would first
give away their work and
time or merchandise
on the hope of making it
up later. Can you
imagine what a plumber
would say if you said
"come in, provide
and install the sink
for free and next time
we'll make it up when
we need a sink." You
would be laughed
at! Also the likelyhood
is that if something
important came along, they
wouldn't use you.
2 "We never pay a cent until we see
the final product."
This is a croc, unless the person is leaving
the door open to cheat
you out of your pay.
Virtually every profession
requres a deposit
or incremental payment
during anything but
the smallest project. Once
you have a working
relationship, you may work
out another arrangement
with a client. But a new
client should not
ask you to go beyond an
initial meeting and,
perhaps some preliminary
sketches without
pay on the job! |
 |
 |
|
3 "Do this for us and you'll get great
exposure! The jobs will just
pour in!"
Baloney. Tell a plumber "Install this
sink and my friend will see and
you'll get
lots of business!" Our plumber
friend
would say "You mean even
if I do a good
job I have to give my work away
to get noticed?
Then it isn't worth the notice."
Also
the guy would likely brag to
everyone he
knows about how this would normally
cost
(X) dollars, but brilliant businessman
that
he is he got if for free! If
anyone calls,
they'll expect the same or better
deal.
4 On looking at sketches or concepts: "Well,
we aren't sure if we want to
use you yet,
but leave your material here
so I can talk
to my partner/investor/wife/clergy."
You can be sure that 15 minutes after you
leave he will be on the phone
to other designers,
now with concepts in hand, asking
for price
quotes. When you call back you
will be informed
that your prices were too high
and Joe Blow
Design/Illustration will be doing
the job.
Why shouldn't they be cheaper?
You just gave
them hours of free consulting
work! Until
you have a deal, LEAVE NOTHING
CREATIVE at
the clients office.
5 "Well, the job isn't CANCELLED, just
delayed. Keep the account open
and we'll
continue in a month or two."
Ummm, probably not. If something is hot,
then not, it could be dead. It
would be a
mistake to *not* bill for work
performed
at this point and then let the
chips fall
where they may! Call in two months
and someone
else may be in that job. And
guess what?
They don't know you at all.....
6 "Contract? We don't need no stinking
contact! Aren't we friends?"
Yes, we are, until something goes wrong or
is misunderstood, then you are
the jerk in
the suit and I am that idiot
designer, then
the contract is essential. That
is, unless
one doesn't care about being
paid. Any reputable
business uses paperwork to define
relationships
and you should too.
7 "Send me a bill after the work goes
to press."
Why wait for an irrelevant deadline to send
an invoice? You stand behind
your work, right?
You are honest, right? Why would
you feel
bound to this deadline? Once
you deliver
the work and it is accepted,
BILL IT. This
point may just be a delaying
tactic so the
job goes through the printer
prior to any
question of your being paid.
If the guy waits
for the job to be printed, and
you do changes
as necessary, then he can stiff
you and not
take a chance that he'll have
to pay someone
else for changes.
8 "The last guy did it for XXX dollars."
That is irrelevant. If the last guy was so
good they wouldn't be talking
to you, now
would they? And what that guy
charged means
nothing to you, really. People
who charge
too little for their time go
out of business
(or self-destruct financially,
or change
occupations) and then someone
else has to
step in. Set a fair price and
stick to it.
9 "Our budget is XXX dollars, firm."
Amazing, isn't it? This guy goes out to buy
a car, and what, knows exactly
what he is
going to spend before even looking
or researching?
Not likely. A certain amount
of work costs
a certain amount of money. If
they have less
money (and you *can*) do less
work and still
take the job. But make sure they
understand
that you are doing less work
if you take
less money that you originally
estimated.
Give fewer comps, simplify, let
them go elsewhere
for services (like films) etc.
10 "We are having financial problems.
Give us the work, we'll make
some money and
we'll pay you. Simple."
Yeah, except when the money comes, you can
expect that you will be pretty
low on the
list to be paid. If someone reaches
the point
where they admit that the company
is in trouble,
then they are probably much worse
off than
they are admitting to. Even then,
are you
a bank? Are you qualified to
check out their
financials? If the company is
strapped to
the point where credit is a problem
through
credit agencies, banks etc. what
business
would you have extending credit
to them.
You have exactly ZERO pull once
they have
the work. Noble intentions or
not, this is
probably a losing bet. But if
you are going
to roll the dice, AT LEAST you
should be
getting additional money for
waiting. The
bank gets interest and so should
you. That
is probably why the person is
approaching
you; to get six months worth
of free interest
instead of paying bank rates
for credit and
then paying you with that money.
Don't give
away money.
Now, this list wasn't meant to make anyone
crazy or paranoid, but is designed
to inject
some reality into the fantasy.
You are GOING to be dealing with people who
are unlike yourself. Their motivations
are
their own and their attitudes
are probably
different than yours. There are
going to
be demands, problems, issues
and all the
hassles that go with practically
ANY work/job/money
situation. Too many times I see
the sad example
of someone walking in to a situation
with
noble intentions and then getting
royally
screwed, because what they see
as an opportunity
and a labor of love, the other
party sees
as something else entirely, not
at all romantic
or idealized, but raw and simple.
How can you deal with this stuff and still
do good creative work? Good question.
THIS
is why an education is important.
You learn,
out of the line of fire, how
to deal with
the art at it's own level and
also how to
deal with the crap that surrounds
it. You
may have tough teachers and think
that it
can't be worse, but wait until
a business
person has a hundred grand riding
on your
art! Then you will know what
"demanding"
means. You will then thank all
those tough
teachers for building up the
calluses that
enable you to enjoy the job rather
than just
feeling like it is all a big
waste of time!
In the end, working commercially, being a
terrific artist is about 25%
of the task.
If that is the only part of the
task that
you are interested in, do yourself
a favor.
Don't turn "pro."
Article by Mark W. Lewis
|
|