Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 67 total)
  • Any Graphic designers in the house?
  • monkeysfeet
    Free Member

    I am after someone to design a logo for my partners startup business. If anymore can help please PM me
    Thanks Steve.

    spennyy
    Free Member

    Binners my be able to help

    joepud
    Free Member

    im a designer, this may sound blunt but is it a paid job?

    flannol
    Free Member

    +1 binners ^

    Also my friend Dawn could help, she created the brand Rafflebike identity (among others, but sport is definitely her niche)

    https://www.behance.net/dawn_broadbent

    dawn.broadbent@hotmail. dot c.o.m.

    oldtennisshoes
    Full Member

    Do you need any pie charts?

    eyestwice
    Free Member

    For logos, I’ve actually had great success with 99designs in the past.

    A local/UK business is an entirely different process, it requires more research to find a designer whose style you can relate to and who ‘gets’ your concept. In order to keep the number of revisions to a minimum.

    Given the current climate, I’d choose local/UK over crowdsourcing every single time. Just saying this in case you are actually considering an online marketplace.

    binners
    Full Member

    Thanks for recommending me chaps. I’ll message you @monkeysfeet

    binners
    Full Member

    I’ve just messaged you @mokeysfeet. Whether it gets through to you is anyone’s guess. From recent experience, probably not. If not then if you email me on rowlinsonadam@gmail.com then I can send you through some examples of logo design work and we could have a chat about what you need

    johndoh
    Free Member

    Following with interest to see if Joepud’s question is answered.

    Rubber_Buccaneer
    Full Member

    I’ve used binners….and he did me a logo😀.  He gets a big 👍 from me

    doomanic
    Full Member

    Exposure is payment, right?

    joepud
    Free Member

    Exposure is payment, right?

    haha yeh, thats exactly what i tell my bank when its time to pay the mortgage.

    Following with interest to see if Joepud’s question is answered.

    me too. it always amazes me when people expect designers to work for free. no one would think of getting a builder in and being like look i need a few shelves putting up but can you do it for free it will be good experience and you will get “exposure.”

    Simply put if you refuse to pay someone that shows exactly how little you value their service.

    perchypanther
    Free Member

    no one would think of getting a builder in and being like look i need a few shelves putting up but can you do it for free

    You’d be wrong. I’ve lost count of the number of freebies that my various employers have done over the years just to get a picture in the local paper.
    People are generally ill disposed to any large scale construction in their vicinity and a bit of positive exposure can go a long way to balance that out.

    joepud
    Free Member

    You’d be wrong. I’ve lost count of the number of freebies that my various employers have done over the years just to get a picture in the local paper.

    For me the difference in this hypothetical builder putting up these hypothetical shelves is the shelves wont be used to make money. Also im assuming in the local paper it would say work done by bob the builder. And also whats the ROI on getting these hypothetical shelves in a hypothetical magazine. The logo will be used to promote the business and make said business money and unless they tell everyone who interacts with their brand who designed it you can’t compare the two. It could end up on tshirt for example which im sure would be sold…. or maybe the shop could give them away in return for “positive exposure” after all it goes a long way.

    Designers working for free is a real bug of mine and its deep rooted in this industry from agencies getting interns to people wanting a free logo or website. At the end of the day if designers work for free everyone expect free work from a designer. It devalues my craft something i have spent 10+ years doing. To be honest most of the people who ask for free design work are often more hassle than they are worth (which is very little) and have a very limited understand of how long it takes to make a logo or website.

    Sorry to rant it just drives me mad when people expect a designer to work for free. The question these people need to ask themselves is would they also work for free, if the answer is no don’t ask someone else to do it.

    johndoh
    Free Member

    You’d be wrong. I’ve lost count of the number of freebies that my various employers have done over the years just to get a picture in the local paper.

    Yeah but those freebies are always for charities, schools or other worthy causes (just like a designer may well design a logo in such a situation – I know I have). They don’t just do it to be nice to Sharon & Dave who quite fancied getting an extension done for nowt.

    joepud
    Free Member

    They don’t just do it to be nice to Sharon & Dave who quite fancied getting an extension done for nowt.

    But the positive exposure can go a long way to balance that out… When we go to Sharon and Dave’s house and see the fancy free extension they will say bob did it for free then we phone bob for a free extension too. And thats all good because bobs also paying his bills with “positive exposure…”  SMH.

    johndoh
    Free Member

    Yeah good point – all that positive exposure has to be worth something, right?

    I am now finding that old chestnut of providing free concepts at pitch stage is creeping back in too – for a time organisations weren’t asking for it but they are again now and it frustrates me as we are a UX-led web agency so we need to do lots of thinking / research etc to deliver a website that meets the user needs and we can’t do that at the pitch stage – we’d be just guessing.

    joepud
    Free Member

    Yeah good point – all that positive exposure has to be worth something, right?

    yeh likely worth shirt buttons and we all know what they are worth.

    Free pithes doesn’t surprise me. Clients know agencies want / need work so will get away with it if they can. I left agency life about 5/6 years ago i got fed up with clients, pm, account mangers and working very late for even less reward. Im a product designer these days so very UX focused so totally get when your coming from. Clients see a few screens in a powerpoint and think thats it, some don’t get the hours spent working on stuff thats ended up the bin or archive folder.

    supernova
    Full Member

    You should try being a photographer – people just straight up steal your work, never mind demand you work for free!

    johndoh
    Free Member

    You should try being a photographer – people just straight up steal your work, never mind demand you work for free!

    Yep – had similar – someone had a case study on their website showing some printed work they had done for a client however we did it. She claimed she had permission from the client to use it and that may be, but she didn’t have our permission as copyright holders. That was a fun fight.

    joepud
    Free Member

    You should try being a photographer – people just straight up steal your work, never mind demand you work for free!

    Similar happened to a friend. Someone stole a photo off his IG for a business card got it made then asked if they could use it. Once he said well ideally you should pay for the photo the guy was like oh no bother I will use another. Apparently he was just letting him know he was using the photo out of politeness… its like no the polite thing to do is say can i use this photo how much does it cost.

    johndoh
    Free Member

    Still no answer from the OP though 🤷‍♂️

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Clients see a few screens in a powerpoint and think thats it, some don’t get the hours spent working on stuff thats ended up the bin or archive folder.

    I wonder if you could constantly video your screen to show the design process then supply them with a speeded up video of it? 🙂

    joepud
    Free Member

    Still no answer from the OP though 🤷‍♂️

    yeh, funny that.

    I wonder if you could constantly video your screen to show the design process then supply them with a speeded up video of it?

    haha yeh, i would put one on my face too so they can see despair as i work on version 60 of their logo or website.

    eddiebaby
    Free Member

    I used to get rubbish briefs via the Sales team. Being typical sales guys they didn’t want to go back to the clients with questions in case they pulled the ad.
    So I started itemising on my invoices how much of the charge was down to inadequate information or insufficient copy or crap images being supplied.
    They soon got the message. They just expected me to suck it up, and we’re supposed to be on the same side.

    Malvern Rider
    Free Member

    As a (young) graphic designer I soon figured that a day or two of your professional time was often considered (by even the happiest client) worth an hour or two of your client’s time. This often holds true whether they be a bike mechanic* or an executive of a global operation. 😉

    Case in point – I once designed a logo for a famous bike brand yet never received a penny or a thankyou. In fairness, it was referred and handled via a (since-absent) friend who may in or may not have received some renumeration on my behalf! 20 years later they’ve updated the logo so it’s moot. But, a lesson learned! I still help people out, but nowadays it’s even worse with online ‘designers’ reselling one of the many thousands of royalty-free generic logo files that they’ve spent a few minutes tweaking and then charge only £50 for what is twenty minutes to half an hour of their time.

    So when you give someone a fully-custom top-end service they’ll think your design is ‘worth‘ £50. Which it might be if you had spent twenty minutes tweaking a generic logo design for a local flower shop.

    Working in design houses on an hourly rate was also a lesson. Clients would sub to the boss and then charge their clients quadruple or more for your work. Working 36 hours on a project might net me some grudging overtime from the boss, but it would net our client many thousands once he’d resold the work to the Met (as it happened).

    *Bike-mechanic often report the same phenomenon. Their work will be most realistically valued by people who themselves have done it and/or raced the result. Same work is rarely valued the same by Average Joe who just wants it done for a few bob because how hard can it be? Fixing a puncture or tuning and servicing an Enduro/XC bike. Fiver, innit?

    The future for most all of us (and our children) is a 90 hour week @ £8 per hr.

    Or, if it doesn’t trouble your conscience – bag a big client and then farm the work out to your arty mate/someone online.

    nealglover
    Free Member

    Still no answer from the OP though 🤷‍♂️

    yeh, funny that.

    Not really, he’s probably busy talking to the designer that offered an email address and a chat about requirements, rather than bothering with the ones that just came on to moan about how shit customers are 😆

    Malvern Rider
    Free Member

    ^ Either/or fallacy

    As any bike mechanic will know, it’s possible/possibly essential to do both 😉

    #notallcustomers

    Cougar
    Full Member

    https://notalwaysright.com/

    Someone stole a photo off his IG for a business card got it made then asked if they could use it.

    Didn’t someone on here wind up on the side of a van?

    nickjb
    Free Member

    rather than bothering with the ones that just came on to moan about how shit customers are

    LOL, there are a few moaners. Just for balance, luckily there are plenty of forum members who are happy to help others out for free (if that were the case, which I suspect it wasn’t and the OP was happy to pay)

    zilog6128
    Full Member

    @Cougar yep (well, someone from here’s photo anyway) https://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/cheeky-feckers/

    can’t remember if there was a resolution to this in a later thread? Maybe @footflaps can let us know what happened!!

    There are no-win-no-fee solicitors who’ll take on this kind of stuff if the “borrower” doesn’t want to play ball (i.e. either pay you or remove it) and I can’t imagine it would be a difficult case to win!

    johndoh
    Free Member

    Not really, he’s probably busy talking to the designer that offered an email address and a chat about requirements, rather than bothering with the ones that just came on to moan about how shit customers are

    Hah yes, that is a possibility, still it would be nice to know. As you might be able to tell, us designers get a bit shirty about this stuff sometimes.

    FWIW, I did a logo for a local charity helping vulnerable people get out walking in the countryside a couple of years ago. I attend a meeting then did some initial creative (probably about 6 hours in total which equals £400 + VAT had I been charging for it). I never heard back from the person yet they have used a version of what I did on their website (with some very minor alterations). I don’t understand why as I was doing it for free anyway so why he didn’t come back to me I’ll never know – other than the agreement was that we’d charge him for a website design and build once the branding had been done but it seems he just wanted to bung his new logo on his old website for no fee.

    Malvern Rider
    Free Member

    luckily there are plenty of forum members who are happy to help others out for free

    Never moan about offering freebies. That would be anus horribilis.

    other than the agreement was that we’d charge him for a website design and build once the branding had been done

    A verbal agreement isn’t worth the paper it’s written on, etc. In any case, would you wish to be building his website knowing that he possibly/likely isn’t as good as his word?

    joepud
    Free Member

    LOL, there are a few moaners.

    as one of the key moaners to be fair its one of my biggest issues i have with the design industry people just dont see the value in it due to all the bedroom designers.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    @zilog6128 Yeah, that’s the bunny. I too would be interested to know if there was ever a resolution. I’ve half a mind to reopen the thread.

    nickjb
    Free Member

    Hah yes, that is a possibility, still it would be nice to know.

    If you knock the “-6/” off the end of the URL then you will get your answer

    Cougar
    Full Member

    one of my biggest issues i have with the design industry people just dont see the value in it due to all the bedroom designers.

    If you can’t beat ’em…?

    Perceived value is a problem in many walks of life. Over on Facebook in one of the escape room groups just now I’m talking to someone who’s hawking some online interactive theatre experience at £40/head. My reaction was “sounds cool, but how much?!” He’s replied talking about cost of production and design, staff time, tailor-made bespoke experiences and so forth which is all well and good but to my mind as a punter the question I’m asking is “is it worth forty quid to me?” A Fabergé egg is a unique piece of art hand-made from exotic materials… or it’s several thousand pounds for a $%^&ing egg!

    If someone is happy paying £50 for something knocked up from Clipart in ten minutes rather than £500 for a quality piece of customised work then whilst it seems to me to be a particularly ill-advised place to be scrimping, ultimately that’s their lookout is it not?

    johndoh
    Free Member

    In any case, would you wish to be building his website knowing that he possibly/likely isn’t as good as his word?

    Well no absolutely not but I didn’t know that at the time and you’d kinda expect that the founder of a charity that is focussed on helping others would be an honest kind of person. Still, you live and learn.

    joepud
    Free Member

    If you can’t beat ’em…?

    then how do i pay my mortgage.

    <span style=”font-size: 0.8rem;”>One of my many main bugs of this situation is these “businesses” who ask for a free logo or website when you ask them for something for free they think you’re on crack. A car dealer once asked me for a free website so I asked him for a free car he looked at me like i was mental – claimed selling car was his business… its like hello what do you think being a designer is for me. </span>

    If someone is happy paying £50 for something knocked up from Clipart in ten minutes rather than £500 for a quality piece of customised work then whilst it seems to me to be a particularly ill-advised place to be scrimping, ultimately that’s their lookout is it not?

    Not really us as a design community should put much more worth in the value we give to businesses. We need to educate clients and make them understand why a logo costs a lot of money rather than bending and being yeh sure i will do it for free. If you are offering your services for free it shows how much you value your skill or dont.

    monkeysfeet
    Free Member

    Meh, thanks for the reply. I have emailed binners. It is a paid job.
    Jeez you go off, have a life and this is the stick you get.

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 67 total)

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