As A Designer, and Businessman, I Have Some Policies

As a designer I’ve allowed myself to be lied to, mislead, and cheated. These valuable lessons and some fantastic courage from the industry good guys have forced me to develop some important standards and policies.

  1. I get EVERYTHING in writing. Email or formal signed contract works for me.
  2. I tell customers/co-workers precisely what I believe I excel at and what I don’t, setting expectations as perfectly as possible. I very rarely say “I can do that!” if I never have done it or have little experience in it.
  3. If someone has a reputation for not paying designers, I try not to work with them or demand C.O.D. or a full payment before I start.
  4. My reputation is always more important to me than money, so I always I provide a little more than I initially agree to.
  5. For better or worse, I work 24/7. If I am on an interesting project, working with good people, I am constantly thinking about it, sketching through it, sleeping on it and revising it.

My Subconscious at Work

I’ve been working part of the day.

I’ve been playing part of the day.

I’ve been thinking really hard all day.

My ideal process is a mix of all of the above. I sketched out a wireframe idea earlier, and I really liked it. For the product I’m working on I see no other possible solution. Which is a dangerous place to be. My mind actually closed, so that’s when I had to stop.

I put any further production on the idea to the back burner for the moment, shuffling it off to my subconscious and now it’s up to my instincts to revisit and think on it.

Lets see what a few hours away and a good night’s sleep will produce.