I'm a beginner: my client won't answer simple questions I've asked to aid design, what to do?











up vote
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down vote

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It's my first time designing for any one



Email sent.




Hi Client! If you wouldn't mind answering a few questions I need to
know so I can communicate your brand better and have a better sight as
to how you want the design :)




  • What does Red Mist reflect (what's the brands identity, why you chose red mist etc.)


  • Who's your ideal client for shop and e-liquid (target audience/who you ant to reach)


  • Who do you see as your e-liquids direct competitors



Please will you throw together a mood board of labels and images you
like to give me a better feel for whats in your head



when you have the time



Cheers! Designer hat on Chloe




Email received




you know what i want crisp, simple, perfect & clean, easy 😊🤟🏻



Also i have decided i will let you put your name on as the designer
credit!



Thanks



Client




I don't think he understands the design process, and its unpaid - but I don't want to design the whole e-liquid graphic range for nothing- its a lot of work. How do I bring this up? how do I price? I'm a beginner/novice!



Any help appreciated










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  • 3




    Politely point out you must have a proper briefing, to avoid any miscommunication, extra work which you must bill, and a disappointing result.
    – usr2564301
    2 days ago






  • 25




    As you're new to the industry and already doing free work, I strongly advise you to watch the talk "F*** you, pay me". The idea that work should be done for free seems to be peculiar to the graphic design industry. Nothing wrong with doing charity work, but many graphic designers do free work as if they're the recipient of charity, oh-so-grateful for the chance to do this free work for the "exposure." There is a lot of crucial advice in the talk; probably a good investment to watch it a few times.
    – Wildcard
    yesterday








  • 5




    I read random questions on Stack Exchange to learn things ... I'm an outsider and not a graphic designer. That said, if I had hired someone to design something for me, I would expect their communications with me to also be polished. Perhaps your communications above are an example, but I wouldn't use smileys. Also, the ending is a bit off. "when you have the time" seems tacked on at the end and unnecessary, and also misses punctuation and capitalization.
    – Steve
    yesterday






  • 1




    I had the same thought about "mood board" as others here. Your customers know absolutely nothing about graphic design or the process and methods you use. It's up to you to help guide them, in a language they understand I'm a software engineer, and in my profession we have the same challenges.
    – Steve
    yesterday






  • 4




    As an aside, I prefer numbers to bullets. Even in casual correspondence, it makes referencing so much clearer and easier.
    – Strawberry
    yesterday















up vote
12
down vote

favorite
2












It's my first time designing for any one



Email sent.




Hi Client! If you wouldn't mind answering a few questions I need to
know so I can communicate your brand better and have a better sight as
to how you want the design :)




  • What does Red Mist reflect (what's the brands identity, why you chose red mist etc.)


  • Who's your ideal client for shop and e-liquid (target audience/who you ant to reach)


  • Who do you see as your e-liquids direct competitors



Please will you throw together a mood board of labels and images you
like to give me a better feel for whats in your head



when you have the time



Cheers! Designer hat on Chloe




Email received




you know what i want crisp, simple, perfect & clean, easy 😊🤟🏻



Also i have decided i will let you put your name on as the designer
credit!



Thanks



Client




I don't think he understands the design process, and its unpaid - but I don't want to design the whole e-liquid graphic range for nothing- its a lot of work. How do I bring this up? how do I price? I'm a beginner/novice!



Any help appreciated










share|improve this question









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  • 3




    Politely point out you must have a proper briefing, to avoid any miscommunication, extra work which you must bill, and a disappointing result.
    – usr2564301
    2 days ago






  • 25




    As you're new to the industry and already doing free work, I strongly advise you to watch the talk "F*** you, pay me". The idea that work should be done for free seems to be peculiar to the graphic design industry. Nothing wrong with doing charity work, but many graphic designers do free work as if they're the recipient of charity, oh-so-grateful for the chance to do this free work for the "exposure." There is a lot of crucial advice in the talk; probably a good investment to watch it a few times.
    – Wildcard
    yesterday








  • 5




    I read random questions on Stack Exchange to learn things ... I'm an outsider and not a graphic designer. That said, if I had hired someone to design something for me, I would expect their communications with me to also be polished. Perhaps your communications above are an example, but I wouldn't use smileys. Also, the ending is a bit off. "when you have the time" seems tacked on at the end and unnecessary, and also misses punctuation and capitalization.
    – Steve
    yesterday






  • 1




    I had the same thought about "mood board" as others here. Your customers know absolutely nothing about graphic design or the process and methods you use. It's up to you to help guide them, in a language they understand I'm a software engineer, and in my profession we have the same challenges.
    – Steve
    yesterday






  • 4




    As an aside, I prefer numbers to bullets. Even in casual correspondence, it makes referencing so much clearer and easier.
    – Strawberry
    yesterday













up vote
12
down vote

favorite
2









up vote
12
down vote

favorite
2






2





It's my first time designing for any one



Email sent.




Hi Client! If you wouldn't mind answering a few questions I need to
know so I can communicate your brand better and have a better sight as
to how you want the design :)




  • What does Red Mist reflect (what's the brands identity, why you chose red mist etc.)


  • Who's your ideal client for shop and e-liquid (target audience/who you ant to reach)


  • Who do you see as your e-liquids direct competitors



Please will you throw together a mood board of labels and images you
like to give me a better feel for whats in your head



when you have the time



Cheers! Designer hat on Chloe




Email received




you know what i want crisp, simple, perfect & clean, easy 😊🤟🏻



Also i have decided i will let you put your name on as the designer
credit!



Thanks



Client




I don't think he understands the design process, and its unpaid - but I don't want to design the whole e-liquid graphic range for nothing- its a lot of work. How do I bring this up? how do I price? I'm a beginner/novice!



Any help appreciated










share|improve this question









New contributor




Chloe butler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











It's my first time designing for any one



Email sent.




Hi Client! If you wouldn't mind answering a few questions I need to
know so I can communicate your brand better and have a better sight as
to how you want the design :)




  • What does Red Mist reflect (what's the brands identity, why you chose red mist etc.)


  • Who's your ideal client for shop and e-liquid (target audience/who you ant to reach)


  • Who do you see as your e-liquids direct competitors



Please will you throw together a mood board of labels and images you
like to give me a better feel for whats in your head



when you have the time



Cheers! Designer hat on Chloe




Email received




you know what i want crisp, simple, perfect & clean, easy 😊🤟🏻



Also i have decided i will let you put your name on as the designer
credit!



Thanks



Client




I don't think he understands the design process, and its unpaid - but I don't want to design the whole e-liquid graphic range for nothing- its a lot of work. How do I bring this up? how do I price? I'm a beginner/novice!



Any help appreciated







client-relations freelance pricing spec-work






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edited 16 hours ago









Emilie

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asked 2 days ago









Chloe butler

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  • 3




    Politely point out you must have a proper briefing, to avoid any miscommunication, extra work which you must bill, and a disappointing result.
    – usr2564301
    2 days ago






  • 25




    As you're new to the industry and already doing free work, I strongly advise you to watch the talk "F*** you, pay me". The idea that work should be done for free seems to be peculiar to the graphic design industry. Nothing wrong with doing charity work, but many graphic designers do free work as if they're the recipient of charity, oh-so-grateful for the chance to do this free work for the "exposure." There is a lot of crucial advice in the talk; probably a good investment to watch it a few times.
    – Wildcard
    yesterday








  • 5




    I read random questions on Stack Exchange to learn things ... I'm an outsider and not a graphic designer. That said, if I had hired someone to design something for me, I would expect their communications with me to also be polished. Perhaps your communications above are an example, but I wouldn't use smileys. Also, the ending is a bit off. "when you have the time" seems tacked on at the end and unnecessary, and also misses punctuation and capitalization.
    – Steve
    yesterday






  • 1




    I had the same thought about "mood board" as others here. Your customers know absolutely nothing about graphic design or the process and methods you use. It's up to you to help guide them, in a language they understand I'm a software engineer, and in my profession we have the same challenges.
    – Steve
    yesterday






  • 4




    As an aside, I prefer numbers to bullets. Even in casual correspondence, it makes referencing so much clearer and easier.
    – Strawberry
    yesterday














  • 3




    Politely point out you must have a proper briefing, to avoid any miscommunication, extra work which you must bill, and a disappointing result.
    – usr2564301
    2 days ago






  • 25




    As you're new to the industry and already doing free work, I strongly advise you to watch the talk "F*** you, pay me". The idea that work should be done for free seems to be peculiar to the graphic design industry. Nothing wrong with doing charity work, but many graphic designers do free work as if they're the recipient of charity, oh-so-grateful for the chance to do this free work for the "exposure." There is a lot of crucial advice in the talk; probably a good investment to watch it a few times.
    – Wildcard
    yesterday








  • 5




    I read random questions on Stack Exchange to learn things ... I'm an outsider and not a graphic designer. That said, if I had hired someone to design something for me, I would expect their communications with me to also be polished. Perhaps your communications above are an example, but I wouldn't use smileys. Also, the ending is a bit off. "when you have the time" seems tacked on at the end and unnecessary, and also misses punctuation and capitalization.
    – Steve
    yesterday






  • 1




    I had the same thought about "mood board" as others here. Your customers know absolutely nothing about graphic design or the process and methods you use. It's up to you to help guide them, in a language they understand I'm a software engineer, and in my profession we have the same challenges.
    – Steve
    yesterday






  • 4




    As an aside, I prefer numbers to bullets. Even in casual correspondence, it makes referencing so much clearer and easier.
    – Strawberry
    yesterday








3




3




Politely point out you must have a proper briefing, to avoid any miscommunication, extra work which you must bill, and a disappointing result.
– usr2564301
2 days ago




Politely point out you must have a proper briefing, to avoid any miscommunication, extra work which you must bill, and a disappointing result.
– usr2564301
2 days ago




25




25




As you're new to the industry and already doing free work, I strongly advise you to watch the talk "F*** you, pay me". The idea that work should be done for free seems to be peculiar to the graphic design industry. Nothing wrong with doing charity work, but many graphic designers do free work as if they're the recipient of charity, oh-so-grateful for the chance to do this free work for the "exposure." There is a lot of crucial advice in the talk; probably a good investment to watch it a few times.
– Wildcard
yesterday






As you're new to the industry and already doing free work, I strongly advise you to watch the talk "F*** you, pay me". The idea that work should be done for free seems to be peculiar to the graphic design industry. Nothing wrong with doing charity work, but many graphic designers do free work as if they're the recipient of charity, oh-so-grateful for the chance to do this free work for the "exposure." There is a lot of crucial advice in the talk; probably a good investment to watch it a few times.
– Wildcard
yesterday






5




5




I read random questions on Stack Exchange to learn things ... I'm an outsider and not a graphic designer. That said, if I had hired someone to design something for me, I would expect their communications with me to also be polished. Perhaps your communications above are an example, but I wouldn't use smileys. Also, the ending is a bit off. "when you have the time" seems tacked on at the end and unnecessary, and also misses punctuation and capitalization.
– Steve
yesterday




I read random questions on Stack Exchange to learn things ... I'm an outsider and not a graphic designer. That said, if I had hired someone to design something for me, I would expect their communications with me to also be polished. Perhaps your communications above are an example, but I wouldn't use smileys. Also, the ending is a bit off. "when you have the time" seems tacked on at the end and unnecessary, and also misses punctuation and capitalization.
– Steve
yesterday




1




1




I had the same thought about "mood board" as others here. Your customers know absolutely nothing about graphic design or the process and methods you use. It's up to you to help guide them, in a language they understand I'm a software engineer, and in my profession we have the same challenges.
– Steve
yesterday




I had the same thought about "mood board" as others here. Your customers know absolutely nothing about graphic design or the process and methods you use. It's up to you to help guide them, in a language they understand I'm a software engineer, and in my profession we have the same challenges.
– Steve
yesterday




4




4




As an aside, I prefer numbers to bullets. Even in casual correspondence, it makes referencing so much clearer and easier.
– Strawberry
yesterday




As an aside, I prefer numbers to bullets. Even in casual correspondence, it makes referencing so much clearer and easier.
– Strawberry
yesterday










10 Answers
10






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
38
down vote















  1. Make a phone call. Do not use an e-mail for this interview.



    You can't even know if he is answering this questions or he is just mentioning some previous ideas he has.




  2. If it is unpaid... do not do it. You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry.



    The "Oh, I'm new" is not a reason at all. Either you have practiced a lot and have become good at designing or don't do it.








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  • 1. I tried to ask these in person but he wasn't very forthcoming, so I thought email would give him better time to think
    – Chloe butler
    2 days ago










  • 2. Thankyou for the advice
    – Chloe butler
    2 days ago






  • 14




    "You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry." Dual-edged sword here. Yes, you can certainly damage yourself by working for free. People simply do not appreciate your efforts if you give them away for free. Also there is this idea that if you give it away for free, it's probably not worth much. Still, I like the idea of 'paying it forward'. So I still do it sometimes. But I have this rule. If I'm doing it for free, it has to be fun.
    – Stijn de Witt
    yesterday






  • 2




    It's maybe been said enough times already, but I would like to reinforce that being a newbie is no reason to work for free. If new doctors and dentists don't work for free at first, graphic designers starting out should not have any reason to go unpaid either.
    – Joonas
    yesterday










  • Minor formatting tip: Put four spaces in front of the second lines of each paragraph, and remove the space in front of the 1.. Things will line up a bit nicer.
    – Nic Hartley
    21 hours ago


















up vote
20
down vote













Asking for a "mood board" is waaaaaaaaaaaaaay too much to ask any client. That's perhaps a designer's tool and a client should never be asked to do that work. That's what they are paying you for (or not paying as the case may be).



Rafael is correct when he posted make a phone call. Often in emails people skim and don't actually read. So things get missed, overlooked, and just forgotten about. In a phone call you can ask, if he evades, ask again. If he isn't clear, ask for clarity, etc. There's no skimming or forgetting during a phone call. It may take asking several times. It may require you explaining why you need to know. But I'd try to not end the phone call until I had answers.



Your questions are good questions to ask.



I would explain to the client.....




Hi Chris,
I can certainly create what you need but I really need these questions answered. Imagine if you hired a caterer for an event. They'd ask about food allergies, number of attendees, etc. All in an effort to do a better job. That's what my questions are for, to ensure I do a better job designing the [whatever it is].




If this is unpaid work then, frankly, I wouldn't keep "stalking" the client. I would make 2 maybe 3, phone calls and send 1 maybe 2, emails. Then explain that I can't move forward without some direction.






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    up vote
    9
    down vote













    Your client doesn't know what they want, and they don't know what any of the things you mean ask.



    You know the industry that the client works in, you know the name.



    Throw together a few different ideas in very rough draft.



    Send them to the client making very clear that these are rough sketches to get a concept not a final piece and ask them to rate each one by how much they like them and give feedback.



    Iterate on the feedback.



    I'm a software engineer not graphic designer but over and over again I find that if you ask someone what they want they don't know. If you present them with a few options though they will immediately know they don't want 1 or 3 but they sort of like 2 but can you add this bit from 4 and maybe X and sometimes a bit of U and then add a unicorn.






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      up vote
      6
      down vote













      First, It's not good for you nor for the whole sector to do free works. But I understand that at first is hard to take money from someone who trusts you.



      I think that the problem is the questions you are asking and how you are asking them. These questions are made almost in argot, you are using a very straightforward and professional language.



      My approach would be more human. If you have the opportunity to go to the company to talk to your client. Look at how they work, how is everything organized, maybe even you will see other things you can improve such as billboards, cards or catalogs and you can suggest expanding your contract.



      But if you can't go there, just call him. Talk to him as a counselor, this way you are selling your own brand. Ask him what they do (I think you've already talked about it), ask him how is the company doing (probably will tell you about problems that you can identify with design or marketing problems, even they tell you about competence) why he thought about requesting your help, what he thought about improving (you've already done this for sure) ask him if you like any company style (probably he should have pointed other company logos right now).



      The part where you ask about competence in my country at least would feel gross. You have to research the market. Which companies are the best, which ones are the direct competence, what's the difference between that company and your client's company, how to make that differences matter or not. All that is your work as a designer.



      Have in mind that unless you are working for a really big company that has complex inner bureaucracy and needs to control every investment, you usually won't receive all these answers in a straightforward manner.



      As a designer, you won't be only designing. You will be a "friend" of that company. Most of the people would come to you without really knowing their needs, even if they act as they know. You have to act as "visual communication therapist" to hear their problems and analyze what they need.






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      • +1 for the last paragraph especially.
        – Cullub
        yesterday


















      up vote
      1
      down vote













      Sometimes you have a client who doesn't know themselves what they actually want. They expect you as the designer to come up with the brand identity. In that case it can be a valid design process to just throw things at the wall and see what sticks. Give them a couple of different drafts and then ask them what they like or dislike about them.



      This is of course a process where you will invest a lot of work which will end up unused. You also risk getting caught up in an endless cycle of review after review with the client never being completely satisfied. So if you decide to use this process, then the client needs to be aware that they are paying you by the hour and that you also expect to get paid for those designs they do not pick in the end.






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        up vote
        1
        down vote













        That's a nightmare waiting to happen. Dip-set. Find another client with money and an actual request.






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        • This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review
          – Danielillo
          yesterday










        • @Danielillo It answers the question asked in the title.
          – Steve
          yesterday


















        up vote
        0
        down vote













        I understand the difficulty when it comes to communicating with clients and getting the information needed to create a cohesive design. With that said, Scott and Rafael are both very correct in that a.) a phone call is always an effective means of figuring out what is in a client's head and b.) the client is never the person to be creating a mood board.



        It is not entirely out of line to request if there are specific logos or designs that come to the client's mind when they consider their own form or taste for a style, but this is also not often given in design processes.



        If the client cannot be reached over the phone and will not provide any more information, there is still a lot of work that can be done. If the client will not tell you what they specifically want, they can certainly tell you what they do not want judging by the designs and sketches you put forward.



        The design process begins by assembling all possible aspects of the company together and sketching every idea that comes to mind. Create more solidified examples of ideas you find strongest, and allow the client to pick them apart and choose details they like and would prefer to remove. Most clients have a hard time actually saying what they really need, and what they think they need is seldom what the best possible design is for a project.



        Hope this offers some clarity.






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          up vote
          0
          down vote













          You're the designer!




          • They "hired" you for ideas, so you'll need to put some in front of
            them and get a sense of what they like. Make 3 quick very different
            mood boards yourself and ask them which one they like best.

          • Write up your questions in a numbered list, with space between.
            Word them very simply.

          • Tell the client "I'll need you to answer these few questions so
            I can have the information I need to do a great job for you. Please
            type your answers right below these questions and email it back to me
            by Friday."


          You can't ask a client to do a mood board, but they may have an "ideas" folder laying around, so always ask. There are some clients who just want to hire someone good and let them run with it and they usually end up being great clients. So his behavior is not unusual.



          Why are you working for free?



          You may be starting out, but charge something - get 30 or 50 bucks out of them. Always charge money. You need to pay the light bill so you can run your computer. If they don't value your time they won't take the time to work with you properly. Give him some basic stuff for free - logo, whatever....then a price quote for anything else, maybe a bundle of ad materials for a flat rate. And then let him know your hourly rate.



          If they don't answer the questions by Friday,you tried. Move on.



          Good luck!






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          • Hi Kerry Ann, welcome to GD.SE, I've tried to fix the construction of your answer to make it more understandable. Are you 100% sure the OP's client is a man?
            – Danielillo
            11 hours ago










          • You are right! There's just one "he" I didn't see.
            – Danielillo
            7 hours ago


















          up vote
          0
          down vote













          If you are confuse about price of your design then you can see what other people set their price for their design, this thing give you ideas what should be your design price.






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            up vote
            0
            down vote













            I came across this by chance, and I am one who could have hired a designer (not for free!). If you do this for free in order to get your "foot in the door", maybe ok - but don't do it more than once.



            Anyway, he has actually told you what he wants: "crisp, simple, perfect & clean, easy". It is not CLEAR what he wants, but that's why we hire people from the outside, to help us do stuff we can't do ourselves. Don't expect people who hire designers to know how to order stuff from them. Very often, you will probably be surprised as to how little clarity there will be in some job descriptions. I know, I have written a few such myself, and only later realized that they must have been horrible to base any actual work on. Ordering is an art form :-)



            I suggest you put in VERY LITTLE effort in a first sketch that is crisp, simple and clean (possible 2-3 variations). Then you can leave it up to him: If he wants to move forward he should pick which one to keep working on, and he should pay for the next phase of the project. If he doesn't like any of them, you are probably best off finding other projects and better clients. Good luck! Hard work often makes people stand out from the crowd, thankfully.






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              10 Answers
              10






              active

              oldest

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              10 Answers
              10






              active

              oldest

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              active

              oldest

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              oldest

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              up vote
              38
              down vote















              1. Make a phone call. Do not use an e-mail for this interview.



                You can't even know if he is answering this questions or he is just mentioning some previous ideas he has.




              2. If it is unpaid... do not do it. You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry.



                The "Oh, I'm new" is not a reason at all. Either you have practiced a lot and have become good at designing or don't do it.








              share|improve this answer























              • 1. I tried to ask these in person but he wasn't very forthcoming, so I thought email would give him better time to think
                – Chloe butler
                2 days ago










              • 2. Thankyou for the advice
                – Chloe butler
                2 days ago






              • 14




                "You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry." Dual-edged sword here. Yes, you can certainly damage yourself by working for free. People simply do not appreciate your efforts if you give them away for free. Also there is this idea that if you give it away for free, it's probably not worth much. Still, I like the idea of 'paying it forward'. So I still do it sometimes. But I have this rule. If I'm doing it for free, it has to be fun.
                – Stijn de Witt
                yesterday






              • 2




                It's maybe been said enough times already, but I would like to reinforce that being a newbie is no reason to work for free. If new doctors and dentists don't work for free at first, graphic designers starting out should not have any reason to go unpaid either.
                – Joonas
                yesterday










              • Minor formatting tip: Put four spaces in front of the second lines of each paragraph, and remove the space in front of the 1.. Things will line up a bit nicer.
                – Nic Hartley
                21 hours ago















              up vote
              38
              down vote















              1. Make a phone call. Do not use an e-mail for this interview.



                You can't even know if he is answering this questions or he is just mentioning some previous ideas he has.




              2. If it is unpaid... do not do it. You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry.



                The "Oh, I'm new" is not a reason at all. Either you have practiced a lot and have become good at designing or don't do it.








              share|improve this answer























              • 1. I tried to ask these in person but he wasn't very forthcoming, so I thought email would give him better time to think
                – Chloe butler
                2 days ago










              • 2. Thankyou for the advice
                – Chloe butler
                2 days ago






              • 14




                "You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry." Dual-edged sword here. Yes, you can certainly damage yourself by working for free. People simply do not appreciate your efforts if you give them away for free. Also there is this idea that if you give it away for free, it's probably not worth much. Still, I like the idea of 'paying it forward'. So I still do it sometimes. But I have this rule. If I'm doing it for free, it has to be fun.
                – Stijn de Witt
                yesterday






              • 2




                It's maybe been said enough times already, but I would like to reinforce that being a newbie is no reason to work for free. If new doctors and dentists don't work for free at first, graphic designers starting out should not have any reason to go unpaid either.
                – Joonas
                yesterday










              • Minor formatting tip: Put four spaces in front of the second lines of each paragraph, and remove the space in front of the 1.. Things will line up a bit nicer.
                – Nic Hartley
                21 hours ago













              up vote
              38
              down vote










              up vote
              38
              down vote











              1. Make a phone call. Do not use an e-mail for this interview.



                You can't even know if he is answering this questions or he is just mentioning some previous ideas he has.




              2. If it is unpaid... do not do it. You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry.



                The "Oh, I'm new" is not a reason at all. Either you have practiced a lot and have become good at designing or don't do it.








              share|improve this answer
















              1. Make a phone call. Do not use an e-mail for this interview.



                You can't even know if he is answering this questions or he is just mentioning some previous ideas he has.




              2. If it is unpaid... do not do it. You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry.



                The "Oh, I'm new" is not a reason at all. Either you have practiced a lot and have become good at designing or don't do it.









              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited 21 hours ago

























              answered 2 days ago









              Rafael

              21.9k12254




              21.9k12254












              • 1. I tried to ask these in person but he wasn't very forthcoming, so I thought email would give him better time to think
                – Chloe butler
                2 days ago










              • 2. Thankyou for the advice
                – Chloe butler
                2 days ago






              • 14




                "You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry." Dual-edged sword here. Yes, you can certainly damage yourself by working for free. People simply do not appreciate your efforts if you give them away for free. Also there is this idea that if you give it away for free, it's probably not worth much. Still, I like the idea of 'paying it forward'. So I still do it sometimes. But I have this rule. If I'm doing it for free, it has to be fun.
                – Stijn de Witt
                yesterday






              • 2




                It's maybe been said enough times already, but I would like to reinforce that being a newbie is no reason to work for free. If new doctors and dentists don't work for free at first, graphic designers starting out should not have any reason to go unpaid either.
                – Joonas
                yesterday










              • Minor formatting tip: Put four spaces in front of the second lines of each paragraph, and remove the space in front of the 1.. Things will line up a bit nicer.
                – Nic Hartley
                21 hours ago


















              • 1. I tried to ask these in person but he wasn't very forthcoming, so I thought email would give him better time to think
                – Chloe butler
                2 days ago










              • 2. Thankyou for the advice
                – Chloe butler
                2 days ago






              • 14




                "You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry." Dual-edged sword here. Yes, you can certainly damage yourself by working for free. People simply do not appreciate your efforts if you give them away for free. Also there is this idea that if you give it away for free, it's probably not worth much. Still, I like the idea of 'paying it forward'. So I still do it sometimes. But I have this rule. If I'm doing it for free, it has to be fun.
                – Stijn de Witt
                yesterday






              • 2




                It's maybe been said enough times already, but I would like to reinforce that being a newbie is no reason to work for free. If new doctors and dentists don't work for free at first, graphic designers starting out should not have any reason to go unpaid either.
                – Joonas
                yesterday










              • Minor formatting tip: Put four spaces in front of the second lines of each paragraph, and remove the space in front of the 1.. Things will line up a bit nicer.
                – Nic Hartley
                21 hours ago
















              1. I tried to ask these in person but he wasn't very forthcoming, so I thought email would give him better time to think
              – Chloe butler
              2 days ago




              1. I tried to ask these in person but he wasn't very forthcoming, so I thought email would give him better time to think
              – Chloe butler
              2 days ago












              2. Thankyou for the advice
              – Chloe butler
              2 days ago




              2. Thankyou for the advice
              – Chloe butler
              2 days ago




              14




              14




              "You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry." Dual-edged sword here. Yes, you can certainly damage yourself by working for free. People simply do not appreciate your efforts if you give them away for free. Also there is this idea that if you give it away for free, it's probably not worth much. Still, I like the idea of 'paying it forward'. So I still do it sometimes. But I have this rule. If I'm doing it for free, it has to be fun.
              – Stijn de Witt
              yesterday




              "You are not only damaging yourself but the whole industry." Dual-edged sword here. Yes, you can certainly damage yourself by working for free. People simply do not appreciate your efforts if you give them away for free. Also there is this idea that if you give it away for free, it's probably not worth much. Still, I like the idea of 'paying it forward'. So I still do it sometimes. But I have this rule. If I'm doing it for free, it has to be fun.
              – Stijn de Witt
              yesterday




              2




              2




              It's maybe been said enough times already, but I would like to reinforce that being a newbie is no reason to work for free. If new doctors and dentists don't work for free at first, graphic designers starting out should not have any reason to go unpaid either.
              – Joonas
              yesterday




              It's maybe been said enough times already, but I would like to reinforce that being a newbie is no reason to work for free. If new doctors and dentists don't work for free at first, graphic designers starting out should not have any reason to go unpaid either.
              – Joonas
              yesterday












              Minor formatting tip: Put four spaces in front of the second lines of each paragraph, and remove the space in front of the 1.. Things will line up a bit nicer.
              – Nic Hartley
              21 hours ago




              Minor formatting tip: Put four spaces in front of the second lines of each paragraph, and remove the space in front of the 1.. Things will line up a bit nicer.
              – Nic Hartley
              21 hours ago










              up vote
              20
              down vote













              Asking for a "mood board" is waaaaaaaaaaaaaay too much to ask any client. That's perhaps a designer's tool and a client should never be asked to do that work. That's what they are paying you for (or not paying as the case may be).



              Rafael is correct when he posted make a phone call. Often in emails people skim and don't actually read. So things get missed, overlooked, and just forgotten about. In a phone call you can ask, if he evades, ask again. If he isn't clear, ask for clarity, etc. There's no skimming or forgetting during a phone call. It may take asking several times. It may require you explaining why you need to know. But I'd try to not end the phone call until I had answers.



              Your questions are good questions to ask.



              I would explain to the client.....




              Hi Chris,
              I can certainly create what you need but I really need these questions answered. Imagine if you hired a caterer for an event. They'd ask about food allergies, number of attendees, etc. All in an effort to do a better job. That's what my questions are for, to ensure I do a better job designing the [whatever it is].




              If this is unpaid work then, frankly, I wouldn't keep "stalking" the client. I would make 2 maybe 3, phone calls and send 1 maybe 2, emails. Then explain that I can't move forward without some direction.






              share|improve this answer



























                up vote
                20
                down vote













                Asking for a "mood board" is waaaaaaaaaaaaaay too much to ask any client. That's perhaps a designer's tool and a client should never be asked to do that work. That's what they are paying you for (or not paying as the case may be).



                Rafael is correct when he posted make a phone call. Often in emails people skim and don't actually read. So things get missed, overlooked, and just forgotten about. In a phone call you can ask, if he evades, ask again. If he isn't clear, ask for clarity, etc. There's no skimming or forgetting during a phone call. It may take asking several times. It may require you explaining why you need to know. But I'd try to not end the phone call until I had answers.



                Your questions are good questions to ask.



                I would explain to the client.....




                Hi Chris,
                I can certainly create what you need but I really need these questions answered. Imagine if you hired a caterer for an event. They'd ask about food allergies, number of attendees, etc. All in an effort to do a better job. That's what my questions are for, to ensure I do a better job designing the [whatever it is].




                If this is unpaid work then, frankly, I wouldn't keep "stalking" the client. I would make 2 maybe 3, phone calls and send 1 maybe 2, emails. Then explain that I can't move forward without some direction.






                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  20
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  20
                  down vote









                  Asking for a "mood board" is waaaaaaaaaaaaaay too much to ask any client. That's perhaps a designer's tool and a client should never be asked to do that work. That's what they are paying you for (or not paying as the case may be).



                  Rafael is correct when he posted make a phone call. Often in emails people skim and don't actually read. So things get missed, overlooked, and just forgotten about. In a phone call you can ask, if he evades, ask again. If he isn't clear, ask for clarity, etc. There's no skimming or forgetting during a phone call. It may take asking several times. It may require you explaining why you need to know. But I'd try to not end the phone call until I had answers.



                  Your questions are good questions to ask.



                  I would explain to the client.....




                  Hi Chris,
                  I can certainly create what you need but I really need these questions answered. Imagine if you hired a caterer for an event. They'd ask about food allergies, number of attendees, etc. All in an effort to do a better job. That's what my questions are for, to ensure I do a better job designing the [whatever it is].




                  If this is unpaid work then, frankly, I wouldn't keep "stalking" the client. I would make 2 maybe 3, phone calls and send 1 maybe 2, emails. Then explain that I can't move forward without some direction.






                  share|improve this answer














                  Asking for a "mood board" is waaaaaaaaaaaaaay too much to ask any client. That's perhaps a designer's tool and a client should never be asked to do that work. That's what they are paying you for (or not paying as the case may be).



                  Rafael is correct when he posted make a phone call. Often in emails people skim and don't actually read. So things get missed, overlooked, and just forgotten about. In a phone call you can ask, if he evades, ask again. If he isn't clear, ask for clarity, etc. There's no skimming or forgetting during a phone call. It may take asking several times. It may require you explaining why you need to know. But I'd try to not end the phone call until I had answers.



                  Your questions are good questions to ask.



                  I would explain to the client.....




                  Hi Chris,
                  I can certainly create what you need but I really need these questions answered. Imagine if you hired a caterer for an event. They'd ask about food allergies, number of attendees, etc. All in an effort to do a better job. That's what my questions are for, to ensure I do a better job designing the [whatever it is].




                  If this is unpaid work then, frankly, I wouldn't keep "stalking" the client. I would make 2 maybe 3, phone calls and send 1 maybe 2, emails. Then explain that I can't move forward without some direction.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited yesterday

























                  answered 2 days ago









                  Scott

                  142k14195403




                  142k14195403






















                      up vote
                      9
                      down vote













                      Your client doesn't know what they want, and they don't know what any of the things you mean ask.



                      You know the industry that the client works in, you know the name.



                      Throw together a few different ideas in very rough draft.



                      Send them to the client making very clear that these are rough sketches to get a concept not a final piece and ask them to rate each one by how much they like them and give feedback.



                      Iterate on the feedback.



                      I'm a software engineer not graphic designer but over and over again I find that if you ask someone what they want they don't know. If you present them with a few options though they will immediately know they don't want 1 or 3 but they sort of like 2 but can you add this bit from 4 and maybe X and sometimes a bit of U and then add a unicorn.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      Tim B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                        up vote
                        9
                        down vote













                        Your client doesn't know what they want, and they don't know what any of the things you mean ask.



                        You know the industry that the client works in, you know the name.



                        Throw together a few different ideas in very rough draft.



                        Send them to the client making very clear that these are rough sketches to get a concept not a final piece and ask them to rate each one by how much they like them and give feedback.



                        Iterate on the feedback.



                        I'm a software engineer not graphic designer but over and over again I find that if you ask someone what they want they don't know. If you present them with a few options though they will immediately know they don't want 1 or 3 but they sort of like 2 but can you add this bit from 4 and maybe X and sometimes a bit of U and then add a unicorn.






                        share|improve this answer








                        New contributor




                        Tim B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                        Check out our Code of Conduct.




















                          up vote
                          9
                          down vote










                          up vote
                          9
                          down vote









                          Your client doesn't know what they want, and they don't know what any of the things you mean ask.



                          You know the industry that the client works in, you know the name.



                          Throw together a few different ideas in very rough draft.



                          Send them to the client making very clear that these are rough sketches to get a concept not a final piece and ask them to rate each one by how much they like them and give feedback.



                          Iterate on the feedback.



                          I'm a software engineer not graphic designer but over and over again I find that if you ask someone what they want they don't know. If you present them with a few options though they will immediately know they don't want 1 or 3 but they sort of like 2 but can you add this bit from 4 and maybe X and sometimes a bit of U and then add a unicorn.






                          share|improve this answer








                          New contributor




                          Tim B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                          Check out our Code of Conduct.









                          Your client doesn't know what they want, and they don't know what any of the things you mean ask.



                          You know the industry that the client works in, you know the name.



                          Throw together a few different ideas in very rough draft.



                          Send them to the client making very clear that these are rough sketches to get a concept not a final piece and ask them to rate each one by how much they like them and give feedback.



                          Iterate on the feedback.



                          I'm a software engineer not graphic designer but over and over again I find that if you ask someone what they want they don't know. If you present them with a few options though they will immediately know they don't want 1 or 3 but they sort of like 2 but can you add this bit from 4 and maybe X and sometimes a bit of U and then add a unicorn.







                          share|improve this answer








                          New contributor




                          Tim B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                          Check out our Code of Conduct.









                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer






                          New contributor




                          Tim B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                          Check out our Code of Conduct.









                          answered yesterday









                          Tim B

                          1913




                          1913




                          New contributor




                          Tim B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                          Check out our Code of Conduct.





                          New contributor





                          Tim B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                          Check out our Code of Conduct.






                          Tim B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                          Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                              up vote
                              6
                              down vote













                              First, It's not good for you nor for the whole sector to do free works. But I understand that at first is hard to take money from someone who trusts you.



                              I think that the problem is the questions you are asking and how you are asking them. These questions are made almost in argot, you are using a very straightforward and professional language.



                              My approach would be more human. If you have the opportunity to go to the company to talk to your client. Look at how they work, how is everything organized, maybe even you will see other things you can improve such as billboards, cards or catalogs and you can suggest expanding your contract.



                              But if you can't go there, just call him. Talk to him as a counselor, this way you are selling your own brand. Ask him what they do (I think you've already talked about it), ask him how is the company doing (probably will tell you about problems that you can identify with design or marketing problems, even they tell you about competence) why he thought about requesting your help, what he thought about improving (you've already done this for sure) ask him if you like any company style (probably he should have pointed other company logos right now).



                              The part where you ask about competence in my country at least would feel gross. You have to research the market. Which companies are the best, which ones are the direct competence, what's the difference between that company and your client's company, how to make that differences matter or not. All that is your work as a designer.



                              Have in mind that unless you are working for a really big company that has complex inner bureaucracy and needs to control every investment, you usually won't receive all these answers in a straightforward manner.



                              As a designer, you won't be only designing. You will be a "friend" of that company. Most of the people would come to you without really knowing their needs, even if they act as they know. You have to act as "visual communication therapist" to hear their problems and analyze what they need.






                              share|improve this answer










                              New contributor




                              umbium is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.


















                              • +1 for the last paragraph especially.
                                – Cullub
                                yesterday















                              up vote
                              6
                              down vote













                              First, It's not good for you nor for the whole sector to do free works. But I understand that at first is hard to take money from someone who trusts you.



                              I think that the problem is the questions you are asking and how you are asking them. These questions are made almost in argot, you are using a very straightforward and professional language.



                              My approach would be more human. If you have the opportunity to go to the company to talk to your client. Look at how they work, how is everything organized, maybe even you will see other things you can improve such as billboards, cards or catalogs and you can suggest expanding your contract.



                              But if you can't go there, just call him. Talk to him as a counselor, this way you are selling your own brand. Ask him what they do (I think you've already talked about it), ask him how is the company doing (probably will tell you about problems that you can identify with design or marketing problems, even they tell you about competence) why he thought about requesting your help, what he thought about improving (you've already done this for sure) ask him if you like any company style (probably he should have pointed other company logos right now).



                              The part where you ask about competence in my country at least would feel gross. You have to research the market. Which companies are the best, which ones are the direct competence, what's the difference between that company and your client's company, how to make that differences matter or not. All that is your work as a designer.



                              Have in mind that unless you are working for a really big company that has complex inner bureaucracy and needs to control every investment, you usually won't receive all these answers in a straightforward manner.



                              As a designer, you won't be only designing. You will be a "friend" of that company. Most of the people would come to you without really knowing their needs, even if they act as they know. You have to act as "visual communication therapist" to hear their problems and analyze what they need.






                              share|improve this answer










                              New contributor




                              umbium is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.


















                              • +1 for the last paragraph especially.
                                – Cullub
                                yesterday













                              up vote
                              6
                              down vote










                              up vote
                              6
                              down vote









                              First, It's not good for you nor for the whole sector to do free works. But I understand that at first is hard to take money from someone who trusts you.



                              I think that the problem is the questions you are asking and how you are asking them. These questions are made almost in argot, you are using a very straightforward and professional language.



                              My approach would be more human. If you have the opportunity to go to the company to talk to your client. Look at how they work, how is everything organized, maybe even you will see other things you can improve such as billboards, cards or catalogs and you can suggest expanding your contract.



                              But if you can't go there, just call him. Talk to him as a counselor, this way you are selling your own brand. Ask him what they do (I think you've already talked about it), ask him how is the company doing (probably will tell you about problems that you can identify with design or marketing problems, even they tell you about competence) why he thought about requesting your help, what he thought about improving (you've already done this for sure) ask him if you like any company style (probably he should have pointed other company logos right now).



                              The part where you ask about competence in my country at least would feel gross. You have to research the market. Which companies are the best, which ones are the direct competence, what's the difference between that company and your client's company, how to make that differences matter or not. All that is your work as a designer.



                              Have in mind that unless you are working for a really big company that has complex inner bureaucracy and needs to control every investment, you usually won't receive all these answers in a straightforward manner.



                              As a designer, you won't be only designing. You will be a "friend" of that company. Most of the people would come to you without really knowing their needs, even if they act as they know. You have to act as "visual communication therapist" to hear their problems and analyze what they need.






                              share|improve this answer










                              New contributor




                              umbium is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                              First, It's not good for you nor for the whole sector to do free works. But I understand that at first is hard to take money from someone who trusts you.



                              I think that the problem is the questions you are asking and how you are asking them. These questions are made almost in argot, you are using a very straightforward and professional language.



                              My approach would be more human. If you have the opportunity to go to the company to talk to your client. Look at how they work, how is everything organized, maybe even you will see other things you can improve such as billboards, cards or catalogs and you can suggest expanding your contract.



                              But if you can't go there, just call him. Talk to him as a counselor, this way you are selling your own brand. Ask him what they do (I think you've already talked about it), ask him how is the company doing (probably will tell you about problems that you can identify with design or marketing problems, even they tell you about competence) why he thought about requesting your help, what he thought about improving (you've already done this for sure) ask him if you like any company style (probably he should have pointed other company logos right now).



                              The part where you ask about competence in my country at least would feel gross. You have to research the market. Which companies are the best, which ones are the direct competence, what's the difference between that company and your client's company, how to make that differences matter or not. All that is your work as a designer.



                              Have in mind that unless you are working for a really big company that has complex inner bureaucracy and needs to control every investment, you usually won't receive all these answers in a straightforward manner.



                              As a designer, you won't be only designing. You will be a "friend" of that company. Most of the people would come to you without really knowing their needs, even if they act as they know. You have to act as "visual communication therapist" to hear their problems and analyze what they need.







                              share|improve this answer










                              New contributor




                              umbium is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited yesterday









                              Ovaryraptor

                              4,23211028




                              4,23211028






                              New contributor




                              umbium is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                              answered yesterday









                              umbium

                              611




                              611




                              New contributor




                              umbium is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.





                              New contributor





                              umbium is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.






                              umbium is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.












                              • +1 for the last paragraph especially.
                                – Cullub
                                yesterday


















                              • +1 for the last paragraph especially.
                                – Cullub
                                yesterday
















                              +1 for the last paragraph especially.
                              – Cullub
                              yesterday




                              +1 for the last paragraph especially.
                              – Cullub
                              yesterday










                              up vote
                              1
                              down vote













                              Sometimes you have a client who doesn't know themselves what they actually want. They expect you as the designer to come up with the brand identity. In that case it can be a valid design process to just throw things at the wall and see what sticks. Give them a couple of different drafts and then ask them what they like or dislike about them.



                              This is of course a process where you will invest a lot of work which will end up unused. You also risk getting caught up in an endless cycle of review after review with the client never being completely satisfied. So if you decide to use this process, then the client needs to be aware that they are paying you by the hour and that you also expect to get paid for those designs they do not pick in the end.






                              share|improve this answer

























                                up vote
                                1
                                down vote













                                Sometimes you have a client who doesn't know themselves what they actually want. They expect you as the designer to come up with the brand identity. In that case it can be a valid design process to just throw things at the wall and see what sticks. Give them a couple of different drafts and then ask them what they like or dislike about them.



                                This is of course a process where you will invest a lot of work which will end up unused. You also risk getting caught up in an endless cycle of review after review with the client never being completely satisfied. So if you decide to use this process, then the client needs to be aware that they are paying you by the hour and that you also expect to get paid for those designs they do not pick in the end.






                                share|improve this answer























                                  up vote
                                  1
                                  down vote










                                  up vote
                                  1
                                  down vote









                                  Sometimes you have a client who doesn't know themselves what they actually want. They expect you as the designer to come up with the brand identity. In that case it can be a valid design process to just throw things at the wall and see what sticks. Give them a couple of different drafts and then ask them what they like or dislike about them.



                                  This is of course a process where you will invest a lot of work which will end up unused. You also risk getting caught up in an endless cycle of review after review with the client never being completely satisfied. So if you decide to use this process, then the client needs to be aware that they are paying you by the hour and that you also expect to get paid for those designs they do not pick in the end.






                                  share|improve this answer












                                  Sometimes you have a client who doesn't know themselves what they actually want. They expect you as the designer to come up with the brand identity. In that case it can be a valid design process to just throw things at the wall and see what sticks. Give them a couple of different drafts and then ask them what they like or dislike about them.



                                  This is of course a process where you will invest a lot of work which will end up unused. You also risk getting caught up in an endless cycle of review after review with the client never being completely satisfied. So if you decide to use this process, then the client needs to be aware that they are paying you by the hour and that you also expect to get paid for those designs they do not pick in the end.







                                  share|improve this answer












                                  share|improve this answer



                                  share|improve this answer










                                  answered yesterday









                                  Philipp

                                  20916




                                  20916






















                                      up vote
                                      1
                                      down vote













                                      That's a nightmare waiting to happen. Dip-set. Find another client with money and an actual request.






                                      share|improve this answer








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                                      • This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review
                                        – Danielillo
                                        yesterday










                                      • @Danielillo It answers the question asked in the title.
                                        – Steve
                                        yesterday















                                      up vote
                                      1
                                      down vote













                                      That's a nightmare waiting to happen. Dip-set. Find another client with money and an actual request.






                                      share|improve this answer








                                      New contributor




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                                      • This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review
                                        – Danielillo
                                        yesterday










                                      • @Danielillo It answers the question asked in the title.
                                        – Steve
                                        yesterday













                                      up vote
                                      1
                                      down vote










                                      up vote
                                      1
                                      down vote









                                      That's a nightmare waiting to happen. Dip-set. Find another client with money and an actual request.






                                      share|improve this answer








                                      New contributor




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                                      That's a nightmare waiting to happen. Dip-set. Find another client with money and an actual request.







                                      share|improve this answer








                                      New contributor




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                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer






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                                      answered yesterday









                                      Steve

                                      1112




                                      1112




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                                      New contributor





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                                      • This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review
                                        – Danielillo
                                        yesterday










                                      • @Danielillo It answers the question asked in the title.
                                        – Steve
                                        yesterday


















                                      • This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review
                                        – Danielillo
                                        yesterday










                                      • @Danielillo It answers the question asked in the title.
                                        – Steve
                                        yesterday
















                                      This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review
                                      – Danielillo
                                      yesterday




                                      This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review
                                      – Danielillo
                                      yesterday












                                      @Danielillo It answers the question asked in the title.
                                      – Steve
                                      yesterday




                                      @Danielillo It answers the question asked in the title.
                                      – Steve
                                      yesterday










                                      up vote
                                      0
                                      down vote













                                      I understand the difficulty when it comes to communicating with clients and getting the information needed to create a cohesive design. With that said, Scott and Rafael are both very correct in that a.) a phone call is always an effective means of figuring out what is in a client's head and b.) the client is never the person to be creating a mood board.



                                      It is not entirely out of line to request if there are specific logos or designs that come to the client's mind when they consider their own form or taste for a style, but this is also not often given in design processes.



                                      If the client cannot be reached over the phone and will not provide any more information, there is still a lot of work that can be done. If the client will not tell you what they specifically want, they can certainly tell you what they do not want judging by the designs and sketches you put forward.



                                      The design process begins by assembling all possible aspects of the company together and sketching every idea that comes to mind. Create more solidified examples of ideas you find strongest, and allow the client to pick them apart and choose details they like and would prefer to remove. Most clients have a hard time actually saying what they really need, and what they think they need is seldom what the best possible design is for a project.



                                      Hope this offers some clarity.






                                      share|improve this answer








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                                        up vote
                                        0
                                        down vote













                                        I understand the difficulty when it comes to communicating with clients and getting the information needed to create a cohesive design. With that said, Scott and Rafael are both very correct in that a.) a phone call is always an effective means of figuring out what is in a client's head and b.) the client is never the person to be creating a mood board.



                                        It is not entirely out of line to request if there are specific logos or designs that come to the client's mind when they consider their own form or taste for a style, but this is also not often given in design processes.



                                        If the client cannot be reached over the phone and will not provide any more information, there is still a lot of work that can be done. If the client will not tell you what they specifically want, they can certainly tell you what they do not want judging by the designs and sketches you put forward.



                                        The design process begins by assembling all possible aspects of the company together and sketching every idea that comes to mind. Create more solidified examples of ideas you find strongest, and allow the client to pick them apart and choose details they like and would prefer to remove. Most clients have a hard time actually saying what they really need, and what they think they need is seldom what the best possible design is for a project.



                                        Hope this offers some clarity.






                                        share|improve this answer








                                        New contributor




                                        Reine is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                        Check out our Code of Conduct.




















                                          up vote
                                          0
                                          down vote










                                          up vote
                                          0
                                          down vote









                                          I understand the difficulty when it comes to communicating with clients and getting the information needed to create a cohesive design. With that said, Scott and Rafael are both very correct in that a.) a phone call is always an effective means of figuring out what is in a client's head and b.) the client is never the person to be creating a mood board.



                                          It is not entirely out of line to request if there are specific logos or designs that come to the client's mind when they consider their own form or taste for a style, but this is also not often given in design processes.



                                          If the client cannot be reached over the phone and will not provide any more information, there is still a lot of work that can be done. If the client will not tell you what they specifically want, they can certainly tell you what they do not want judging by the designs and sketches you put forward.



                                          The design process begins by assembling all possible aspects of the company together and sketching every idea that comes to mind. Create more solidified examples of ideas you find strongest, and allow the client to pick them apart and choose details they like and would prefer to remove. Most clients have a hard time actually saying what they really need, and what they think they need is seldom what the best possible design is for a project.



                                          Hope this offers some clarity.






                                          share|improve this answer








                                          New contributor




                                          Reine is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                          Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                          I understand the difficulty when it comes to communicating with clients and getting the information needed to create a cohesive design. With that said, Scott and Rafael are both very correct in that a.) a phone call is always an effective means of figuring out what is in a client's head and b.) the client is never the person to be creating a mood board.



                                          It is not entirely out of line to request if there are specific logos or designs that come to the client's mind when they consider their own form or taste for a style, but this is also not often given in design processes.



                                          If the client cannot be reached over the phone and will not provide any more information, there is still a lot of work that can be done. If the client will not tell you what they specifically want, they can certainly tell you what they do not want judging by the designs and sketches you put forward.



                                          The design process begins by assembling all possible aspects of the company together and sketching every idea that comes to mind. Create more solidified examples of ideas you find strongest, and allow the client to pick them apart and choose details they like and would prefer to remove. Most clients have a hard time actually saying what they really need, and what they think they need is seldom what the best possible design is for a project.



                                          Hope this offers some clarity.







                                          share|improve this answer








                                          New contributor




                                          Reine is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                          Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                          share|improve this answer



                                          share|improve this answer






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                                          answered 2 days ago









                                          Reine

                                          111




                                          111




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                                          New contributor





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                                              up vote
                                              0
                                              down vote













                                              You're the designer!




                                              • They "hired" you for ideas, so you'll need to put some in front of
                                                them and get a sense of what they like. Make 3 quick very different
                                                mood boards yourself and ask them which one they like best.

                                              • Write up your questions in a numbered list, with space between.
                                                Word them very simply.

                                              • Tell the client "I'll need you to answer these few questions so
                                                I can have the information I need to do a great job for you. Please
                                                type your answers right below these questions and email it back to me
                                                by Friday."


                                              You can't ask a client to do a mood board, but they may have an "ideas" folder laying around, so always ask. There are some clients who just want to hire someone good and let them run with it and they usually end up being great clients. So his behavior is not unusual.



                                              Why are you working for free?



                                              You may be starting out, but charge something - get 30 or 50 bucks out of them. Always charge money. You need to pay the light bill so you can run your computer. If they don't value your time they won't take the time to work with you properly. Give him some basic stuff for free - logo, whatever....then a price quote for anything else, maybe a bundle of ad materials for a flat rate. And then let him know your hourly rate.



                                              If they don't answer the questions by Friday,you tried. Move on.



                                              Good luck!






                                              share|improve this answer










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                                              • Hi Kerry Ann, welcome to GD.SE, I've tried to fix the construction of your answer to make it more understandable. Are you 100% sure the OP's client is a man?
                                                – Danielillo
                                                11 hours ago










                                              • You are right! There's just one "he" I didn't see.
                                                – Danielillo
                                                7 hours ago















                                              up vote
                                              0
                                              down vote













                                              You're the designer!




                                              • They "hired" you for ideas, so you'll need to put some in front of
                                                them and get a sense of what they like. Make 3 quick very different
                                                mood boards yourself and ask them which one they like best.

                                              • Write up your questions in a numbered list, with space between.
                                                Word them very simply.

                                              • Tell the client "I'll need you to answer these few questions so
                                                I can have the information I need to do a great job for you. Please
                                                type your answers right below these questions and email it back to me
                                                by Friday."


                                              You can't ask a client to do a mood board, but they may have an "ideas" folder laying around, so always ask. There are some clients who just want to hire someone good and let them run with it and they usually end up being great clients. So his behavior is not unusual.



                                              Why are you working for free?



                                              You may be starting out, but charge something - get 30 or 50 bucks out of them. Always charge money. You need to pay the light bill so you can run your computer. If they don't value your time they won't take the time to work with you properly. Give him some basic stuff for free - logo, whatever....then a price quote for anything else, maybe a bundle of ad materials for a flat rate. And then let him know your hourly rate.



                                              If they don't answer the questions by Friday,you tried. Move on.



                                              Good luck!






                                              share|improve this answer










                                              New contributor




                                              Kerry Ann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.


















                                              • Hi Kerry Ann, welcome to GD.SE, I've tried to fix the construction of your answer to make it more understandable. Are you 100% sure the OP's client is a man?
                                                – Danielillo
                                                11 hours ago










                                              • You are right! There's just one "he" I didn't see.
                                                – Danielillo
                                                7 hours ago













                                              up vote
                                              0
                                              down vote










                                              up vote
                                              0
                                              down vote









                                              You're the designer!




                                              • They "hired" you for ideas, so you'll need to put some in front of
                                                them and get a sense of what they like. Make 3 quick very different
                                                mood boards yourself and ask them which one they like best.

                                              • Write up your questions in a numbered list, with space between.
                                                Word them very simply.

                                              • Tell the client "I'll need you to answer these few questions so
                                                I can have the information I need to do a great job for you. Please
                                                type your answers right below these questions and email it back to me
                                                by Friday."


                                              You can't ask a client to do a mood board, but they may have an "ideas" folder laying around, so always ask. There are some clients who just want to hire someone good and let them run with it and they usually end up being great clients. So his behavior is not unusual.



                                              Why are you working for free?



                                              You may be starting out, but charge something - get 30 or 50 bucks out of them. Always charge money. You need to pay the light bill so you can run your computer. If they don't value your time they won't take the time to work with you properly. Give him some basic stuff for free - logo, whatever....then a price quote for anything else, maybe a bundle of ad materials for a flat rate. And then let him know your hourly rate.



                                              If they don't answer the questions by Friday,you tried. Move on.



                                              Good luck!






                                              share|improve this answer










                                              New contributor




                                              Kerry Ann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                              You're the designer!




                                              • They "hired" you for ideas, so you'll need to put some in front of
                                                them and get a sense of what they like. Make 3 quick very different
                                                mood boards yourself and ask them which one they like best.

                                              • Write up your questions in a numbered list, with space between.
                                                Word them very simply.

                                              • Tell the client "I'll need you to answer these few questions so
                                                I can have the information I need to do a great job for you. Please
                                                type your answers right below these questions and email it back to me
                                                by Friday."


                                              You can't ask a client to do a mood board, but they may have an "ideas" folder laying around, so always ask. There are some clients who just want to hire someone good and let them run with it and they usually end up being great clients. So his behavior is not unusual.



                                              Why are you working for free?



                                              You may be starting out, but charge something - get 30 or 50 bucks out of them. Always charge money. You need to pay the light bill so you can run your computer. If they don't value your time they won't take the time to work with you properly. Give him some basic stuff for free - logo, whatever....then a price quote for anything else, maybe a bundle of ad materials for a flat rate. And then let him know your hourly rate.



                                              If they don't answer the questions by Friday,you tried. Move on.



                                              Good luck!







                                              share|improve this answer










                                              New contributor




                                              Kerry Ann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                              share|improve this answer



                                              share|improve this answer








                                              edited 11 hours ago









                                              Danielillo

                                              17.8k12665




                                              17.8k12665






                                              New contributor




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                                              answered 23 hours ago









                                              Kerry Ann

                                              1




                                              1




                                              New contributor




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                                              New contributor





                                              Kerry Ann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                              Kerry Ann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                              • Hi Kerry Ann, welcome to GD.SE, I've tried to fix the construction of your answer to make it more understandable. Are you 100% sure the OP's client is a man?
                                                – Danielillo
                                                11 hours ago










                                              • You are right! There's just one "he" I didn't see.
                                                – Danielillo
                                                7 hours ago


















                                              • Hi Kerry Ann, welcome to GD.SE, I've tried to fix the construction of your answer to make it more understandable. Are you 100% sure the OP's client is a man?
                                                – Danielillo
                                                11 hours ago










                                              • You are right! There's just one "he" I didn't see.
                                                – Danielillo
                                                7 hours ago
















                                              Hi Kerry Ann, welcome to GD.SE, I've tried to fix the construction of your answer to make it more understandable. Are you 100% sure the OP's client is a man?
                                              – Danielillo
                                              11 hours ago




                                              Hi Kerry Ann, welcome to GD.SE, I've tried to fix the construction of your answer to make it more understandable. Are you 100% sure the OP's client is a man?
                                              – Danielillo
                                              11 hours ago












                                              You are right! There's just one "he" I didn't see.
                                              – Danielillo
                                              7 hours ago




                                              You are right! There's just one "he" I didn't see.
                                              – Danielillo
                                              7 hours ago










                                              up vote
                                              0
                                              down vote













                                              If you are confuse about price of your design then you can see what other people set their price for their design, this thing give you ideas what should be your design price.






                                              share|improve this answer








                                              New contributor




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                                                up vote
                                                0
                                                down vote













                                                If you are confuse about price of your design then you can see what other people set their price for their design, this thing give you ideas what should be your design price.






                                                share|improve this answer








                                                New contributor




                                                Vincent007 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.




















                                                  up vote
                                                  0
                                                  down vote










                                                  up vote
                                                  0
                                                  down vote









                                                  If you are confuse about price of your design then you can see what other people set their price for their design, this thing give you ideas what should be your design price.






                                                  share|improve this answer








                                                  New contributor




                                                  Vincent007 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                  If you are confuse about price of your design then you can see what other people set their price for their design, this thing give you ideas what should be your design price.







                                                  share|improve this answer








                                                  New contributor




                                                  Vincent007 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                  share|improve this answer



                                                  share|improve this answer






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                                                  answered 10 hours ago









                                                  Vincent007

                                                  1




                                                  1




                                                  New contributor




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                                                      up vote
                                                      0
                                                      down vote













                                                      I came across this by chance, and I am one who could have hired a designer (not for free!). If you do this for free in order to get your "foot in the door", maybe ok - but don't do it more than once.



                                                      Anyway, he has actually told you what he wants: "crisp, simple, perfect & clean, easy". It is not CLEAR what he wants, but that's why we hire people from the outside, to help us do stuff we can't do ourselves. Don't expect people who hire designers to know how to order stuff from them. Very often, you will probably be surprised as to how little clarity there will be in some job descriptions. I know, I have written a few such myself, and only later realized that they must have been horrible to base any actual work on. Ordering is an art form :-)



                                                      I suggest you put in VERY LITTLE effort in a first sketch that is crisp, simple and clean (possible 2-3 variations). Then you can leave it up to him: If he wants to move forward he should pick which one to keep working on, and he should pay for the next phase of the project. If he doesn't like any of them, you are probably best off finding other projects and better clients. Good luck! Hard work often makes people stand out from the crowd, thankfully.






                                                      share|improve this answer








                                                      New contributor




                                                      Ole Petter Pedersen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                        up vote
                                                        0
                                                        down vote













                                                        I came across this by chance, and I am one who could have hired a designer (not for free!). If you do this for free in order to get your "foot in the door", maybe ok - but don't do it more than once.



                                                        Anyway, he has actually told you what he wants: "crisp, simple, perfect & clean, easy". It is not CLEAR what he wants, but that's why we hire people from the outside, to help us do stuff we can't do ourselves. Don't expect people who hire designers to know how to order stuff from them. Very often, you will probably be surprised as to how little clarity there will be in some job descriptions. I know, I have written a few such myself, and only later realized that they must have been horrible to base any actual work on. Ordering is an art form :-)



                                                        I suggest you put in VERY LITTLE effort in a first sketch that is crisp, simple and clean (possible 2-3 variations). Then you can leave it up to him: If he wants to move forward he should pick which one to keep working on, and he should pay for the next phase of the project. If he doesn't like any of them, you are probably best off finding other projects and better clients. Good luck! Hard work often makes people stand out from the crowd, thankfully.






                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                        New contributor




                                                        Ole Petter Pedersen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                        Check out our Code of Conduct.




















                                                          up vote
                                                          0
                                                          down vote










                                                          up vote
                                                          0
                                                          down vote









                                                          I came across this by chance, and I am one who could have hired a designer (not for free!). If you do this for free in order to get your "foot in the door", maybe ok - but don't do it more than once.



                                                          Anyway, he has actually told you what he wants: "crisp, simple, perfect & clean, easy". It is not CLEAR what he wants, but that's why we hire people from the outside, to help us do stuff we can't do ourselves. Don't expect people who hire designers to know how to order stuff from them. Very often, you will probably be surprised as to how little clarity there will be in some job descriptions. I know, I have written a few such myself, and only later realized that they must have been horrible to base any actual work on. Ordering is an art form :-)



                                                          I suggest you put in VERY LITTLE effort in a first sketch that is crisp, simple and clean (possible 2-3 variations). Then you can leave it up to him: If he wants to move forward he should pick which one to keep working on, and he should pay for the next phase of the project. If he doesn't like any of them, you are probably best off finding other projects and better clients. Good luck! Hard work often makes people stand out from the crowd, thankfully.






                                                          share|improve this answer








                                                          New contributor




                                                          Ole Petter Pedersen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                          I came across this by chance, and I am one who could have hired a designer (not for free!). If you do this for free in order to get your "foot in the door", maybe ok - but don't do it more than once.



                                                          Anyway, he has actually told you what he wants: "crisp, simple, perfect & clean, easy". It is not CLEAR what he wants, but that's why we hire people from the outside, to help us do stuff we can't do ourselves. Don't expect people who hire designers to know how to order stuff from them. Very often, you will probably be surprised as to how little clarity there will be in some job descriptions. I know, I have written a few such myself, and only later realized that they must have been horrible to base any actual work on. Ordering is an art form :-)



                                                          I suggest you put in VERY LITTLE effort in a first sketch that is crisp, simple and clean (possible 2-3 variations). Then you can leave it up to him: If he wants to move forward he should pick which one to keep working on, and he should pay for the next phase of the project. If he doesn't like any of them, you are probably best off finding other projects and better clients. Good luck! Hard work often makes people stand out from the crowd, thankfully.







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                                                          answered 7 hours ago









                                                          Ole Petter Pedersen

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