Archive for February, 2010

When Things Get Hectic

It’s Tuesday, and with Tuesday comes a different set of stresses than with Monday. If you’re an entrepreneur – or manager of any sort – Tuesday is the day when the rest of the week comes into focus, and you realize how much crap stuff you have to accomplish before the weekend arrives.

Among your to-do’s are marketing tasks (hopefully) that will keep your customers rolling in. Activities like:

  • monthly/quarterly mailings
  • attending events or trade shows
  • updating your company website and blog
  • creating a seasonal product catalog
  • making presentations/sales calls
  • sending email newsletters
  • advertising

When things get busy, we (yes, even us designers) tend to procrastinate marketing our businesses in order to get through the rest of our tasks. However, even when things are hectic, you should still be focused on promoting your business.

Making a calendar at the beginning of each year that outlines your marketing efforts helps you stay on track, while also helping you budget for any design and printing costs. This can be done quarterly as well, to the same effect (my preferred method), and allows you to be more nimble with your decisions.

By planning your marketing efforts in advance, you can reap some cost savings by:

  • ganging up your print jobs for mailings (saves resources, too!)
  • having a general brand overview piece on hand to send to prospects and take to meetings
  • resizing one design for multiple trade show booth layouts
  • qualifying for discounts from your mail house for scheduled catalog mailings
  • creating a single branded email newsletter template that is ready for monthly content
  • having a standard advertisement design that can resized and sent to publications on the fly
  • not paying rush charges when you’re behind the 8-ball!

“I want to make beautiful things – even if nobody cares.”

Well said, Mr. Bass.

For the non-designers out there, Saul Bass is an icon of American graphic design who created the well-known logos for Dixie, Continental Airlines and the United Way (just to name a few). You may have also seen his work in the titling sequences for the movies Psycho, Spartacus and Casino, among many others.

I came across some snippets of a documentary about his career on the web and was enlightened to hear him say,
“It costs every designer money to make it beautiful, because you have to spend more time, you have to futz with it, you have to noodle, you have to push…You’re eating up your budget.”

We’ve been asked many times if we could shorten our schedule for a logo design, or if we can reduce our price if the client promises one round of revisions instead of two. The answer is usually, “No.” Not because we like to be difficult or don’t like to commit to a delivery date, but for the reason Saul Bass stated above.

It costs time (and time = money) to make beautiful things. Things that are not beautiful don’t leave our shop. If you’re a client of ours, chances are good that our attention to detail and craftsmanship are why you arrived at Studio 22 HQ—and are also why you’ve stayed!

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