Are Internships Really Worth It? Well, It Depends.

Internships used to mean that a student would work alongside a seasoned senior design professional or an art director in a design studio or advertising agency for a proscribed period of time. The intern would learn the ropes from someone who understood the demands of the real world. This was (and still is) an extremely valuable experience for both the intern as well as for the Art Director. In the good old days, this used to be called an “apprenticeship.” What better way is there to learn that which can’t be taught in a school environment. It’s also a great way to see if someone is a good fit for an organization. In some cases, I consider internships to be the equivalent of another year of school. Three months at MTV can go a long way! More >

Working with Musicians

I consider myself very artistic. I have a very creative/imaginative mind that allows me to look at things from multiple perspectives. I’m a good photographer, a good painter, and I dabble in a couple of other areas of art. But nowhere is my creative talents is any semblance to musical ability. In fact, in college, my roommate was a guitar teacher, and he told me to just give it up. More >

Design: Giving Back

I was wanting to write a post about this at some point, and I figured now was a great time. I was surfing the internet tonight, and came across a post on Reddit.com about a guy that had a photo of his dad right before he passed away.

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Establish a Professional Manner from the beginning

There is no question that clients can be quite a challenge and managing them is as much a part of being a designer as coming up with a great concept. If there is a client that wants something “yesterday” a big red flag should go off in your head. My advice is to smile and say, “I’d love to work with you, but before I do anything, we need to have a strategy meeting. After the strategy meeting, I’ll work up a quote for you and we can talk about your concerns.”

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Yo-Yo-Yoga

I’ve been a designer for a few years now, and have dealt with a fair share of crazy people.  I got involved with a friend’s Yoga Studio.  I did get paid to do some work, and then those willing people left the “co-op” yoga studio ownership program. So I worked out a deal with the remaining members including my original friend, that I would build them a website in exchange for my personal studio time. So I built a website. It looked really nice, just needed some input from the co-op on final touches/verbage. etc. Well after several attempts at getting the information, I gave up. They were going to have to stay with what they had. I had to move on. The group was too disorganized.  At one point I tried to show my friend how to built and maintain the website, how to make changes, FTP etc. He himself was wanting to become a designer and taking on projects with clients. More >

“MAD”gazine

I just graduated design school and I was looking for work. A guy posted an ad on craigslist saying he’s starting a new magazine and he needs a designer. I sent him a replay and he called me in for an interview. He told me he would pay me $10 per page I design. I was thinking that’s a little low but I needed money and the experience so I agreed to it. He promised he’s going to pay me the full amount once the magazine is finished. He would call me at least 10 times a day wanting designs. He would talk to someone about advertising their business  in his magazine and tell them he would have their ad right away. Then calling me and wanting me to design it right there on the spot as he was waiting. After two months of this passed by I finally finished designing the whole magazine. He wrote me a check for $1000. I deposited it. The next day the bank told me the check bounced. This guy ran out of business, never had the magazine published and now works as a car salesman. He paid me $200 cash and told me he’s going to pay me back everything he owes me. Never did heard back from him. The worst client ever!

LESSON LEARNED

You have the option to take on project or not. It’s better to pass on a bad project, even if you need the money. A bad project can hurt other work.  It will eat up your time, keep you up at night, and just bring you down altogether.

My advice is if you think something isn’t worth the time, it’s not.

The Con-Man!

On 8/8/07 we received a tip from a company we trade work with. They told me that they had an investment company contact them about a website that they weren’t going to be able to do quickly enough. I said I could handle the project. I contact the guy, who told me his name was Mark Bell, and his company was Apple Capital Inc. Mr. Bell told me that they would buy foreclosed houses and turn around and sell them. The money that was made there would go into electric gambling machines. He said that he needed the website up on Friday. I told him, not possible, and Monday would be the soonest. We had him sign a contract, and we began working on the site. On Monday, the site was active, and everything seemed normal.

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College Horror Story

I hope this counts, but I am in school for Visual Communications. We have a class called Design Studio where you work for a company and help them with a branding project because they are not able to afford good work. The project was to create a logo, poster, website, my emma template, ticket, program shell and pop card. More >

Show Me Your Best Project!

Ok everyone, it’s time we stop bitching just for one little post and share a piece you are most proud of….or two or three….  Just post a link to it in the comment section, or send me a link to it and I’ll include your work under your name or something.  Should be fun!

Mike

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This actually hit a little too close to home!