The following article is a follow up to a discussion between myself and Jacob Cass over at JustCreativeDesign.com
At some point of your freelancing careers, you will, if you haven’t already, come in contact with a client that dictates their entire project. The decide on the colors, the layout, and the typeface (Comic Sans anyone?). Everytime you put in your two sense, you’re shot down. It’s their way or the highway. I mean, come on, you wouldn’t hire an electrician to do electrical work and tell them their doing it all wrong, would you?
Well before you give up and drop every curse word in the book (hopefully after the clients leaves or hangs up the phone) continue to read below for ideas on how you can shed some light on a difficult, mindset client.
Offer and explain your ideas
“As a designer, usually when the client has something in mind you should take their ideas into consideration, listen to them and tactfully offer your professional opinion.”
Remember, you are not just a monkey with the right tools to get the job done. They chose YOU because you are the right person for the job and you must treat it this way. Make sure to listen to their ideas and make sure they listen to yours. And hopefully come to a happy median.
Making the best use of their listening time:
After listening to their idea, it’s now your time and you must do it effectively. Tell them WHY you want to use certain fonts or HOW your color scheme would be more effective then the ones they had in mind. Explain your ideas and reasoning explicitly and carefully. Use the good ‘ol WHO, WHAT, WHY’s and HOW’s and don’t use your fancy design jargon. Save that for the playground! :) Act professionally and hopefully they will treat you that way and increase your chances of having more say with the outcome.
Provides examples and visuals
You can also present them with two mockups of their idea and yours. Although this would require more time and effort (compensate for this in the contract), it would help them visually see the difference. You could also show them books or other examples of good, effective design which would assist helping them gain a broader, more visual idea of design. While showing these examples, follow the same procedure as above, and provide them with precise detail on why and how they work.
One last resort…
Caution: Only use if you are feeling a bit ballsy
Take them to the ‘Make My Logo Bigger Cream’ website. This site showcases videos poking fun at topics that include filling up extra white space with more copy, changing the colors to bright neon to make them stand out more, and obviously, making the company logo BIGGER to stand out. That’s right – all the stuff that makes us designers cringe! Great videos and definitely worth the watch either way.
[...] Tips and techniques on how to talk to and handle clients who shoot down all of your ideas and design on their own. View source [...]
Nice article, very well structured and the picture fits very well.
I have a client who thinks “they know it all”, and can easily get on my nerves. If i have a better client I usually try to get this client on hold.
Thanks
Thanks for the compliment, it means a lot to me! Clients like that are tough to deal with but you can really learn much from instances like this and help you grow.
I got forwarded this link by a fellow designer (i’ll take that as a small slap on the face Chris) – good stuff. I’ve resorted to that last link a couple of time in te past, it’s an absolute gem and really works as a wake up call for some clients.
Another great one for committee’s is the design curve on SEOmoz http://www.seomoz.org/blog/how-to-ruin-a-web-design-the-design-curve
[...] In most instances, I try my hardest to educate them into finding a better solution that will fit their audience’s needs and communicate their products/services AND keep them happy. If you’ve had experience with this, then you know its not easy. It takes work, patience and a bit of strategy. [...]
Had this problem last week wish I had read your post then. I like clients that interact with the design. But the biggest PITA is the control freak, who sit behind you when you are designing for them on PS or similar. I try and make it as boring as I can the record is four hours.
On final completion of the product, one of my clients told me proudly that he will tell his friends about my good work, I asked him not to and if asked not to give my name out as the designer. Next job he strangley left me on my own.
Thanks for sharing this as I was close to a nervous breakdown.
Rich