Become A More Effective and Proficient Designer

Recently on Twitter I’ve been posting short tips and tricks on various ways to become a better designer by setting up your computer and using various programs to their full advantage.

Below are various techniques I use to keep my computer organized, accessible and favorable that help me be more effective, proficient and more informed designer.

Tweetdeck

Sure Tweetie looks slick and pretty, but you can’t underestimate the power of Tweetdeck….

Want to find new high quality fonts? Try setting up a search with the keywords ‘free font.’ If  your interested in a particular subject of graphic design, such as typography, set up a search and keep an eye on the pulse of information that passes through.

Also, I have a group called “Top Twits” on my Tweetdeck that I organize some of my favorite designers and people into. This allows me to eliminate more chatty banter and focus more on what I want. Also, if you have an iPhone or iPod touch both groups and searches will sync up and stay current whenever you make changes if you have the iPhone/Touch app.

Find more Tweetin’ designers to follow here.

Organize your bookmarks

Ok, so now you have your Tweetdeck set up and you’re catching loads of great information and links. Sure you might not need 600 free design icons right now, but at some point you will… and what better way to access them quickly is keep your bookmarks organized.

Have a look at my bookmarks folders below and start organizing and collecting. The next time you need logo inspiration or looking for beautiful grid systems you have them at your finger tips.

Also, try using Xmarks to keep all of your bookmarks synced and up-to-date across browsers and computers.

Keep an inspirational photo album

Besides bookmarking useful links, I also find web imagery that I like to collect for future inspiration. Try using Evernote, – also has Firefox pluginLittle Snapper or iPhoto (if you’re using a Mac). Create albums/groups and keep them organized.

Organize your fonts

I cannot stress enough how much time this will save you in the long run… organize your typefaces!

How many times have you sifted through thousands of fonts try to find that perfect san serif, while passing by scripts, serifs, etc? Try creating groups such as:

  • sans
  • serifs
  • scripts
  • blackletter
  • decorative
  • grunge
  • playful/handwritten
  • slant
  • slab
  • symbols and icons
  • headline
  • even organize by foundry!
  • web-safe

Create template folders to keep clients organized

If you don’t already keep your files and clients organized then now is the time to start. I created a base ‘client template folder’ that has nested folders inside so I’m ready to start adding files and documentation to it as work comes through. Have a look at mine below:

If you can’t read the above the folders are organized by the following: deliverables, fonts, images, inspiration, invoices, project files, project worksheet (questionnaire responses), quote, terms and agreement. I then keep my client folders inside a main folder dated by the year.

Create document templates

Hate having to write out proposals or send out quotes? You can simplify the process and spend more time designing if you create a base terms of agreement, invoice, etc. Just plug in the necessary information and charge the little bit you required and your ready to send it out.

Make it easy to move around

Laptops aren’t just good enough these days. It’s all about the cloud computing and it’s time to take advantage of it as a designer.

I am a huge fan and daily user of Dropbox. It allows me to work on my desktop – for example – and quickly move files across computers to my laptop. It also makes it easy to share large files and folders with clients. This app will definitely help with proficiency.

Organize your mailbox

This helps me out in a big way, especially with all the emails I receive from my readers, clients, etc. Try creating client folders and drag your emails from each client into the right folder. This will help in referencing them later.

Tip: If you’re on a Mac, create smart mailboxes for automatic organization.

Subscribe to blogs using a good aggregator

In a previous article I posted 16 tips on how to become a better designer and one of them was read and subscribe to design blogs.

Besides finding valuable information on Twitter to bookmark, try subscribing to the RSS feeds of your favorite blogs using a good aggregator, such as Google Reader. This will help you stay up-to-date with what’s happen in the design community (which is a really important aspect of improving your skills).

As a treat here is my OPML (?) files of my 300 blogs I subscribe to, so feel free to download it and import into your Reader! Knock yourself out! What are some of the ways you organize your computer in order to be a more effective and proficient designer?



Discussion and Comments

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  1. Mike says:

    Hey, you stole my “Free Fonts” technique! :-p

    Excellent post, as usual.

  2. tashfeen says:

    Nice stuff! I wish I were half as organized! :D

  3. Preston Lee says:

    I have recently discovered the magic of tweet deck in finding topics that I am looking for. I recently set up a couple of filters to find “graphic designer needed” “#logodesign” and a couple others. It’s amazing what great resources and work opportunities might come your way by using tweetdeck that way.

    Thanks for the post, Brian.

  4. Isaiah says:

    Totally just stole your client folder template.
    Thanks!

  5. Fantastic article, Brian! It’s so easy to get caught up in day to day work and let things become piled up and a little unorganized. Reading this has inspired to block off some time tomorrow to clean everything up a bit. :)

  6. Aleksi says:

    Love your post. I’m already doing most of this stuff(and more) but got some valuable new tips.

    Thanks!

  7. Mariusz says:

    Ever considered using Delicious (there is plugin for virtually every browser out there) with tagging instead of folder-ized bookmarks and Laterloop for “Saved for later”?

  8. Edgar Leijs says:

    How neat and tidy! Love it, hope to organize like this real soooon! And TweetDeck is awsome…

  9. cssah says:

    Excellent post Behoff,tweet deck is a powerful app that you can get all you need ,and i really love Xmark for FireFox

  10. This post was very interesting and useful.

    Dropbox is very useful. Now i’m trying to use dropbox with svn to backup repository of my sites. I’ven’t tried yet to deploy site via svn

    the tweetdeck tricks is awesome.

    keep up the good job!

    silly.bear

  11. Stephen says:

    Very interesting post.

    I am of the opinion that to survive online you need to be very well organised. I have just had a massive clean up and feel revitalized now that my desktop only has several icons on it. All of the other clutter is contained within!

    I signed up for Evernote yesterday. This is the second time I have seen it mentioned in two days. I haven’t had a proper look at it yet, but I hope to later on today.

    Dropbox is new to me and it looks like an interesting prospect, thanks for the heads up on that.

  12. Luis Lopez says:

    I love the idea of the template folder for your clients, I just have images, ready to send, and versions, but your idea is better, and also for the bookmarks, i have a lot of folders but i could have even more if I try to order by specific subjects like instead of blogs, I could have, graphic design, marketing, animation, web design etc..

    Great post, you always have something interesting to share with others designer

  13. Fabio C. says:

    It’s very good article! Thank you.

  14. Pablo Lara says:

    Really very useful post. Congrats¡

  15. The Template folder for your clients really helps when it’s structured the way you have shown. Great Article!

  16. Mike says:

    Thanks for sharing, good advice.

  17. Brian says:

    tashfeen.
    It initially takes some time to setup but trust me it’s well worth it in the end. :)

    Preston,
    Great point you brought up here – you can even try setting up keywords of people looking for design work and pick up more clients. Thanks for sharing!

    Isaiah,
    Steal away my friend ;)

    Mariusz,
    For awhile I used to use delicious, but I’ve found storing the bookmarks and accessing them directly on my browswer was a much more faster and better option. Feel like I have more control over them, plus if you’re using Firefox it allows you to tag them with keywords as well.

  18. Jim MacLeod says:

    Thanks for the smart mailbox info. I need to tame that beast I call an inbox (6000+ and growing).

  19. Brian says:

    Stephen,
    It’s always good to be organized no matter online or off, but as a graphic designer and dealing with tons of computer files it’s essential. Especially since we are in a field where time is money, it helps to be as proficient as possible and your clients will also thank you for it.

  20. Jason Aiken says:

    Brian, Great Post…great advice.

    Thanks,
    Jason

  21. Ezrad Lionel says:

    Organizing is like a part time job. Whooo, just thinking about all those bookmarks I haven’t even looked at since I bookmarked them. Don’t even talk about defrag, or my folders, they always seem to end up duplicated on my desktop.. sigh

  22. Great post! I’ll definitely be putting some of these tips into effect asap.

    I like to use delicious to organize my bookmarks. I’ve never tried Xmarks, but it looks like a good system too. I find it virtually impossible to keep my bookmarks organized without something like that.

    I can’t believe I never thought to organize my fonts according to style. I love all the other organization tips too. It’s going to take me awhile to get all sorted out, but I’m loving these suggestions. :)

  23. lette says:

    sweet! i wish i could be half as organized.. thanks for the tips, will have to implement that :-)

  24. @nomadone says:

    I’m with you on the tweetdeck thing man. Appreciate the OPML file as well.

    I used to use a favourites setup like yours for bookmarks but it became so large and filled with so many categories I couldn’t wade through it anymore. Probably need to spend a few hours revitalising it and resorting. Might discover a few old gems!

    Thanks for this helpful post.

  25. Adam says:

    Great post! I am going to organize my fonts Tonight!

    I use Evernote just like your bookmaking idea. This way I can copy bookmarks, clip inspiration, and create todo lists from great ideas like your font suggestion. Ahhhhh if evernote had long hair and pretty eyes I would marry her. ;)

  26. Thanks for such an amazing article! I’m not very organized at all so this is actually ridiculously helpful. :) I’ll try to implement these tips for my own design business.

  27. How to Become a More Effective, Proficient and Informed Designer…

    Various techniques I use to keep my computer organized, accessible and favorable that help me be more effective, proficient and more informed designer.

  28. ngassmann says:

    Tweetdeck is great and all, but syncing between the iphone and your desktop has been very hit-and-miss for me. Maybe it’s better on a Mac?

  29. Lorilee says:

    Amazingly helpful & informative post. I greatly appreciate the detail you went into about every part of your organization. I struggle with using what’s helpful & what’s popular. They are not always the same. I love the tip about organizing emails. Thank you so much!

  30. Excellent review! Thanks!

  31. doesnt get better dude .. excellent tips .. could relate to few .. n get inspired from t rest

  32. Jeff Walker says:

    Just got around to reading this because Im not as organized as you. Many thanks for sharing the excellent tips. Im improving and learning everyday because of people like you. -Jeff

  33. All good advice. Another good suggestion is to install quicksilver. It has really helped me speed up the way I interact with OSX.

  34. @getsorted says:

    Late to the game here, but I just wanted to say what a great post this is. Thanks for providing step-by-step instructions and examples. Nice work as usual, Brian!

  35. [...] How To Become A More Effective, Proficient Graphic Designer [...]

  36. Marcell says:

    haha soo true! I am very unorganized so when it is time to create a website I usually take a while finding files I would like to use

  37. I find monitter just as useful as tweetdeck.

  38. Seesmic appears to be similar to TweetDeck. However, both drop some tweets, which is problematic.

  39. thanks for the post very helpful – :)

  40. I can never agree more when it comes to organizing bookmarks in folders and sub-folders accompanied with tags and labels. It saves time and increases productivity especially when you have hundreds of bookmarks.

    Xmarks is a good application to backup and sync your bookmarks across multiple platforms.

  41. BenDesign says:

    Great Post. Thank you. :)

  42. As a fellow designer, I thought that everyone knew about organization techniques to keep everything in order. It is always surprising to me to hear about other designers who just don’t get ti, or that this is news.

  43. GREAT post! I am in the process of really organizing things and will be using, stealing, personalizing all of the great ideas you listed. Thanks Brian!

    A Dropbox alternative (and I LOVE Dropbox) is SugarSync. It allows you to Sync ANY folder on your computer. That can come in handy as well.

    Anyway, great post… now onto organizing fonts and bookmarks… dear god…

  44. Jacob Cass says:

    Thanks for the tip re the “template client box” – I am going to use that now! Keep up the good work.

  45. Metropolis says:

    [...] – MeeCSS – 50 reglas ridículas de Diseño – Alternative Ideas For Designing A Web Portfolio – How To Become A More Effective, Proficient and Informed Designer – 10 Productivity Tips That Work Surprisingly Well – Creativity Truths Every Freelancer Should Know [...]

  46. HWP says:

    Here is another good site for collecting images off the web: http://vi.sualize.us

  47. brabantia says:

    Just worry about the eventual size of your “unsorted bookmarks” folder ;-)

Brian Hoff
About Brian Hoff: Designer, Writer and Speaker

I’m a graphic designer living in Brooklyn, New York who loves creating compelling and useful websites and memorable interactions across the web. When I’m not designing I can be found writing, speaking and occasionally part-time teaching at colleges — all on the subject of design. I started this blog to share my passion and experiences with designers and clients. I'm most active on Twitter; say hello:


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