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What You (The Customer) Should Consider When You Want To Palm-Off Blame On Your Designer!

Updated: Apr 25


Jump starting your memory
This Is NOT A Designers Job!

“The last designer didn’t do a good job, and I dunna why I hadda pay for artwork that doesn’t work nuh!”


... I spoke about opportunity cost in an earlier article, how it can affect your income, and how to calculate the opportunity cost of working with one designer over another. So I'm skipping right to the thoughts surrounding design: whether or not there should be an outcome attached to a designer's work, and the other side of the coin, what clients don't consider when design doesn't live up to the hype.


When I first started blogging, the problem I had with it was understanding why I was doing it. That all changed the day I got my first One-Page Project client from a blog I wrote. So, in the case of someone cluelessly paying for design services, while simultaneously looking for 'some sort of ROI' on the other end, I get it: you want professional design services, you just don't know why.


In a sense, you're asking for the words.


I'm sorry if no one told you that before, but I've seen it, providing my own services, how clients will often tell us what they need help with, just not in the way we (the service provider) need it to be expressed.


Looking for a designer who can connect their work to some sort of outcome, like connecting your own services to an outcome, so things like upping your prices or even more clients can be a logical expectation to have, for example, isn't an unrealistic ask.


...But, Unfortunately, Some Folks Do Purchase Ferraris To Only Park It In Their Garages.


If I built a website, but not many people are attracted to what's being sold because the client "doesn't like marketing", then "lack of sales" isn't soley based on the design. If I develop a process to help them onboard their clients more easily, but they never use it because "they're fearful of directing a prospect to their website", then it's fair to deduce that the "artwork working" is also dependent on another factor.


When design fails, it isn't (if they do their job) always the designer's fault.


At the very least, your designer is creating under the belief that there is a purchasing public; that you intend to continue marketing your services, or learn to, especially if you don't know how and you're looking to generate new business. And that you're going to actually use what was created.


Design only plays a supporting role in your business goals.


The work of getting your brand seen, telling potential customers and clients about your website, and educating them on how to use it begins after it’s built. Remember, you established and designed this thing for a specific reason. A brand stored in your Google Drive isn't going to help you get in front of your ideal clients to generate new business. For your website to "make monotonous processes in your business more efficient so you’re not caught wasting time on leads that don’t convert", you have to show up when someone schedules a call with you and know how to determine whether or not they're is a good fit, you need to have a plan in place to move them from a prospect to a client, and you need to implement your processes.


Someone's reluctance to fall in line with how you work should be a red flag that they're not the right type of customer or client for you, instead of a scarlet letter on your priorities.


It's time to shake the fairy tale concept of design being some 'magic pill' for business problems. What you don't do after the work has been done has an effect on the outcome!

So, if for all your designer’s effort discussing, planning, designing, and educating you on the proper use of your website, you simply ignore it and as a result, remain in the same situation you were in before its design, it’s no one’s fault but your own. It isn't your web designer's job to jump-start your memory on the purpose you got a website in the first place, or to motivate you to advertise your services or value your brand. That's something you should naturally carry in your conscience because you care about the experiences the people you serve have with your services, and also love what you do.


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