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Thread title: How do you deal with clients with bad taste? |
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06-21-2012, 05:52 AM
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#11
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Status: I'm new around here
Join date: Feb 2012
Location: Philippines
Expertise: Web Developer
Software: Photoshop, Dreamweaver
Posts: 3
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Make clients happy, and service provider will be.
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08-02-2012, 12:43 AM
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#12
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Status: I'm new around here
Join date: Aug 2012
Location:
Expertise: Design, HTML, CSS, Collection
Software: PS, MAMP
Posts: 14
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I actually just ran across this. I had a client that I though I designed something brilliant for. Instead he wanted a super drab thing. The guy is an animator for god's sake and yet he has no artistic vision... LOL. Anyway, just do that they say and try to make it yours as much as possible. Not everything is going to be portfolio worthy anyway
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11-28-2012, 05:24 PM
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#13
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Status: Junior Member
Join date: Apr 2010
Location: Manila
Expertise: Webdesign
Software: Photoshop cs4
Posts: 65
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Client hired you for your expertise. Since you are the expert in designing, it's better to tell the client his idea won't work, give reasons and suggest. If client still wants his idea, then do it. That's all you could do. Since they paid you for your service.
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12-08-2012, 04:16 AM
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#14
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Status: I'm new around here
Join date: Oct 2009
Location: Canada
Expertise: Graphic & Web Design
Software: Photoshop, Lightroom, Coda
Posts: 21
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i got hired by a temp tattoo artists to design this dreadful website he just kept changing his mind on everything and his ideas were really childish he wanted a rainbow website different fonts everywhere just an insane jumble mess which I was trying to get him away from because he was having several problems with his current website which was over 12 years old he liked older styled graphics really crappy and low quality he was really insane
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12-10-2012, 01:59 PM
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#15
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Status: Junior Member
Join date: Sep 2006
Location:
Expertise: PHP,MySQL, HTML(5), CSS
Software: Photoshop, Sublime Text2,MS VS
Posts: 63
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There is no such thing as having bad test. Everyone has their own tastes. You are being paid to provide a service and so as much aesthetics are concerned you really have no real control or input about it. Clients are always right. All you can do is inform the client why such and such design choices are wrong. If the client still refuses to change his /her mind just do has told. Sometimes you both can make an agreement on something that works for the both of you.
In the end what is more important to you? Making money and being a professional that can follow instructions yet still provide satisfaction to more and more clients or a professional that argues with each and every client on design choices that are not aesthetically pleasing to you personally?
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02-07-2013, 05:00 AM
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#16
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Status: I'm new around here
Join date: Feb 2013
Location: Tampa FL
Expertise: Graphic Design, Web Design
Software: Photoshop, Illustrator, Sublim
Posts: 12
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That's terrible advice.
There are plenty of ways to respectfully offer alternatives to a clients "professional design idea".
Those of you that think a client is always right and shouldn't be corrected are lacking professionalism. Any professional in any professional environment, should and must educate clients on their expertise.
If a client has a bad taste for color, design, and layout, then offer them and educated or professional suggestion. Lets say you know nothing about building rockets, would you take advice from someone that has done it before, or perhaps builds them for a living? Understand that your client has hired you to provide a professional service. If you are not willing to educate and respectfully disagree with some aspects of their lack in design skills then you should't be designing.
Only after trying to educate and offer experience related alternatives should you lay down and do it exactly as your client wants it. This may sound terrible, but how many of your clients that want graphic or web design are professional designers or developers? None of mine are.
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04-02-2013, 10:08 AM
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#17
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Status: I'm new around here
Join date: Apr 2013
Location: UK, Bristol
Expertise: Decorating
Software: Photoshop
Posts: 1
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Do as they client ask's and just don't showcase it yourself. I'm a decorator by trade, if the client ask's me to paint a wall in a revolting colour, i do.... and i smile
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04-02-2013, 12:09 PM
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#18
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Status: I'm new around here
Join date: Jan 2013
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Posts: 13
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I try to be as polite as it's possible and in the mildest way explain why some idea is not so good as it seems to them.
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04-13-2013, 02:05 PM
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#19
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Status: design rockstar
Join date: Jan 2005
Location: guelph, ontario
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Posts: 2,246
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Originally Posted by derek lapp
depends on what their bad taste is about.
if they have a flat-up tacky idea, i'll probably just turn the project down. i know i won't want to do it, i'll push off working on it whenever i have something else to do, and eventually i'll fall behind and drop it anyways, might as well keep a good rep.
if they want some tacky/dated art direction that i personally disagree with, i'll do what i can to talk them out of it. if it'll look dated, i'll explain why, if i just don't like the style i'll explain why - usually it'll be because i get a disconnect from the stylistic attributes and the brand's actual message. in this case, i'm with village genius: do it, compromise on the design enough to get the job done, then file it under "paid the bills".
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as an art director who deals with a ridiculously fickle client with awful, awful taste, on a daily basis - pretty much a month after i first posted this - i can't stand by this advice enough. i'm even going to extend it with my response when a developer asked me why i so easily let the client make the design even worse after a meeting:
unless you're going to use this project specifically to get a job, it isn't worth the headaches.
it's tough if you're trying to assemble a portfolio for the first time, but you really only need 2-3 good work examples to impress someone, so unless it's a dream project the CEO is just flushing down the toilet, try once and if it doesn't work, kill-it, bill-it, go by something with your check that makes you happy and forget about how stupid your client is.
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05-01-2013, 08:31 AM
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#20
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Status: Junior Member
Join date: Apr 2013
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Posts: 42
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You should follow what Clients ask you to design... Even if client's taste is bad, how does that matter to you, till the time you are getting paid...
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