BnB Graphics

Home Up Feedback Contact Search Newsletter Partners Site Map

Website Graphics Photoshop 3D Mega AdSense Earners 10 Web Designer Tips Logo Design ?'s Anti Aliasing Text Become A Designer Beyond Borders Cartoon Animation Design School Computer Animation Computer-Graphics CGI Convert to PDF Graphics Software Graphics & Copyrights Logo Pro Design Digital Art Digital Cameras Digital-Printing Digitalize It Brochure = Sales Monochrome Graphics Photoshop Printing In Color Favicon Photo Software Font Basics Font Tips 4-Color Postcards Know Your Clipart Logo Basics CMYK Pro Graphics Look Graphics Creations Graphics Schools Designs 101 Web PlugIns Graphics Primer Hire-A-Designer Logo Trademarks Web Images Visual Basic Color Basics Logo Guide 404 Page Great Impression Abstract Backgound Publisher Basics BnB Graphics Vector Graphics DigiCam Dollars OCR Software Photo Software PhotoShop Pen Tool Picasa.com Photo Printing Print Troubleshooting Press Kits Affordable-Graphics Simple Leaflets Web Graphics Easy Logo Freelancers Trademarks & Copyrights Photos As Graphics Photo Says It Your Graphics


Free Grafix Archives

Trackion Laptop Tracking - Lowjack for laptops
Trackion Laptop Tracking

Bread and Butter for Graphic Designers

by Alec Ellis

As a graphic designer myself, I know the benefit of regular studio work, the sort of work that keeps the studio alive, not the most exciting, usually referred to, in designer's terms, as 'bread and butter' work. In the Graphics world bread and butter work takes the form of regular, heads down, non-award winning briefs: a daily stats sheet, the club newsletter, the monthly report, stationery updates, shopping mall news papers and prices catalogues, with all the weekly bargains. These are just a few examples of what keeps us in business; we also love to pass this work on to the junior or the 'newby'; regular work that brings in probably 80% of the years income, for an average design studio.

These jobs are quickly finished, mindless at best, and are able to be billed and paid within 30 days. The bread and butter job doesn't just exist in the 'offline' world, as many of my fellow designers have found with the introduction of the Internet. Though websites are becoming smarter many graphic designers are becoming aware how to control and create them. As with the introduction of the computer to the design world, everyone became an instant designer, "give me a computer and I will design my own leaflets", said businessmen. That lasted about a year, when graphic designers started to take back the banner and the businessman became a client again. You can only take so many identical leaflets.

The graphic designer has now become the new 'web designer'. Web graphic programs have evolved from web editors, they are easier to use, with web support software and technical help plentiful. This leaves the creative spirit as the only inconstant, 'once again'. Graphic designers are producing master pieces, all they had to do was learn about the 'medium', in this case, the Internet, Web, software, programming, and more. Once the technical side had been mastered (these days you don't have to be a main-framer), the creativity took over, as a new artist introduced to oil paints, watercolour, wood, metal, coke cans, urinals, and six inch nails, for the very first time. Masterpieces have come and gone, and now the Graphics and Web design worlds are looking very similar. You still very much get the chance to shine, that 20% of studio work may still win you awards, and the 80% will still pay for the electricity, rent, pub lunches, the Friday beers, the accountant and the cleaner. Growth! Your studio has blue chip Graphic designers working on the 20%; trainee Graphic Designers and juniors working on the 80% bread and butter; you now have an extension built on to the studio for the second design team.

Your blue chip Web designers working on the 20% web designs; and the web designer trainees and juniors updating data, adjusting editorial, correcting web pages, fixing broken links and uploading new graphics. With the right web hosting partner, offering your studio the correct amount of bandwidth and webspace, with a fast access, you will be able to knock out web 'bread and butter' work at a pace and at a price that will allow you to retain your happy, regular, web clients. With one account, password access to different domains, and 24/7 access, you can have your studio complete and all work kept in-house. Your trainee or junior can download a web page, correct a mistake, update prices or figures, change a graphic, then upload again, ready for viewing, in minutes. Imagine your 60 bread and butter offline clients, matched in the studio by 60 online bread and butter clients. That's a lot of bread and butter. If you wish to know more about how a Multiple web hosting account, such as those offered by web hosting regulars M6.net: www.m6.net, can help you, contact sales@m6.net for more information, or simply speak to one of our friendly informative support or sales staff on +61 2 6162 1500.


About the Author
Alec Ellis BA Hons Graphics (LCP, London, UK) Director, M6.net, Web Hosting

Back
Home
Up
Next

PPMore_Bus_125x125

Fight SPAM and WIN!!


Back Home Up Next


Copyright © 2005-2008 Go2Grafix.com
All other products mentioned are registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective companies.

Our Privacy Policy    Legal Notice
Last modified: May 27, 2008