Ah, a subject near and dear to my heart. Without turning this blog into a gripe session, I wanted to talk about many of the reasons as to why in current times, designers are expected to do more, get less and/or get out. Some explanations are completely obvious, some are more from gut feelings.
A Reasonable Explanation Would Be The Economy
Yes, we are in a recession. To some degree we have been since the dotcom crash of 2000. One of the first things that companies look at in a recession is trimming jobs to save money. A company may have had many designers working for them, and as workers are eliminated, the remaining employees are then required to take on additional roles. A print designer may now be required to also design for web, or to do some creative writing. They are doing more yet their salary more than likely has not increased. In some cases, the salary may have been cut even though the workload hasn’t.
Looking at the requirements for new jobs, employers want designers to know print, web, mobile, photography and more. Can anyone really do it all well? And gone are the days of a great portfolio and years of experience landing designers a job. No degree—no job. Many older designers only have an associate degree. They didn’t need a bachelor degree to do their jobs, yet suddenly it’s imperative to have one.
A Glut Of New Graduates Competing With Seasoned Designers
OK, I’m just going to say it. Being a graphic designer sounds sexy. It appeals to a lot of young people that think that designers play all day long and the job is easy. Of course we know this to be the opposite (we do get to play at times). But with so many design schools cropping up and wooing students to come and be in the exciting world of art, designers are being bred like bunnies. This does not mean that every graduate is a top-notch designer, but they are hungry. They just spent XXX amount of dollars for a career and off they go to forge one.
Getting back to the economy, employers are flooding the market with unpaid intern positions or positions that pay $12 or less per hour. Giving away my age here, those were the wages back in the early to mid-eighties. No experienced designer is going to want or be able to work for those wages. We all have families, houses and bills to pay. The younger set may be taking these jobs, but the older generation of designers are being forced to start their own businesses, switch careers or seeing no other choice, they are taking these positions. What a boon for the employer, all this experience at a bargain basement price. Why would they go back to paying $50k or more for a seasoned designer?
Note the graph on the right that I found at http://www.onlinedegrees.org/. It is easy to see the appeal to new design students yet I don’t feel it is very accurate—not in today’s market. The second graph from http://www.graphicdesignsalary.org/ is a much more realistic salary range. But again, looking at the job postings over the past five years in the United States, I feel that you would be lucky to find anything offering more than $25k per year where the prospective employer is asking for experience with three or more creative disciplines
The Perils of Crowdsourcing
For those not in the know, crowdsourcing is the fast food of the design world and essentially outsourcing with a twist. The job doesn’t just get sent outside but becomes a competition. Designers from all around the world spend their own personal unpaid time creating work for companies with the hope that their design will be chosen from thousands of entries and then be rewarded with ridiculously low pay. I have no clue how many crowdsourcing sites are out there, but I know there are too many of them.
These sites can appeal to an inexperienced designer in hopes of easy money. Nothing easy about working for free. This also appeals to smaller businesses and startups that want to have it all, but not have to pay for it. There are so many drawbacks to crowdsourcing, but that is another article altogether.
The Computer Age
My computer will have to pried from my cold dead hands when the day comes. I love the computer and how it has changed the design industry. No, wait—maybe I hate the computer and how it has changed the design industry. Let me explain. Just because I have an expensive chef’s knife, pan and ingredients, this doesn’t mean I will produce a meal worthy of Le Cordon Blue. The same goes for design. Just because you have a computer, Microsoft Word and the font Comic Sans doesn’t mean you should be doing the work of graphic designers. We now have to compete against anyone and everyone with a computer that thinks the software they own does all the design work and they can market themselves as designers. There are enough people out there that really don’t know good design from bad and how it can affect their businesses. Design software in the hand of a talented and experienced designer can be amazing just as proper tools and ingredients are to a chef.
In the end, this may sound like all doom and gloom, but the times they are a changin’. We need to analyze the situation and adapt. Some scenarios may go back to the way they were when the economy recovers, but some, such as crowdsourcing, probably will not. There will always be people that understand the importance of design, and others will see it as just a cheap commodity.
I’d love to hear additional insights as to where you think the industry is headed for both younger and more seasoned designers and how we can adapt.

Let me put this on the table, first: I love writing, editing, and proofreading. I take them very seriously. I expect excellence from myself because words are my passion, and I set my goals high because of the pride that I take in my work. I strive for perfection as a writer – every time, all of the time, because it’s not just the message that’s important, but also, how you present it to your audience.
Many different approaches are taken in selecting the right candidate for a job or project. Whether you are hiring someone for a full-time position or assigning an existing employee to a new task, it can be difficult to determine the criteria by which to make your selection.
People love stories. Ever since the dawn of civilization, we have been using them to both understand and explain the world around us. Our belief about anything we encounter is the direct result of the story we tell ourselves about it. We eat vegetables because we tell ourselves a story about them being nutritious for our bodies. We read books because we tell ourselves a story about them being capable of informing or entertaining us. In everything, there lies a story that influences the way we think and behave in response to that thing. This idea cannot be truer than it is in business.
The damsel. I have already been talking about this, because no business’s story can exist without it. The “damsel in distress” is the customer. Without the customer, the villain becomes irrelevant and no heroic deed can be possible. The level of satisfaction your customer has is the extent to which you have defeated the villain and become the hero in her eyes.
It has taken me a long time to get started writing this series of posts. I had begun the process a few months ago. And, then, things got busy and it sat in my Evernote notebook called “Posts to Finish”, taunting me for two reasons.
But if you hover all your social icons at the side of the page, is that too invasive? As a viewer browses, the icons hover, following like a faithless dog, a bad penny, and every other overused turn of phrase I can’t think of. At least they’re all above the fold, right?
So your startup has built some steam and you’re finally beginning to see growth? The few of you who are working on your business–you know, the ones who have been there from the beginning–are starting to lose it. You’re exhausted. You’re falling asleep in your food. You’re slurring your speech. In one last fleeting moment of consciousness, the thought enters your mind: it’s time to find some help.
If you really think about it, we begin learning from the time we exit the womb. Our bodies instinctively tell us to take our first breath and then we cry from the environmental change of leaving a nice warm comfy space. After the initial shock of “what the heck is happening to me?” our bellies are rumbling and we instinctively to learn to nurse. Soon thereafter, we learn based upon our needs, wants and from choices/mistakes. For example, we discover that by crying our little heads off, we will get what we want and/or need – to be fed, to have our diaper changed, provided with more or less external stimuli. As I see it, we pretty much have learned to make our parents do what we want without even realizing it!
This paragraph should be empty because teens know everything! Oh wait…they don’t?
It may seem to many that our ability to learn and retain lessens as we stroll through adulthood is non-existent or greatly diminished. Such is not the case. Granted, if we pursue a college education, our road to discovery continues because we that dream job and must garner the skills to land it. During the same time, we also learn that if we choose to party all night long rather than pull an all-nighter studying for finals, it can be a huge mistake with detrimental results – and I am not just talking about a wicked hangover. Even after landing said dream job, we may eventually find out that that career path wasn’t what we wanted to do after all.
When you’re the new kid on the block in your market, you will do almost anything to get business. Probably the first thing you will consider is lowering your prices. People are willing to pay for your products or services at the price you’ve already established. Naturally, they will buy more if you discount, right?
If you have just started your own business, you know that it’s a lot like living on your own for the first time. No parents to bail you out and pay your bills when you fall behind. No ditching work to play video games with your friends. No more wasting time or money, because now it isn’t someone else’s; it’s yours. You are accountable, whether you like it or not.
So many small business people try to bring people in with low prices. They put it on their marketing materials. They put it on their signs outside. They put it in the actual names of their business. Sure, some businesses focus on low price and it works for them. But, given the choice, why choose to focus on price? Why market to the customers who are going to be pinching pennies? Why market the profits right out of your business?