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10 Rules for Success as a Creative Professional

10 Rules for Success as a Creative Professional

FromClients From Hell Podcast


10 Rules for Success as a Creative Professional

FromClients From Hell Podcast

ratings:
Length:
24 minutes
Released:
Jun 13, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

If 'creativity' is a factor in your work, these ten rules will help you find success in your career.  When we say success, we don't exclusively mean more clients, more work, or more freedom. We mean all of the above and more: success as a creative means personal and professional development because you are your business and your craft.  This episode was heavily inspired by articles from: Photographer Chase Jarvis  Venture Capitalist Guy Kawasaki  -- This episode is sponsored by AND.CO, the freelancer's resource! They offer great tools for freelancers, including curated job lists, time tracking and invoicing software, contracts, free guides and more!  -- 10 Rules for Succeeding as a Creative Professional You’re on your own. Blogs, teachers, webinars, courses, and classes can help you, but they’re not going to get things done for you. They’re there to refine your skills, give you ideas, or teach you the rules. In almost every instance, they’re positioned in such a way that they’re giving you permission to get started by offering inspiration and addressing your concerns or fears. In terms of creativity, it’s about you: what’s going on inside you, what’s going on around you, and how you manage the two. Though you don’t necessarily have to follow their advice, you should listen to experts. You should follow them. You should consume content that excites you – but you shouldn’t be afraid to strike out on your own.   Clients rarely know what they need. Clients hire you because they don’t know exactly what they’re doing. Some clients may think they do, but that’s not exactly the same thing. Listen to what a client says and take to heart what they recommend. They know their product or vision. It can even be worth attempting their version of things to see how it turns out. But then it’s up to you to add value. “Adding value” is why clients will hire you. Show them something new or unexpected (in a good way) – this is how you communicate that your expertise requires more than a few clever mouse clicks. The best client interaction is where you take a client’s vision and add colour.   Different is more important than “better.” Better and different are often treated like synonyms in creative fields. Better means you’re following someone else’s path. This isn’t an inherently bad thing, but it’s how derivative and repetitive trends occur. You’re unlikely to outpace that trailblazer, and as a result, you end up looking like a cheap imitation. However, taking someone else’s path and tweaking it to your style, tastes, or needs – making it “better” in a way that matters to you, either as the audience or the artist – is how you start to succeed. And it’s also how you and your work gets better. Competing on outright skill is like competing on price. It’s a global economy. Someone out there is going to better or cheaper than you. If you do something in a way that’s distinctly yours, you have no competition. Being different is more important than being better.   Compete on value, not price. Competing on price in a creative field is a bad idea unless you live somewhere with an exceptionally low cost of living. Instead, focus on delivering value. Value can come in many forms, like better than the competition, a standout style, an offering more tailored to the client’s unique needs – whatever. Clients tend to care most about avoiding risk and saving time and money; your value should speak to these points in some capacity, but don’t stress a perfect one-to-one translation. If you deliver value and you can communicate this to prospects, you should charge more.   You need to be challenged. If you’re not pushing your skills or expertise, you’re not improving. You’re probably stagnating. An easy job isn’t a bad job, but it’s the jobs where I had to meet tough deadlines and big challenges that have pushed my career forward in terms of skills, impact, and clients.   You are what (and who) you surround yourself with. If you want to be
Released:
Jun 13, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The Clients From Hell podcast is equal parts humorous and helpful as it explores the modern life and times of creative professionals.