“If you did it right, it looks like it was effortless”
I read Mike Monteiro’s book of pre-pandemic essays called The collected angers. The book has less to do with the subject of this blog, but I grabbed a few quotes that resonated with me and seemed relevant.
In order not to make it too reductive, I’m also linking to the original essays for those who want to follow up:
The worst feedback you can get from a client is “Wow. It looks like you worked really hard on this!” Stop using your work like a time card. If you did it right, it looks like it was effortless. It looks like it’s always existed. And the client will probably be irritated that they paid you for 30 hours of work to do something that looks like it took an hour. Which it did. They’re just not seeing the 29 hours of bad design that got you to that one hour of good design. And for the love of god, please don’t show them those 29 hours of bad design. A presentation is a shitty place for a sausage-making demonstration, and you’ll just come across as a defensive, unsure person needing validation.
—from 13 ways designers screw up client presentations. This sounds like a version of “My kid could’ve painted that” argument.
Learn how to steal. Be aware of your history. Design is the oldest profession in the world. You’re not the first person to tackle whatever design problem you’re tackling. See how others tackled it. Take the best solutions you find and improve on them. Don’t burn time solving things from scratch. Make use of what others have learned.
—from 10 things you need to learn in design school if you’re tired of wasting your money
The world needs fixing, not disrupting.
—from 8 reasons to turn down that startup job
And:
“The way you get a better world is, you don’t put up with substandard anything.”—Joe Strummer