How to Make Friends and Influence Art Directors

One of the most common questions I am asked by prospective designers is how to best get started in the design industry. While I enjoy replying to everyone individually, I’ve decided to put together this page to answer all of the basics:

  1. Your portfolio is a whole lot more important than your résumé. Whenever I’ve had to fill a design position, I’ve always gotten tons of résumés and ended up going straight to URLs without even looking at the education or other qualifications of the applicant first. There are just so many people in this industry who are “all talk” that I’d rather hire someone whose stuff looks great but maybe hasn’t had a chance to go to a great college or work at a great company yet. The best thing you can do for yourself, résumé-wise, is to put together a nice one or two sheeter and offer it online, complete with sample URLs. That way, you make it very easy for whoever will be evaluating you as a prospective employee.
  2. With regards to your portfolio, spend every spare minute of your time on it. Nothing impresses me more than a clean book filled with thoughtful work. It doesn’t matter how big your clients are… only how good your work is. You should create imaginary clients if that allows you to flex your design muscle. I would rather see a beautiful poster for an imaginary band than a lackluster design project for a big company like Boeing. In other words, you will never be judged on the size (or existence!) of your clients — only the quality of your work.
  3. Consider volunteering your services for pro-bono work around the community to get your name out there. Pro-bono work is great because since you’re doing a public service, you are often given more creative freedom than you otherwise would be. Also, it’s a great way to meet people in the local design community. One of the first pro-bono projects I involved myself in was the Seattle Show — the annual advertising and design awards for the Seattle area. The Show needed a site designed every year to support the awards, and by taking care of this, I was able to meet and work with a lot of creative directors, art directors, ad agencies, and design firms around town. It has been a great networking opportunity and it only takes up maybe 40 hours of my time every year.
  4. Networking is just as important as any step you’ll take in your job search. When I was in business school, I was kind of “anti-networking”. I wanted to get a job after college based solely on my own skills and experience without the help of “being a friend of someone at the company” or “knowing someone who knows the hiring manager”, etc etc. The reality of the situation though is that in the end, it is people who will be hiring you, so you must meet a lot of them and be nice to everyone along the way. Word of mouth is the strongest form of advertising, and you want to be in a position where your name will come up in the correct circles whenever there’s a great project to be done around town. Early in your career especially, you should also concentrate on being very easy to work with, rather than necessarily producing what you consider your best work every time. For instance, if you’re doing a project for a client and they ask you to change something in your design, be flexible. Concentrate on pleasing them and making them feel like they are part of the design process rather than pushing your own preferences through, even though you know your way is probably better. I’m a pretty dogmatic person sometimes and it often takes a lot of self-control to let clients have their way, but it usually pays off in the end.
  5. Before you decide where you want to work right out of college, decide where you want to be, ideally, in 10 or 15 years. Once you do that, you can work backwards and decide what steps you can take today to get yourself on the right path. For instance, let’s say you want to be running your own design school in the South of France in 10 years (I do!). In order to do that, you’ll need to know French, be very familiar with the educational process, have a good amount of money, and a host of other things. Maybe that means your first job should be designing and running the web site for some sort of educational institution. Or maybe it means doing some pro-bono work for a local French community group. If you aren’t sure where you want to be in 10 or 15 years, you should just concentrate on working at a place where you are surrounded by people you can learn from and people you can network with in the future. Local design firms and ad agencies are great places to start, even if you take an entry-level production job.
  6. You should definitely definitely definitely have your own web site when looking for a job… even if it’s just a one-page résumé you’re putting online. It is so cheap to create and maintain a web site these days that it’s pretty much a no-brainer. In addition to letting you circulate your name and qualifications worldwide, it’s also a permanent e-mail address for life, which is important. So, for instance, you’d be permanently reachable through you@you.com instead of having to rely on a hotmail address. It comes off as very professional and shows good thought and consideration.

I’m always happy to answer any further questions people might have with regards to getting started in this industry, so if you don’t see what you are looking for here, please feel free to drop me a line.

Like this entry? You can follow me on Twitter here, subscribe via email here, or get the RSS feed if that's how you roll.

11 Responses:

  1. How to Make Friends and Influence Art Directors

    How to Make Friends and Influence Art Directors A great article from ESPN designer Mike Davidson….

  2. Kit.blog says:

    Wanna design?

    If you’re a wannabe designer and you’re a bit confused about how to get started in the design industry, Mike Davidson’s How to Make Friends and Influence Art Directors is a useful read for you.
    And while you’re at reading lists of advices, have anot…

  3. guidance

    ‘How to Make Friends and Influence Art Directors’ by Mike Davidson that’s my starting point. it feels good to have some solid advice, even if it is common sense things i came up with on my own. having someone validate…

  4. Engage says:

    Advice for new grads

    Mike Davidson — insert a genuflect here if you know anything about online design — has a great primer for recent design grads. Lots of wisdom in there for any newly minted communications pros, designers or not….

  5. Business Links for Web Developers

    A handful of links related to the business end of web design and development…

  6. Deciding on Being a Grown-up

    One of the biggest decision ever made in life comes at the tender age of 17 or 18 during college and major selection. The decision can be put off or changed, but if delayed the pressure only continues.

    Mike Davidson of Mike Industries.com has grea…

  7. How to Get a Job in the Web Industry

    I recently filled a position on my web team after several arduous months of looking (don’t even get me started on the reasons why). However, it was certainly interesting to be involved in the interview process from the hiring perspective…

  8. Biznik says:

    Word of mouth is “the strongest form of advertising”

    Today I discovered Mike Industries, a blog by Seattle entrepreneur Mike Davidson. He’s CEO of a startup called Newsvine, a company that believes “in turning news into conversation.” He has some interesting things to say about the imp…

  9. [...] to Make Friends and Influence Art Directors Mike’s article on how to best get started in the design industry gets a pretty high Google ranking, and it shows. Reading through it, you get the sense that the [...]

  10. [...] Are you getting started in Design? this is good for you. + CRIT is a discussion board for design studenr founded by School of Visual Arts MFA. + Stefan is [...]

  11. [...] Why not maximize your networking by targeting your pro bono work to an audience that will help you every step of the way. Like Mike Davidson did? “One of the first pro-bono projects I involved myself in was the Seattle Show — the annual advertising and design awards for the Seattle area…I was able to meet and work with a lot of creative directors, art directors, ad agencies, and design firms around town. It has been a great networking opportunity and it only takes up maybe 40 hours of my time every year.” | Mike Davidson | How to Make Friends and Influence Art Directors [...]

Shared

Gale force winds applied directly to people’s faces. (via @itscolossal)

Fungible:

An excellent, must-read treatise by Stijn Debrouwere about how journalism is slowly being replaced by other services which perform journalistic duties (inform, entertain, etc.) without being journalistic entities unto themselves. Examples include Netflix reviews, Quora Q&A threads, and the like:

There are organizations and websites everywhere that are taking over newspapers’ role as tastemaker and watchdog and forum. These disruptors don’t replace investigative reporting, but they replace the other 95% of what made professional news organizations important.

The Forgetting Pill Erases Painful Memories Forever:

Fascinating article about how memories work and how we are very close to being able to biologically destroy them.

“Memory comes with a natural updating mechanism, which is how we make sure that the information taking up valuable space inside our head is still useful. That might make our memories less accurate, but it probably also makes them more relevant to the future.”

How The Huffington Post Ate the Internet:

This is the best article about the Huffington Post that’s ever been written. If you care at all about business or the news industry, it’s an absolute must read. Whether you love or hate HuffPo, the story of how they rose to prominence is fascinating and instructive. When you’re done, also make sure to check out this 1983 New York Magazine article about Arianna (then) Stassinopoulos.

The Daily Show on Easter vs. Passover. When you’re done with part one (above), make sure and check out part two. I guarantee it’s the funniest thing you’ve seen all week.

The “worst” baseball cards in history… which of course means they’re the best. The Bill Pecota one is particularly great. Thanks Fleer! (via @gruber)

Stamen's Beautiful Alternative to Google Maps:

Using OpenStreetMap data, Stamen Design has taken map design to a new level. I love these. Goodbye Google Maps? (via jasonsantamaria)

How Three Germans Are Cloning the Web:

A fascinating story about the Samwer brothers and their lucrative-but-icky-feeling business model: identify American internet companies right after they become successful in America and then clone them internationally, to great financial success.

In today’s episode of Our Stadium is Better than Your Stadium… play this full-screen with the volume cranked.

Children’s Classics as Minimalist Posters: These are amazing. I particularly like the Princess and the Pea poster.

Did You Hear We Got Osama?:

This is a really great post; one of the clearest, most concise, and personally important ones I’ve read in a long time. It’s important to understand that the reason most people consume news is in order to entertain themselves. This isn’t the aspirational reason… it’s just the true reason, in most cases. If you can get your news consumption refined to the point where you are staying amply-informed without being overwhelmed, you stand to be a lot more productive.

Solitude and Leadership:

Multitasking, in short, is not only not thinking, it impairs your ability to think.Thinking means concentrating on one thing long enough to develop an idea about it. Not learning other people’s ideas, or memorizing a body of information…

Takes a little while to get going, but overall a great article about the virtues of seeking solitude from distractions in order to develop your own original thoughts.

“I think you’ve got a pretty good imagination, despicability-wise!”

Overshared
@drewstrojny Yep, your stuff looks great. Always hard to find sites where the quality-to-crap ratio is high :)
@KeriHenare @jcroft Yeah, it's just hard unwinding all of that code. They've really never done a full reset.
@KeriHenare Still, as a non-web pro, you're better off putting your art into WP than having some bad web dev custom make you a site. @jcroft
@KeriHenare @jcroft Ouch. Seriously though, look at some of this stuff! http://t.co/tJqsCXA8 -- pretty powerful.
@jcroft Yep. Legit beef.
@jcroft Ha. As long as you never have to lift the hood up, WordPress works pretty great for 99% of smallish site applications.
Wordpress themes have come a long way. If you are a photographer, architect, etc, how could you NOT use one of these: http://t.co/8MiTmVSJ
@jcroft My bet would be either a) she works in the bar/restaurant industry, or b) you are wearing Axe Body Spray.
@cap Will do. Hey, can I pick up your spare iPhone this weekend? Want to make sure I can successfully reset it and get some apps on it.
Are there any examples other than Facebook of IPOs propped up by greenshoes? How did they unwind in the following days/weeks?
@dotsara Nice work. Last mile slowness is allowed.
@aviel Hmmm, ok. It should be noted that my comprehension grade for complex or nuanced tv shows is like a C at best. I'll keep at it.
@aviel What issues? Robots that look like humans? Female presidents? What's the deep social lesson here?
@MBornemann @dvw Will do. Good enough to keep watching. Just not an instant obsession like Dexter or Breaking Bad.
@aviel What do you mean?