Issue #49
April 19, 2007

Welcome to Inside Freelance Design (IFD), your free, bi-weekly e-letter from American Writers & Artists Inc. Every other week, you can receive this special alert with secrets, tips, and insights from AWAI's graphic design pros to help you improve your skills and reach your goal of becoming a professional graphic designer in the fastest time possible.


IN THIS ISSUE:
  • A Super-Simple Way to Land New Clients by Kammy Thurman
  • Quick Tip: Digital Color Meters for Figuring Out Online Colors
  • EXTRA! EXTRA! News and Job Opportunities

A Super-Simple Way to Land New Clients
By Kammy Thurman

You’ve put your monthly newsletter together and you’re ready to blast it out to your clients. But before you do, there’s one more little thing you can do that will turn your newsletter into a lead-generating machine:

Include a way to reward your clients for referrals.

This is an underused trick that I’ve seen work gangbusters in the photography industry. A photographer I’ve worked with hauled in an extra $18,000 in one month just by spinning his referral program off of his newsletter.

My husband and I are using the same system to quickly build a clientele for our new studio – and starting this month, I’ll be offering a referral program to my copywriting/design clients.

Works in Both Print and Email

This system works best if you provide hard-copy newsletters to your clients. That way, you can include actual referral cards that your clients can hand out.

But even if you have an email newsletter, you can still use it to generate referrals. Just tell your newsletter recipients, “When you send a friend my way, have them mention your name. You will receive such-and-such as a thank-you gift for the referral, and your friend will receive such-and-such as a welcome gift.”

How to Build Your Referral System

I design our referral cards in four-color, and lay out four cards per page. That makes them about the size of a small postcard. The front side of our photography referral card says “New Guest Welcome Certificate” and my copywriting/design card says “New Client Welcome Certificate.”

The back of my card says the following:

Dear Kammy,

I’d like to introduce my friend ______________________.

Please extend your New Client Welcome Package, including the (gift, project discount, etc.) valued at ($ amount) for their first project with you.

Thanks, Kammy, I know they’re in great hands with you!

Sincerely, _________________

The referring client should fill out the card before handing it off to a friend. The friend then turns the card in to you when they hire you for their first project. (They can’t just hand you the card for a gift. They have to “sign on the dotted line” for a project first.)

If you’re working long distance, the new client can enclose the card with the packet they send for their first project.

I print our newsletters and referral cards on my office inkjet, cut the cards apart, and slip them inside the folded newsletters so they don’t get lost in the envelope.

A Few Ways to Reward Your Clients

The rewards you offer in your referral program are limited only by your imagination. There are numerous promotional companies that can work with you to come up with unique, affordable gifts.

It can be as simple as sending a bottle of wine with a couple of glasses imprinted with your business logo. Or even an imprinted coffee mug stuffed with a bag of gourmet coffee.

Or you could offer a gift certificate to the client’s favorite store or restaurant. This takes a little more effort to arrange, but is a small investment of your time to build a lasting, profitable relationship.

But a bit of advice: Stay away from imprinted pens as promotional rewards for clients. When was the last time you made a purchase or service choice based on what’s written on the pen in your pocket? Probably never.

Should You Offer Discounts?

I’ve heard mixed opinions on whether you should offer discounts off your design fees to get new clients. Some designers believe it lowers the value of their work in a client’s eyes. Others say it works great, and they’ve never felt it devalued their service. This is something you’ll have to decide for yourself.

We use a combination of gifts and discounts for our photography studio. We reward the referring client with a gift certificate to a popular restaurant and a free sitting for their next portrait session with us. And we reward the new client with a free sitting and an introductory discount off their first portrait package. The gifts/discounts have a total value of $150 for each client.

For design clients, you might give the referring client a gift certificate and the new client an introductory discount. Or maybe throw in a free order form design (or something else that goes with their project).

It may seem like a lot to give away, but if you consider the lifetime value of a new client over the next five or 10 years or so, it’s but a drop in the bucket.

* * * * * * * * Highly Recommended * * * * * * * *

Everything You Need to Build & Grow Your Successful Graphic Design Business

Get the answers to the hundreds of questions and concerns commonly asked in specific, step-by-step details: www.thedesignerslife.com/bizinbox


QUICK TIP: Digital Color Meters for Figuring Out Online Colors

Let’s say your client just emailed you his photo. He tells you he wants you to use the same blue in his shirt for the background of his website.

One way to approach this challenge is to use a handheld color meter. Or you could hold color chips with CMYK/RGB values against the screen. The first method is exorbitantly expensive. The second gives you iffy results … at best.

The best solution is to use a computer-based color meter that allows you to read color values on your screen.

DigitalColor Meter for Macintosh

If you own a Mac and use OS X, you already have that solution. OS X comes with DigitalColor Meter.

If you haven’t moved DigitalColor Meter to a different folder, you’ll find it in Applications > Tools. If you can’t find it there, simply use Spotlight and search for DigitalColor.

To use DigitalColor Meter, move your cursor over the color you’re interested in and read out the RGB color values. You can get those values as percentages, actual values (8 & 16 bit), and hexadecimal values (8 & 16 bit).

DigitalColor Meter also lets you get LAB values, but we suggest you stick with RGB.

PC/Windows Options

If you’re running Windows on a PC, Eyedropper is a free application that offers the same functionality as DigitalColor Meter.

You can download Eyedropper here. (The website may come up in Slovenian. If it does, click “English” on the right side of the landing page.)

Warning: Do not install any software that you download to your computer without first scanning it with your virus software!

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EXTRA! EXTRA! News and Job Opportunities
  • GRAPHIC-DESIGN SPECIALIST – Entegris, a manager of materials integrity, needs a graphic-design specialist to design websites, displays, and presentations. You must be knowledgeable in Photoshop, Illustrator, and Quark. HTML and photography skills give you an advantage. Send your information to employment@entegris.com.
  • MULTIMEDIA GRAPHIC DESIGNER – Extron Electronics, located in Orange County, CA, is looking for a graphic designer with proven multimedia experience, including Flash Animations. You'll work closely with a design team and must function well under tight deadlines. Send your resume to jobs@extron.com.
  • EXPERIENCED GRAPHIC DESIGNER – MyRegistry.com, an online gift registry in Fort Lee, NJ, has an opening for an experienced graphic designer to support the daily function of their website and develop high-quality designs for print and online materials. You must know Photoshop, Illustrator, and Flash. Send your resume and a link to online examples of your work to oberkowitz@myregistry.com.

COMING NEXT ISSUE:
  • Making the Best Impression on Your Clients
  • Quick Tip: Image Resolution Made Easy

* ABOUT INSIDE FREELANCE DESIGN *

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