- Registrado
- 8 de Jul, 2015
This is one of the more common quotes you can read on any "Clients From Hell" website. As a freelancer, it isn't that uncommon to hear this sort of reasoning, when someone hires you to design something (logo, website, letter, small brochure, business card, etc.pp.). But that is usually the point where you tell them that you don't do it for free and leave politely, if they don't listen.He drew this years ago but it's so accurate about his whole deal with patreon it's almost chilling.
Many people have no idea how much work and time goes into a good design, since there is nothing physical, they don't see its worth. Even if you say "I will need X hours for this", they assume that you whip up their logo in 10 minutes and waste the rest of your time on Facebook. Sure, you can sit down and have some sort of enlightenment, but in other cases you stare blankly at the screen with no idea whatsoever, totally wasting your estimated time on the assignment.
So yes... Fedobear made a point that has already been made a gazillion times before and it isn't even funny - not surprisingly.
However, Patreon is different:
The money comes from people that willingly pay you a few bucks each month (or per episode/comic/etc.) for doing the stuff you probably already did anyway. You don't need to work more, just because you have more patrons (an idea Dobbers can surely get behind) except for the bonuses you offer them. In order to get more patrons ( = more money ) you need exposure, lots and lots of exposure. You want to advertise yourself to the internet and potential patrons. And the best way to do that, is spreading your art all over the net and add a patron link to it. This is why the entire 'art thieves'-thing Globson was bitching about is so mind-baffling.
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