Comments on Spec Work and Crowdsourcing


From the previous post, CreativePro: Spec Work and Crowdsourcing, I thought I’d grab a few of the opinions from the comments.

Shale Grant said: Thanks for your constant and steadfast guard over working on spec. I’ve done both (have my own design firm and have submitted to Crowdspring and frankly no one’s forcing the designers to submit. Some can handle it – some (apparently) cannot. If you don’t like it, don’t do the work on spec! Simple!

If I were a prospective client, I’d think you’re coming across as a whiner. Under the aegis of not giving the client the best they can get, I feel like you haven’t really understood what Crowdspring actually does for the client (they have a chance to answer any questions a designer wishes to ask, not to mention have to fill out a rationale anyway)- only weighing in on how it affects YOU, which makes me think you’re really not in it for the client’s best interest – or for that matter superlative design.

I think you just want to whine in order to justify your client inevitably overpaying for design by you. Face it: it’s the way things are. Either swim or get out of the way.

Several designers posted their opinions to dear Shale Grant, so please take the time to read them.

There is one comment in particular I’d like to share here.

Steve Douglas: Shale, I see spec and design contests as an industry issue – relevant to designers, buyers of design and yes, design firms.

The argument “well, some people do it, and they’re not being forced to” has no bearing on whether anything is good, effective or productive. It’s actually a classic case of the bandwagon or “Argumentum ad populum” logical fallacy – “the mere fact that a belief is widely held is not necessarily a guarantee that the belief is correct”. Lots of people smoke, nobody’s forcing them to, but no-one would use that argument as being illustrative that smoking isn’t harmful to the individual or society itself. The numbers of people participating on spec is, to be blunt, irrelevant.

I’m not sure why expressing a view that YOU should get paid for YOUR work is whining, but no mind. When talking to other designers who participate in spec, let me say this – to a person, they’d ALL prefer to be paid for their work. They’d rather get paid for EVERY contest or spec offering they enter. None of them, and I do mean NONE, actually WANT to give their time or talents away for free. They participate for a myriad of reasons, ranging from desperation to not being aware of alternatives, to the honest belief that they will somehow manage to make a decent living with design contest winnings (most find out rather quickly that they won’t). Unless you are the lone ‘professional’ designer who prefers not getting paid for your services, we probably agree on that one basic premise. Accordingly, I’m not sure how my stance could be determined as “whining”.

In terms of Crowdspring, I don’t want to dwell too long on them specifically, but as you brought them to the table – their website is 100% set up for the abuse of designers, many times as the hands of small business people who aren’t even aware they’re taking liberties. I don’t give a tinker’s toss about how much Crowdspring charges – that’s never been an issue of mine – my issue had always been that designers are exploited on sites like Crowdspring (and being exploited voluntarily has no bearing on whether something is exploitative or not), often by clients hoping to get ‘more for less’ while actually running a very high risk of obtaining inferior design work. Or worse. The vast majority of work on Crowdspring is, to be charitable, amateur (shouldn’t be surprising – design by amateurs is one of Crowdspring’s selling points to attract, well, amateur designers). By the way, this isn’t my opinion, but the published opinion of people who’ve reviewed CS services POSITIVELY on their blogs after running contests. The amount of copied art and stock artwork (submitted as logos) is astonishing. Again, don’t take MY word for this. Read Crowdspring’s own forums for complaints by designers who are otherwise quite happy tinkering around on the so-called “community”.

In terms of what Crowdspring does and the client-designer interaction, I must disagree. Pretty strongly too. The ‘buyers’ NEVER listen to the designer’s suggestions, even when told that what they’ve requested isn’t going to work (especially from a technical POV). All communication is FROM the buyer to the designer, never the other way around. Whatever communication from the designers to the client is usually the “yes sir, no sir – I await your next command, sir” variety. When utilizing people who are supposedly knowledgeable in their craft, the buyers never utilize that portion of the designers’ skillset. Their knowledge and/or experience. It’s akin to me taking my car to a mechanic and ignoring them completely when they tell me my wheels are going to fall off. And that, by the way, is if the ‘buyers’ communicate at all. Read the Crowdspring forum and read how designers carp that the lack of communication is a real hindrance to many contests. The management of Crowdspring have even taken to encouraging communication, suggesting that active participation means more entries. There’s lots more issues we could discuss, but rather than turn this into a Crowdspring-bashing thread, let’s leave it for another day.

In terms of my personal motivations, I’ve always been pretty pragmatic when it comes to business, so If I honestly believed that a service like Crowdspring was good for designers, good for clients, good for the industry (and profitable to boot) I’d be busy setting up my own logo design platform rather than blathering on some blog. I run a small design shop (and have so since 1996), staffed by people who have extensive backgrounds in design and online marketing, so converting my custom shop to a so-called design “crowdsourcing” platform would be a relatively easy transition. Accordingly, “if I were only weighing in on how it affects (ME)” and thought spec sites were a step forward, I’d have launched a logo design contest site years ago, and rather than debating with you on a blog, I’d be inviting you to come work on my site, supplying my ‘buyers’ with your artwork, for free. Which, apparently, you’d be quite happy to do.

Alas, I DO believe that spec sites like Crowdspring are exploitative, harmful for designers and a second-rate solution for clients. I also have to live with myself and would never expect you (or any other designer for that matter) to work for me without payment. Old school? Maybe. A Dinosaur? Perhaps. Whiner? Hardly. Continuing on my personal angle, I’d also like to point out that not once have I EVER suggested that people hire my firm rather than employ Crowdspring or another spec solution. Rather, I’ve suggested that spec contests are not terribly effective (my blog contains a myriad of evidence) and that design buyers have a ton of OTHER alternatives, ranging from small design shops to independent freelancers. As there’s nothing in your comment to indicate that I’m incorrect, I’ll stick by that stance.

I notice you close with the old “evolve or die” (or in your case, “swim or get our of the way”) chestnut. Not the first time anyone who’s been online for a while has heard that. Remember spam e-mail? When it first hit the scene back in the mid-nineties, the exact same rationale and arguments were used by the Direct Marketing associations. People complaining about spam were called dinosaurs. The JHD (Just Hit Delete) folks told those of us who hated our e-mail accounts being saturated with porn and pharma junk that we were “whining”, and trying to stand in the way of people getting “great money saving offers”. Spam e-mail was actually defended as being a positive thing for people getting it, as well as the small companies who couldn’t afford traditional advertising, who had started using it to deliver their message. Fast forward 15 years and spam e-mail accounts for over 80% of ALL Internet traffic, costs the world-wide economy billions and is a major headache for anyone trying to do anything online, from sending pics of the grand kids to parents, to running an online shopping business. This idea that all business models made possible by technology are positive is rubbish. Use of technology is what you “can do”. That needs to be tempered by what you “should do”. In terms of your comment “it’s the way things are”, and continuing with our analogy, the same can be said of spam. Are we better off because of it? Hardly.

Shale, thank you for posting your opinion.

And Steve, once again, thank you for taking the time to share your experience and views.

Cat


9 responses to “Comments on Spec Work and Crowdsourcing”

  1. Couldn’t agree more, Steve. Thanks for reposting, Cat, as I forgot to return for the conversation.

    How about the “subscribe to comments” plugin? ;)

  2. I can’t help the feeling that Shale is a plant from Crowdspring. His logic is so flawed and biased, he appears inauthentic. Kudos to Steve for his eloquent response.

  3. Now, I have to say, I am not a real “graphics designer”. I do a bit of design, but nothing too seriously, and I’d certainly never pursue any type of serious work in it.

    However, I think that you’re simply going to fail protesting about (though I do think whining is more appropriate a term) Crowdsourcing. The fact is, designers are always going to be willing to take part in it, even if it is not in their best interests. Unless you’re going to try to create some sort of designer’s union (good luck getting people in China and India to join), you can’t change that.

    And as long as designers take part, it will exist. To a buyer, it offers a far greater value – at least from their point of view – than any other method that exists. For the price of a single designer making a single design, you can get hundreds, and they’ll have to make the changes you want.

    And as for who is more worthy of giving advice, buyers simply aren’t going to ever care about what a designer thinks. And in my opinion, that is actually a good thing. You work for them, not the other way around. As a programmer, I don’t get to go to the person I work for and tell them their program has to be done differently; short of the impossible, I’m expected to do as told. That is what I am paid for. If I want to create a program completely how I want it, that’s something which I have free time for.

    You can’t force designers to not take part, you can’t compete with the age-old model of “the customer is always right”, and you definitely can’t do it this way. Complaining is not going to solve the problem; it is just going to make buyers look down upon designers as a whole. That will have the opposite effect of what you want.

    What would I suggest? Change your business model. To what? No idea, but defending the old one is a fight to the bottom. The RIAA and MPAA have money, politicians, and general public opinion behind them, and they cannot protect their failing business model. Why do you think you can protect yours?

  4. There’s another one out there. They contacted us through our Request a Quote form. Turns out it’s another crowdsource start up.

    (link removed…)

    I don’t like to give miscreants any linky love but I wanted the No-Spec community to be aware of yet another one.

    I wrote back to my contact at prova and shared the No-Spec link with him but I doubt he or his firm will be swayed.

  5. Young designers,

    Get into this trap due to not having
    the knowledge of their rights
    I myself only realized this after comming to this website
    Yes, I was conned by someone in a contest I won in a famous “Crowdsourcing” contest. He still has not paid me when The company
    (crowdsourcing company) asked him to pay. he simply said he will file a case against them for harrasment.
    Now I will never do work for Free

  6. you have no “rights”
    And EVERYTHING is Spec work until you get fully paid for it.
    Taking a bath, shower, talking to prospective customers, working on your Portfolio site/resume – SPEC work (you can call it that, or you can call it INVESTING) like all investments its not THAT you invest at all, but HOW and what your expectations are AND TOLERANCE OF RISK. Many times, I find that responding to a proposal involves doing serious analysis, design and documentation which, due to the terms of the RFP, are subject to non-disclosure and technically, they can use the proprietary information I include in my proposal to do something else.

    What if you arent employed? wouldnt doing SOMETHING be better than NOTHING? and “crowd sourcing” in some form or another IS the way thinks are going :( There is a new sort of skill set now growing in demand.
    The “Job/spec splitter” – that is, an individual who can talk a job specification and split it in to multiple, perhaps seemingly unrelated elements – elements in a size and scope for crowdsourcing and the like. These individuals are also tasked with developing the protocols to coordinate a project during this crowd-dev and reassemble the bits.

  7. I have submitted a few designs to contests on-line, but I am not a designer and never will be. I also don’t think I will ever win. I simply use them to encourage me to learn how to use more of my computers software so that I can teach my kids when they get a little older. If I was a professional designer I would never submit a project for free.

    I doubt you could ever stop these kinds of contests so your best bet is to try to get professionals to boycott them while checking out the enteries to look for copyright violation. That will be the only thing that will shut one down is a copyright violation lawsuit that cost someone a bunch of cash. Thats how they shut down napster.

    If you are a professional working on these things, you should be working on you business because it will pay off much more in the end.

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