Graphic designers produce design solutions to communicate their clients' messages with high visual impact. Graphic design solutions are required for a huge variety of products and activities, such as websites, advertising, books, magazines, posters, computer games, product packaging, exhibitions and displays, corporate communications and corporate identity, e.g. giving organizations a visual 'brand'.
Working to a brief agreed with the client or account manager, a graphic designer develops creative ideas and concepts, choosing the appropriate media and style to meet the client's objectives. The work demands creative flair, up-to-date knowledge of industry software and a professional approach to time, costs and deadlines.
A graphic designer's job may involve managing more than one design brief at a time, allocating the relevant amount of time according to the value of the job. Typical work activities include meeting clients or account managers to discuss the business objectives and requirements of the job, interpreting the client's business needs and developing a concept to suit their purpose, estimating the time required to complete the work and providing quotes for clients, developing design briefs by gathering information and data through research,thinking creatively to produce new ideas and concepts, using innovation to redefine a design brief within the constraints of cost and time, presenting finalized ideas and concepts to clients or account managers, working with a wide range of media, including photography and computer-aided design (CAD), proof reading to produce accurate and high-quality work, contributing ideas and design artwork to the overall brief, demonstrating illustrative skills with rough sketches, keeping abreast of emerging technologies in new media, particularly design programmes such as Quark Express, FreeHand, Illustrator, Photoshop, 3D Studio, Acrobat, Director, Dream weaver and Flash, as most graphic design work is now completed on a computer.
Whether they are self-employed, working freelance or employed within a business, designers often have to be proactive in presenting or 'pitching' their ideas and designs to prospective customers.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment