ceceliavo Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 Who does them and who doesn’t? What is your reason for not doing so? Or do you do a certain amount up until a certain point? For the record I do revisions. I feel like not doing a revision on a gig a customer isn’t happy with is setting you up for negative feedback and an unhappy customer…am I right? To me that’s like saying “here is some crappy work I just threw together and you’ll have to accept it because I won’t fix it.”
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 I don’t have a fixed count on revisions. All of my gigs are related to webdesign and I make sure I understand their requirements correctly before I let them order any of my gigs, so 95% of my clients never need revisions.The trick is to agree on the final expected result beforehand using as less adjectives as possible. For example, if someone tells me ‘change the color of the menu from red to blue’ then that is what I call a good description, as opposed to ‘change the color of the menu to something good’, which is a strong negative-feedback-magnet! Don’t leave anything unaccounted, ask them questions till you are both clear on what the final product should be like. Specific instruction with lesser adjectives and more nouns make the best buyer requests 😉
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 I don’t have a fixed count on revisions. All of my gigs are related to webdesign and I make sure I understand their requirements correctly before I let them order any of my gigs, so 95% of my clients never need revisions.The trick is to agree on the final expected result beforehand using as less adjectives as possible. For example, if someone tells me ‘change the color of the menu from red to blue’ then that is what I call a good description, as opposed to ‘change the color of the menu to something good’, which is a strong negative-feedback-magnet! Don’t leave anything unaccounted, ask them questions till you are both clear on what the final product should be like. Specific instruction with lesser adjectives and more nouns make the best buyer requests 😉
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 I don’t have a fixed count on revisions. All of my gigs are related to webdesign and I make sure I understand their requirements correctly before I let them order any of my gigs, so 95% of my clients never need revisions.The trick is to agree on the final expected result beforehand using as less adjectives as possible. For example, if someone tells me ‘change the color of the menu from red to blue’ then that is what I call a good description, as opposed to ‘change the color of the menu to something good’, which is a strong negative-feedback-magnet! Don’t leave anything unaccounted, ask them questions till you are both clear on what the final product should be like. Specific instruction with lesser adjectives and more nouns make the best buyer requests 😉
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 I don’t have a fixed count on revisions. All of my gigs are related to webdesign and I make sure I understand their requirements correctly before I let them order any of my gigs, so 95% of my clients never need revisions.The trick is to agree on the final expected result beforehand using as less adjectives as possible. For example, if someone tells me ‘change the color of the menu from red to blue’ then that is what I call a good description, as opposed to ‘change the color of the menu to something good’, which is a strong negative-feedback-magnet! Don’t leave anything unaccounted, ask them questions till you are both clear on what the final product should be like. Specific instruction with lesser adjectives and more nouns make the best buyer requests 😉
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 I don’t have a fixed count on revisions. All of my gigs are related to webdesign and I make sure I understand their requirements correctly before I let them order any of my gigs, so 95% of my clients never need revisions.The trick is to agree on the final expected result beforehand using as less adjectives as possible. For example, if someone tells me ‘change the color of the menu from red to blue’ then that is what I call a good description, as opposed to ‘change the color of the menu to something good’, which is a strong negative-feedback-magnet! Don’t leave anything unaccounted, ask them questions till you are both clear on what the final product should be like. Specific instruction with lesser adjectives and more nouns make the best buyer requests 😉
ceceliavo Posted November 26, 2012 Author Posted November 26, 2012 Awesome. Thank you @techlunatic I ask a million and one questions haha
ceceliavo Posted November 26, 2012 Author Posted November 26, 2012 Awesome. Thank you @techlunatic I ask a million and one questions haha
ceceliavo Posted November 26, 2012 Author Posted November 26, 2012 Awesome. Thank you @techlunatic I ask a million and one questions haha
ceceliavo Posted November 26, 2012 Author Posted November 26, 2012 Awesome. Thank you @techlunatic I ask a million and one questions haha
ceceliavo Posted November 26, 2012 Author Posted November 26, 2012 Awesome. Thank you @techlunatic I ask a million and one questions haha
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 It obviously becomes a tough life for the seller if the nature of your gigs is such that the buyer expects your creative expertise, for example in gigs like logos, business cards etc, which is when the seller has to cross their fingers until the buyer leaves a feedback because there are equal chances of it being good or bad because the output is subjective after all.I can see that you have posted in bold letters, on your gig description, asking people to contact you before placing orders, and all I can say is ‘good luck with that’. Even I have a similar message on most of my gigs and its not that it does not work but even after mentioning in the description that I offer only one tweak per gig, still I receive requests very frequently that sound something like ‘make me a site that looks like grupon, thanks’
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 It obviously becomes a tough life for the seller if the nature of your gigs is such that the buyer expects your creative expertise, for example in gigs like logos, business cards etc, which is when the seller has to cross their fingers until the buyer leaves a feedback because there are equal chances of it being good or bad because the output is subjective after all.I can see that you have posted in bold letters, on your gig description, asking people to contact you before placing orders, and all I can say is ‘good luck with that’. Even I have a similar message on most of my gigs and its not that it does not work but even after mentioning in the description that I offer only one tweak per gig, still I receive requests very frequently that sound something like ‘make me a site that looks like grupon, thanks’
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 It obviously becomes a tough life for the seller if the nature of your gigs is such that the buyer expects your creative expertise, for example in gigs like logos, business cards etc, which is when the seller has to cross their fingers until the buyer leaves a feedback because there are equal chances of it being good or bad because the output is subjective after all.I can see that you have posted in bold letters, on your gig description, asking people to contact you before placing orders, and all I can say is ‘good luck with that’. Even I have a similar message on most of my gigs and its not that it does not work but even after mentioning in the description that I offer only one tweak per gig, still I receive requests very frequently that sound something like ‘make me a site that looks like grupon, thanks’
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 It obviously becomes a tough life for the seller if the nature of your gigs is such that the buyer expects your creative expertise, for example in gigs like logos, business cards etc, which is when the seller has to cross their fingers until the buyer leaves a feedback because there are equal chances of it being good or bad because the output is subjective after all.I can see that you have posted in bold letters, on your gig description, asking people to contact you before placing orders, and all I can say is ‘good luck with that’. Even I have a similar message on most of my gigs and its not that it does not work but even after mentioning in the description that I offer only one tweak per gig, still I receive requests very frequently that sound something like ‘make me a site that looks like grupon, thanks’
techlunatic Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 It obviously becomes a tough life for the seller if the nature of your gigs is such that the buyer expects your creative expertise, for example in gigs like logos, business cards etc, which is when the seller has to cross their fingers until the buyer leaves a feedback because there are equal chances of it being good or bad because the output is subjective after all.I can see that you have posted in bold letters, on your gig description, asking people to contact you before placing orders, and all I can say is ‘good luck with that’. Even I have a similar message on most of my gigs and its not that it does not work but even after mentioning in the description that I offer only one tweak per gig, still I receive requests very frequently that sound something like ‘make me a site that looks like grupon, thanks’
rodesigners Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 Reply to @techlunatic: I agree , when it comes to logos or other design it’s simply a matter of taste
rodesigners Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 Reply to @techlunatic: I agree , when it comes to logos or other design it’s simply a matter of taste
rodesigners Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 Reply to @techlunatic: I agree , when it comes to logos or other design it’s simply a matter of taste
rodesigners Posted November 26, 2012 Posted November 26, 2012 Reply to @techlunatic: I agree , when it comes to logos or other design it’s simply a matter of taste
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