Posts Tagged ‘graphic design’

Your Marketing Plan was a Waste of Time… if it Lives in a Drawer.

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

Eager start-ups often generate business and marketing plans. Or, somewhere along the line a more established company says ‘we should take this seriously, do this on purpose’ and have one done professionally. People often initiate some of the recommended activities, enthusiastic at first. Then, they get busy with work work, the novelty wears off, or people aren’t comfortable with marketing tasks or aren’t getting the support they need.

It’s too difficult, paid work gets in the way or it’s just not a priority. Enthusiasm wears thin, so the grand plan gets filed away and forgotten.

(more…)

Creating a small town buzz in the Big City

Monday, December 20th, 2010

by Maja Rehou, commissioned by Just Business People Magazine (British Columbia)

It’s easy to connect with others in a close knit community like the Sunshine Coast where everybody knows each other and small businesses thrive on word of mouth referrals. However, building rapport in a big cosmopolitan city is a much harder task. But that is exactly what a young graphic designer named Faith Seekings did. President and Creative Director of Rapport Communications & Design Inc., a boutique graphic design and communication firm in the heart of Toronto’s historic district, Seekings has created a buzz in the entrepreneurial community.

A graduate from George Brown College in 1997, Seekings first began her career as a graphic designer working for Market Partners.  After a couple years Seekings’ boss discovered that her black Lab Spaniel cross was left at home while she was at work and said “why don’t you just bring him in.” Seekings loved the idea and Buddy soon became a regular fixture in the office. Buddy passed away in 2004 but Faith continued the tradition with her new canine companion Candy who is often seen in the reception area of the firm on her back waiting for a tummy rub.

After outgrowing Market Partners, Seekings moved to a small start-up but was soon laid off. At the time she says, “I was totally devastated. All I knew was that I needed a full time gig. When people suggested I try freelancing I thought they were nuts.”  But she persevered and eventually met a fellow graphic designer named Neil. He needed someone to pick up his extra design work and in exchange would share his office space and equipment. From taking on freelance work Seekings eventually took over the whole space when Neil left. This is where Seekings says “I was eased into running my own business.”

Watching Neil try to make it on his own, Seekings learned what worked and what didn’t when it came to running a business. She says “I was very lucky to have Neil’s advice and guidance early on.” The biggest thing she learned she says, “was that I couldn’t just sit and wait for work to come to me. I had to go out there and find it myself.” Realizing that no one was going to find her hiding in her office, she looked for places to meet prospects. She discovered networking and joined CAWEE (The Canadian Association for Women Executives and Entrepreneurs). Seekings loves meeting people. “Networking and relationship-building are a natural for me,” she says.

Seekings says “running a business was an awakening for me. I discovered a whole other side to myself. It also made me realize I was completely addicted to being independent and in control.”

After being on her own and liking it, ambitious, Seekings wanted to grow her business. Her client list was getting bigger and her clients were looking for more than just graphic design services. Seekings understood that to grow, “Faith Seekings” could no longer be the brand because she says “it gave people the impression that I was small or on my own as a freelancer.”  The uniqueness of her name was also an obstacle because as Seekings jokes “prospects thought they were being recruited into some kind of cult”. So in 2007 she decided to rebrand her firm to a name that could be easily marketed by other members of her team. But finding the perfect name that truly represented her firm was difficult.  Seekings reminisces about how during a collaborative session her photographer Mondo “just threw the word rapport out there.” “It stuck,” she says and in 2007 Rapport Communications & Design Inc. was born.

The challenges she faces running a business Faith says, “are dealing with things outside my area of expertise such as cash flow and growth.” As more clients came on board she started hiring staff to take on the extra workload but she says she was “just winging it.” She says “it was all suddenly more complicated and I needed to learn how to make it all work.” She was referred to Judi and Nick Hughes founders of Your Planning Partners, a firm that provides workshops, tools and strategies to help small enterprises grow their businesses. It was through them that she was introduced to Bill Tibbles, the owner of a well established graphic design firm. Bill was succession planning and looking for a way to retire. Seekings was looking for a way to grow – a perfect match. Faith soon bought his business and with Bill on board for five years, they operate like partners.

Why has Seekings’ business done so well in an extremely competitive marketplace? Seekings says “my clients trust me and really appreciate the intuitive sense I have of their businesses.” They also like being greeted by a wag of the tail in a quaint little 175 year old building in the heart of the St. Lawrence Market. It’s like being a part of a small community. “Clients aren’t just numbers on invoices they are people I genuinely want to help succeed,” Seekings says.

Seekings not only has rapport with her clients, she also has a strong relationship with her staff. Every Friday they get together for drinks at a local pub to unwind. During the summer months they have also been known to set sail on the harbour on one of her client’s sailboats.

Seekings now has a staff of nine. When asked if she wants her business to continue growing she says “If I got too much bigger I would no longer be as close to my clients and staff. I would inevitably lose rapport.”

What Does My Brochure Have to do With My Website?

Sunday, November 21st, 2010

Many B2B companies don’t do much ongoing marketing, beyond the start-up package, making individual pieces often done separately. We often have clients approach us initially for a branding package or website, then a year later they decide to participate in a tradeshow and call us for  a booth and something to hand out.

For some items done separately means time and different suppliers. The risk may very well be marketing tools that are inconsistent and/or function in isolation from each other. What’s the danger of this? Ineffective marketing that isn’t worth the money invested in it, that may also devalue all other existing pieces.

The first challenge: seeing each as part of a whole

Understanding that all your marketing tools (every point of contact) work together to pull your prospects deeper into your sales funnel and ultimately lead them to a sale, is half the battle. It takes multiple points of contact to make a sale. They include human contact, business cards, referrals, advertising, email campaigns, your LinkedIn profile, etc., etc. Many people rely on the website to make the sale, to entice that call to book an appointment, but how do they get there in the first place? What other pieces of your marketing have they come in contact with on the way? When B2Bs examine their Google Analytics, they’ll see the most traffic is direct or searches for their name, as opposed to a random Google search for your services. This means they must have heard about you another way.

Think of your points of contact as a path

As a prospect works their way through all your points of contact, think of it as a path. All main points are connected, any major changes need to be sign-posted and it should lead to a destination.

Think of their experience when going from one point to the next on this path. The first thing they saw or heard will establish an expectation, a relation to your brand. When they move on to the next thing, is it consistent? Does it carry on the same colours and design elements, the same message?  Breaks in consistency can range from merely less effective results to confusing enough to halt prospects in their tracks.

Are they compelled to move forward on to the next thing? Do they have more than one option? For example, they go to your website but aren’t ready to buy, can they sign up for a newsletter?

Are you wasting money on marketing?

There are two sides to this – you could literally waste money on an ineffective campaign, or just not get as good an ROI as you would like. If you consider each item as part of a whole when doing all at once, but especially if there have been time lapses, you can make small adjustments or enhancements that make not only that piece work better and increase it’s ROI, but also the thing it connects to, and what that connects to as well. Swag (like pens and mugs with your logo) are much more useful with a URL on it. If you do some sort of promotion to drive people to your website, do they see something related to that promotion when they get there?

Top five ways to ensure your tools are working optimally:

  1. Draw them up as a map with your goal (i.e. call for meeting) at the centre so you can visualize going from one to the next through the prospects’ eyes.
  2. Establish basic strategy, like target audience and what you stand for up front, it will really help guide you when adding pieces down the road.
  3. Every time you add a piece check that it’s consistent brand-wise with other marketing tools. Think design – colours, fonts and basic grid layout. Also think messaging, the way you talk about the company and it’s value proposition.
  4. Ask yourself what you want prospects to do once they’ve seen the piece (i.e. call you, go to website, Tweet about you). Does it encourage them to do it? Can you make it more purposely drive prospects to the next part, or more parts of your funnel?
  5. One of the best ways to maintain a strong map is to have all pieces worked on by the same person or group. That means, find a marketing company to help that understands your business and goals, who you work well with and can do it all so you aren’t bouncing from supplier to supplier, or doing it yourself.

What Are Proprietary Websites?

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

In it’s most basic form, it’s a website built with closed-source technology that the developer owns and controls. You essentially license it and often continually pay for access to it, and that access is very limited.

The more common ones were originally developed to answer a very real demand. A few years ago businesses began requesting the ability to update their websites themselves. This meant building a user-friendly interface for them to do it through. Because it was new, they had to be custom built, which was costly and buggy. A few savvy companies popped-up with content management systems and frameworks to build websites on.

Otherwise, there are companies who built frameworks and technology to make the websites they build better in some way or easier for them to build and manage internally. The client doesn’t necessarily benefit from it as a feature.

The Problem With Them?

  • Can be more difficult to get changes made.
  • You can’t take it with you if you decide to leave their service.
  • Limitations on frameworks often don’t allow for custom design or much growth.
  • Limited access makes support difficult for in-house IT.
  • What if they get hit by a bus? If they go out of business, there is no support.

What’s Out There Now?

These days there are open-source solutions for content management out there supported by large communities that are very flexible. Examples are WordPress and Drupal, both of which also have many useful widgets and modules like e-commerce, client login areas, polls, event management, etc. The modules and widgets still need to be customized to your needs and design, but it’s much less expensive to add include in a web project.

Deciding on a Web Company

Know what you’re buying. Before committing to the project, make sure the coded site will belong to you once you’ve paid your bill. You should be able to take it elsewhere and not have to have them make changes if you wish. You don’t want to do all that work and then not have rights to it.

Also, make sure you have control of your domain and hosting account. It’s not uncommon for web companies to set these accounts up and manage them year after year, but make sure they do it in your name, you have all the access codes, and the whois lookup for your domain has your contact information.

Creating a tagline for Toronto…

Sunday, October 24th, 2010

I was recently approached by fellow branders; Ken and Ian from Blueprint with a fun opportunity. They usually work with companies to help them uncover their core proposition (why one should buy from them over the competition). But, with the upcoming municipal elections, it seemed like a fun exercise for the city. In the first two of three articles, journalist Jennifer Wells explained the Blueprint process and reported on the progress in uncovering the city’s DNA, also asking readers to share the words they felt best fit Toronto. The response was staggering – 500 replies in three days.

They ran the responses through Wordle which indicated the top three words were ‘Toronto’, ‘World’ and ‘City.’ That’s very cool because a key statement from Blueprint’s work was ‘Toronto is a World City.’ Nice to know you’re on the same track as so many others.

The core proposition statement they arrived at was ‘Embracing the World.’

The Creative Challenge

The original idea wasn’t to come up with a tagline, but the core statement and story of Toronto’s DNA – it wasn’t a marketing exercise. Once the exercise was complete, they realized the statement sounded like a tagline, which could be confusing, so why not actually develop a tagline?

Enter, Rapport. Blueprint approached five Toronto agencies including us, with less than five days to deliver. Though rushed and free, a fun exercise and good exposure, so we agreed. The creative brief boiled down to this: Toronto is a city that truly embraces different cultures, allowing a lot of great things happen here. Because of this attitude and results, Toronto is a model for cities around the world to follow.

Summing up Toronto’s DNA in One Clever Statement

I assembled our top writers Beth Parker and Jim Murray, plus our brand strategist Terri Carson and new Rapport team member Samantha Esteves for a brainstorming session. With Blueprint having done the foundation work, we got right into the creative part. There were many ideas like ‘I belong. We all belong.’ and ‘Make Yourself At Home.’ They were compelling, but none hit both notions: embracing the world, and Toronto as a model for the world. Then suddenly, an idea formed in Jim’s head and the top contender popped out: ‘Toronto… It’s Where the World is Going.’

This bit of creative genius was included with the other agency’s submissions in the Sunday Star October 10, 2010. Read the article here: http://bit.ly/b63PX4 – you’ll find ours and the other submissions at the end. Which one is your favourite?

Opportunities Tech Firms Are Missing in Their Marketing

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Most tech firms put a lot of emphasis on their technology, and not enough or zero on the service that goes with it. Many treat service as an after-thought, as an unimportant bit of data. By doing this they’re missing out on a chance to differentiate themselves and including sales-talk that’s meaningful to the end-user.

More than a list of features.

When shopping around for managed services or custom software, it’s easy to compare features lists, but what about the support service they’ll receive once they buy? We all know when mission-critical technology goes wrong, it’s the end of the world. If you’ve developed a great system for customer support, include that in your web copy, have something that stands out from the list of technical specs.

You love the geek talk, what does your client care about?

While the IT department loves technical specs, they won’t mean much to a non-techie decision maker. They want to know what it will do for them, how it will improve their experience and how it will save them money. For example, many companies spend/waste a lot of money on software and equipment that just doesn’t get adopted because it’s not properly integrated into their situation. If your post installation service will help ease the transition into the clients’ business systems, it will resonate big-time if expressed in the marketing message.

The new marketing…

They say customer service is the new marketing. FreshBooks has made it their very culture to bend over backwards to help clients in any way they can, making them loyal and fabulous cheerleaders.

How do you add the service part to the marketing message?

You’re probably already doing it. You have processes or services in place that you take for granted, thinking it’s just there to make your job easier. Meanwhile, your clients probably really appreciate it.

  • Write out your process for delivery services and follow-up in detail – pretend you’re explaining it to a five year old.
  • Ask existing clients what they like best about your company’s delivery, then more specific questions on the service and follow-up.
  • Re-write all that in marketing-friendly, non-techie language and add it to your website.

What to Expect: Turn-around on Website and Design Projects

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

The answer to ‘how long do they normally take’ can be as varied as the different types of projects and unique elements required – especially website design and development. Start by identifying key delivery dates, then build backwards to identify key milestones. Your full service design and marketing firm should know from experience how long projects typically take, and lead the way. The key is to discuss it all at the outset of a project, and make sure both sides agree to comfortable schedules.

In General…

We usually tell clients it will take 5-10 business days to see things like logo, ad or web design concepts once the creative brief is decided upon. We say 10–15 days for bigger projects (like large brochures that also require a lot of copywriting. Then, depending again on the size of the project and nature of revisions (we generally include three rounds) we say 2–5 business days.

Identify Major Deadlines

Some of the projects we take on have hard deadlines like a commitment, an upcoming event, or a due date at a publication. If this is true for you, the first question should be ‘can the firm meet it at all?’ If they can’t you should discuss why with them. There’s a difference between they can’t because of other work and commitments (in which case you could go elsewhere) and it’s just not feasible due to the laws of science (plan b?).

If you have no hard deadline to meet, I strongly recommend creating one. If you keep telling your firm ‘no rush’, they will naturally back-burner it for the hard deadlines that come through and so will you. Meanwhile, the project loses momentum, everyone forgets the creative brief and neither side gets what they need (for you the tools to market and build your business, for us a sense of accomplishment and something we can bill).

Creating a Critical Path

Once you determine the hard or soft due date for the project, it’s really helpful to work backwards and set all main milestones. How long does the printer need to work comfortably? How many people need to test the website client-side and what’s a reasonable amount of time to give them to do that, provide feedback and have it implemented? I always try to give a little buffer. From there you can work backwards in terms of rounds of revisions and feedback, meeting on the other end how long the firm needs to generate creative concepts.

You Will Have Deadlines Too

Then there’s your side. The timeline also needs to include when the firm needs to hear back from you or receive needed materials in order to meet their deadlines. If you know when your attention will be needed, and how much of it, you can schedule it in.  If you’ve never been through a website project for example, you may not realize how much time it takes to get information together early on, or test it thoroughly just before launch. Where picking an ad layout may seem simpler, if you need to get the input from hard-to-pin-down higher-ups or a committee, that needs to be worked in.

Ideally, the firm you work with has a process for keeping track of your timelines and holding you accountable, as opposed to just lobbing it into your court and forgetting about it. If not, things can fall through the cracks.

There’s Always a Workaround

Going back to the laws of time and space; occasionally timing just won’t allow for the ideal, but there’s always something that can be done. For example, instead of rushing through a branding process, we may print a very small run of temporary business cards for clients to take to an event. Can the website be up in a reduced form and called a ‘soft-launch’?

We work really hard to meet clients’ tighter deadlines and will not let them down by telling them we can do something we can’t and have pulled off some great creative under pressure. However, we do a much better job when not rushed, and build much better Rapport for them and for us.

Best Planning Practices

Sometimes unexpected opportunities pop up and your firm should do their best to help clients take advantage of them. But, if you involve your firm in everything related to your marketing efforts and discuss upcoming commitments, events, etc. in advance, they can help you not only plan better, but maybe recognize additional opportunities too. A one-year action plan can be a great tool for both sides.

Web Design VS Web Programming

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Lots Of Room For Misunderstanding

The different kinds of suppliers in the website building industry have a lot of clients labouring under a serious misconception.

The misconception lies in the term ‘web design’ vs ‘web programming’. Web programming companies serve a great purpose on complex sites with their deep technical knowledge. Though some say they offer ‘design’, they usually know very little about design, branding or other forms of marketing. There is a very simple reason for this – they are web programmers. Their skill sets revolve around the mechanics of making web sites function… period. Web designers skills revolve around design, communication and brand, on and beyond the web.

In the communications business, we see this misconception time and again. A client will come to a branding company like us for a complete branding package, then for some unfathomable reason, choose a web ‘programming’ company to design their web site. These companies plod ahead, trying their best to make things fit, but rarely take the brand into consideration and consequently never get it quite right.

We know this to be true, because in the instances where this has happened to us and other firms we know, clients will call and express their regret at not having allowed us to design the site properly, or even ask us to step in and get things back on track.

Either way it’s never a good situation for the client, the integrity of their brand or their budget.

Branding & Integration

The most important thing to keep in mind about a web site is that it is an integral element of your company’s branding. And branding, as we all know is very much an organic process. It starts with the development of an Essential Message and it grows from there. It grows into corporate identity. It grows into packaging, signage and advertising. It grows into a presence on the Internet through your web site.

In order for all of this growth to be effective and give you the best possible return on investment, there must be synergy between all the elements that comprise your branding. This is why you hire a design firm with knowledge in all areas of brand awareness in the first place.

We become the shepherds of your brand. We nurture it. We are fanatical about establishing and maintaining synergy. And, when it comes to your web site, we make sure that it is designed properly in conjunction with our web programmers to make sure your site is 100% functional.

Don’t Get Us Wrong

We don’t have anything against web programmers. We work with them all the time and take their knowledge into consideration for the design process – we have our own on-site certified programmers. But the simple fact remains that most web programmers, if given the choice, would prefer not to attempt to design a web site, but would much rather work with a good design provided by a designer or design team.

When the programmer is brought into the process early their knowledge of functionality can enhance the design. They can then apply all their skills to the task of programming the web site so that it is easy to navigate, so that any content management functionality they build into the site works properly and that all the bells and whistles they add to the site ring and toot the way they are supposed to.

This is a very important part of the web site development process. But none of it really happens successfully without a creative design that has synergy with the rest of your branding.

Caveat Emptor (May The Buyer Beware)

Regardless of anything I have said here, there will always be companies out there that will claim to offer web design when what they really mean is web programming. That’s just a fact of life in the business world. All we can do is remind you that your marketing efforts and the integrity of your brand will fare better in the long run if you allow one group to shepherd it for you.

A Re-branding Project Plan

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

Picture it, January 2002. A solo designer, just recovering from being laid-off, decides to give this freelancing thing a try. She sits at her rented desk and works up a logo using her name, and a business card. A fellow tenant helps her by building a website – it’s so cute with her dog on it.

Fast forward to summer, 2007 – she has a good reputation, four employees, many clients and a lot of experience under her belt. But, prospects and new colleagues still get the impression she’s a freelancer renting a desk. Her salesperson has trouble explaining that Faith Seekings is someone’s name and the firm is not a religious cult. She’s embarrassed by her brand and it’s time to change – new name and all.

Skip ahead again to December 2008 when the business has doubled, due partly to buying another, and the brand needed to mature again in look and messaging, to reflect the growth. No new name this time, but there’s an entirely different dog on the website.

I tell you this story because I not only re-brand clients regularly, but I’ve done it myself. Once you’ve decided to rebrand (see past post The Right Time to Re-brand), what would the steps involved be?

First, choose the right firm to do it.

If you are rebranding, at this stage you need more than a designer, you need a brand strategist and copywriter as well. A brand is more than a pretty logo, it’s how you tell your ideal clients who you are and why you’re different. That takes strategy and words, especially if there’s a renaming involved as well.

This doesn’t mean you have to go to a large firm, just one that offers this depth of service and experience. Ask for recommendations from colleagues, meet with at least three, make sure you look at their work and see diversity, yet evidence they can work with your kind of company (size, industry, etc). Don’t discount the importance of liking them and feeling good about communication style.

Our re-brand project plan

All design firms will have their own processes and approach, but would likely include the same basic principles as ours.

Step One: Look backward, look forward.

This would likely be covered initially in the discovery meeting, then in more detail – after we decide to work together. Look back at where you started and why you made the brand/design decisions you did. Review where you are now and what has changed in the interim – with your company, the competition, the marketplace, technology, etc. Then, look at where you want to be in three to five years. I give that time-frame because it’s not unusual to do at least a brand tweak every few years as things continually change. It also reduces the pressure of thinking you’re making decisions that have to work forever.

Step Two: Research, research, research.

Depending what you sign up for with us we may do a complete competitive analysis of your industry. At the least we use one of the best ways to gage how your company is seen: by asking existing ideal clients what they think about your firm, why they keep coming back and refer you. So they’re encouraged to be candid, I recommend having an outside (branding) team do it and explain that all results will be reported back anonymously. Once you’ve got your client’s permission, they set up calls and go. This may show things you need to change, but most often reveals strengths that the company didn’t realize they had, and what competitive advantage is most meaningful to your ideal client. See our May newsletter for more on this.

Step Three: Essential Message Session

This half day session uses the essential message, a method for uncovering your best competitive advantage, articulating it and generating a brand brief. It includes the closer look at your past and future goals from step one. There are interactive exercises to dig deeper into what core challenge your company really solves for your clients and all the ways you do it better than the competition. The research previously done plays a role by throwing new ideas into the discussion. It’s ideal for us not to have preconceived notions, so sometimes we swap step two and three.

From this session, both sides should have a rough positioning statement and a really good idea how the brand character is shaping up, with consensus. If a second session is needed, we book it. We should have enough of a creative brief to begin work on the tagline and brief for the logo.

Step Four: You won’t hear from us for a while

We then take everything we learned and results of the session away to work on. We may do further research or call with further questions. What we’ll come back with is a refined positioning statement and tag line options. The positioning statement is an internal statement meant to guide us in the rest of the branding, but can also turn into content for the website, your LinkedIn profile, or even your verbal introduction.

We also send a long list of tagline options with instructions like eliminating the ones that are definitely a no, highlighting the ones you like best and how to ask for feedback.

We consider both documents iterative. However, clear guidelines on rounds of revisions should be outlined at the outset. We gladly discuss and incorporate your feedback on what works, what doesn’t, and why for the next round.

I believe the positioning statement should never be ‘written in stone’ as the world changes and companies grow, it should do so with you. Ideally after a couple rounds we have a tagline direction nailed down if not the exact words, because then we can start the fun part.

Step Five: The fun part – my favourite book is the Pantone colour book.

I’m a designer at heart, this is the best part for me. With the brand character defined and a tagline selected, the design studio begins generating logo ideas. We present the first round in black and white because personal colour preferences and dislikes are strong, and can adversely effect the impression of a great design. We hate to see a good concept rejected because someone hates orange. We present two to three concepts (or more) including the tagline, with our recommendation and rationale. The same suggestions for getting feedback apply.

The client provides feedback with change requests, mix n’ matches, but definitely narrows down options. Next round or so we show colour options for the favourite logo (or two if it helps with decisions). Again, there may be alteration requests. Seeing it in context also helps finalize the wording of the tagline, if not yet final.

Step Six: A brand is born.

With a strong brand base of positioning statement, tagline and logo finalized, we deliver a package of logos in all formats, colours and file types you’d need. Perhaps a brand guidelines document, and anything you may need to trademark it. We can also then begin design and writing all the support elements the brand needs to be taken public, i.e. stationery, business card, website, brochures, marketing materials, etc. There’s more that needs updating with the new brand than you think (what about company cheques?), so it can be an ongoing process.

Please remember that a brand is much more than a logo. It’s every way your company interacts with the outside world – your website and marketing tools, how your team talks about the company, to how your receptionist answers the phone. This is where your strong, well-defined positioning and tagline really come in to play.

Building a Great Team with Rapport

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Hiring – especially for the first time – can be one of the scariest moves as an entrepreneur. Rapport currently has nine crew on top of me, and the dog. I’ve had a lot of experience with this and, though was lucky to find really great people, learned a few things along the way.

This is one of the top things other entrepreneurs ask me for advice on. My top tips are:

  • Try prospects out on a project or two before committing.
  • Define the need/position first, then find the right person.
  • Personality and ‘fit’ into culture is as important as skill.
  • Be open to them doing things differently then you and let them shine.

Try People as Freelancers Before Hiring

My very first hire was Art Director Lisa, who is still with me today. I absolutely could not have built the company without her. I was fortunate to work on a project with her old boss and friend of mine Mondo Lulu, and got to know her through him. Then, as he started scaling back she began freelancing for me. I knew her design style, her work ethic, that her strengths complemented mine, and that we got along like old friends. My only hesitation hiring her full-time was sustaining her pay. When I had the need with a large project and knew I could keep her busy for three months I asked her to come full time – that was six years ago.

Since then I’ve been fortunate enough to try most people out on a contract basis before making a commitment. Not just to see the quality of their work, but to get a taste of their working style and personality. If it doesn’t work out, it’s tough on both sides, so this is a really great way to try each other on for size.

What Kind of Help Do You Really Need?

My second hire was a newborn designer, and a big mistake. I was still doing all the admin work myself and felt I didn’t have enough time to do all that and my design work. I thought I needed another designer and the recent grad was cheap. I found I still didn’t have time to get anything done and was also now babysitting this kid. So, I let him go and hired an administrative person. Pamela was a God-send. This was my first pure overhead employee – unlike Lisa who generated revenue. But, Pamela took the work I liked least off my shoulders, did it better than me and freed me up to do what I was really good at and made good money for.

Besides hiring for the wrong role, it’s also a mistake to hammer a job around someone you ‘like’. I now determine what roles we really need to fill against goals for the company, then create detailed job descriptions around them to use in my search.

Don’t Underestimate the Power of the Culture You’ve Built

Our team recently did a colours test with our business consultants, Your Planning Partners. Seven out of 10 came in as blue or the ‘Relationship Way’ first. We varied on what came second (Action, Organized, Logical), and that was reflected in skills and roles. What it told me was the team strongly embodied the Rapport values of being laid-back, friendly, relationship-oriented, client-focussed and a close family that got us our name. This culture started with me, gained momentum with early people like Lisa, and continues today in the people we attract. Skills in relation to the role you’re filling are incredibly important, but if a really talented person doesn’t fit our friendly, collaborative culture they don’t belong at Rapport.

It’s important to have more than one of you meet with prospects. From a practical standpoint, I had Senior Web Developer Noel, do initial interviews with junior web developer prospects to make sure he had the skills needed. Then I met the recommended finalists to make sure they fit in and talk money. We added the ‘social interview’ with new guy Nick, where he joined the crew for drinks to get everyone’s feel for him. We are a very social bunch, and it’s a very big deal day after day if someone just doesn’t fit in socially. I think I’ll continue that tradition.

Define Your Values, Be Open to New Things

There is always more than one way to skin a cat. I find this most evident with web developers as their logical nature means they always question the way the other guy did it. But, it’s the same with design, processes and which way the toilet paper goes on. It’s important to define the standards expected for the end result as well as the practical processes that run the business, than make these consistent across the board. However, you’ve hired people to complement what you do, let them. This may mean everything from different journeys to great design, to suggestions that improve workflow.

We’ve defined our vision, mission and values, which I share with the company repeatedly. Resulting details include things like design and web standards, or the project management process we’ve developed. The key is sharing it with the whole team, getting their input, then giving them flexibility within to do their thing.

This makes for a much stronger and more dedicated team than if I insisted everything was done my way.