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There are plenty of very good, cheap graphic design freelancers out there who specialise in logo design. I'd look into that as logo's a so important to a company and you don't want to go down the cheap route and end up with a logo you're not happy with. We worked for a long time on ours and consulted a number of freelance graphic designs and we love the logo we ended up with. Good luck in creating your logo, it's so vital so take your time with it!
Do a search. One of these $29/39/49 etc jobs is a rip off from start to finish.
I last used a guy from People Per Hour. Now some there offer stuff for peanuts but this guy was decent and we worked through some problems without drama via direct email.
I paid £95 I think and I consider it money well spent.
I also concur that the logoguru / 99 designs were good but they have shot themselves in the foot by raising prices to £200 or $200 minimum, plus fees etc. I mean, 99 designs is £199 for a logo and then another £100 minimum (£299) for a log and a business card. Are they real ?
I've got a couple of other designers from PPH I'm watching who just might get some direct work to cut out PPH as PPH's terms are not too good and like all these sites, conflict resolution is half baked.
Has anyone used http://www.48hourslogo.com to get a logo and if so, with what results? How much did you offer, how many designs were submitted and were you happy with the quality?
We used a similar online site and ended up giving up, the quality of work was just really poor. Unlimited revisions is one thing but we found ourselves just going in circles and wasting time.
We ended up contacting a local agency with a portfolio we liked. It didn't cost us any more than some of the prices quoted here and it was much easier to arrive at a design we were happy with.
Yeah but if budget is limited and you want more than you can do yourself or can get from an automated program, then probably better you pitch up your $50 and get what you can and then come back later when you've made some cash and get a proper job done.
Or simply, don't bother and just use a decent font and some colour on letterheads.
If you want to take branding seriously, I would strongly advise you to stay away from any of these sites and hire a professional logo designer. While these sites may look like a good option, they entirely miss the point.
Even though you are just looking for a logo, what you actually need is a brand, something that will add value to your business, a complete set of identity materials that are consistent across the board. Ultimately, a professional image allows you to raise your prices and increase your profit margin.
Now, here's the deal, be aware that a professional logo designer will charge anything between £1k-£20k depending on your exact needs, the size of your business, and how much work needs to be done.
If you can budget for that, I recommend doing that. If you can't, the next best advice is to keep it simple. You'll be way better off just by using a simple typography, such as Helvetica, as your logo, instead of paying £99 for it.
Why? At some point, you'll realize that you can't keep growing your business without re-branding it first. That's just how things are, and it will be a much easier job, if you have not yet defined a symbol, a color or a design style.
I knew that link in your signature was going to be a logo designer site before I even opened it
Typical sales pitch from a 'real' designer saying you need this or you need that... the simple fact is most visitors to your site/shop/business couldn't care less what your logo is or looks like. They want a good product at a fair price with minimum hassle and a suitable guarantee.... they aren't interested what colour the pretty little logo on their receipt is.
I knew that link in your signature was going to be a logo designer site before I even opened it
Typical sales pitch from a 'real' designer saying you need this or you need that... the simple fact is most visitors to your site/shop/business couldn't care less what your logo is or looks like. They want a good product at a fair price with minimum hassle and a suitable guarantee.... they aren't interested what colour the pretty little logo on their receipt is.
Do you seriously believe that a companies brand image is meaningless?
..Now, here's the deal, be aware that a professional logo designer will charge anything between £1k-£20k depending on your exact needs, the size of your business, and how much work needs to be done...
For most people, yes the logo is meaningless.
Certainly for someone posting on a free business forum asking for free advice about a logo... for them a logo is definitely meaningless.
The only people who'll tell you otherwise, are people who want to sell you a logo (or web design).
Get a decent web site made, get a good product, make sure you price it fairly, make sure you have good customer service, make sure you have a better service than your competitors....
all a million times more important than who designed some stupid squiggle on your letterheads.
Designer speak for "how much dare I bill this one for ?" when the work required is not related to the size of the company.
Here's one thing to keep in mind about 99 Designs and other crowdsourced websites, they all prey on hundreds of designers who work for free, as only one, the winner, gets paid for his/her efforts. If you feel fine with exploring fellow human beings, go for it, but for what is worth, you're not going to get a good return anyway. Most of the participants of these sites are beginners, with very little experience to actually create something of value.
You are much better off hiring an actual freelance designer, someone that is professional and actually have the experience to help you make design choices that add value to your business, and these, come at a wide variety of prices. I recommend giving a try on Google search with the terms "logo designer freelancer" and perhaps the price range you are prepared to pay, some designers publicly display their price range on their sites.
Just a final quick advice, be upfront on how much you are looking to invest, that will save time for both, you and the designer. That's the usual market practice and a professional and experienced designer will either ask you about the budget right from the start, or let you know the range of budgets he/she is prepared to accept.
Here's one thing to keep in mind about 99 Designs and other crowdsourced websites, they all prey on hundreds of designers who work for free, as only one, the winner, gets paid for his/her efforts. If you feel fine with exploring fellow human beings, go for it, but for what is worth, you're not going to get a good return anyway. Most of the participants of these sites are beginners, with very little experience to actually create something of value.
You are much better off hiring an actual freelance designer, someone that is professional and actually have the experience to help you make design choices that add value to your business, and these, come at a wide variety of prices. I recommend giving a try on Google search with the terms "logo designer freelancer" and perhaps the price range you are prepared to pay, some designers publicly display their price range on their sites.
Just a final quick advice, be upfront on how much you are looking to invest, that will save time for both, you and the designer. That's the usual market practice and a professional and experienced designer will either ask you about the budget right from the start, or let you know the range of budgets he/she is prepared to accept.
It isn't compulsory for designers to enter you know and the consensus is that the designers aren't all amateurs at all. Knocking them doesn't sit well.
"how much you are looking to invest" - what a croc that is.
Elastic prices truly hurts the image of the industry and that is exactly why these £99 design places have boomed of late, because folk are tired of being taken for mugs by creative people who cannot articulate effort into a legitimate bill they can substantiate.
Then why struggle to have a logo anyway?
Besides taking your money, we like to educate our clients...but I guess you don't need that, right now 48hoursdesign is what you need. Later (if you're still in business) you will contact a real designer!
Cheers
There are two ways to look at this
1. exploitation
2. enabling
I think teh argument falls towards enabling, as it has enabled access to designers in very cheap locations and also has enable access to very cheap designs, that before the internet and these market places existed where just not available to small businesses that had no budget or access to major design studios.
I don't think the explotation arguamnet, of designer, stands up, as designers are not forced to compete on such a market.
There is however the possibiity of exploitation of the naievety of the small business in procuring such services, where the small business is perhaps paying too much for low quality work as they do not understand what they are getting. However as they say caveat emptor.
And thats your big mistake - considering it working for free. Factor in the non successful jobs when you price the other ones.
If that doesn't earn you enough money, then tough. Market forces are setting the prices to what they should be.
If you were any good you could easily survive outside of the ecosystem of crowd sourcing sites and jobs without having to worry about them. The only people I see crying about them are people with a false sense of ability.
Evidently the crowd sourcing model works and works well - otherwise there wouldn't be so many designers happy to use it.
It might effectively mean UK, USA and a lot of other Western based designers are forced out of the market... but I would just say that is tough luck and it was always going to be the case for a product with electronic delivery and absolutely no need to ever meet the provider face to face.
If the numbers work for a designer and he's happy to do 20 'for free' jobs to get paid for 1... then whats the problem? It doesn't work for you personally so we should outlaw it all?
Also those 20 jobs he done that he didn't get paid for... he can recycle those designs later into further job bids / sell them from his own site / do whatever else he wants with them.