Creative excellence isn’t everything. Laura Snoad deconstructs four design projects that more than paid for themselves by boosting the client’s bottom line.
For a client, the success of a design project usually hinges not on acclaim, but sums. No matter how many Yellow Pencils, social media mentions or column inches a project tots up, it’s hard for a client to see true value for money unless the work boosts their profits by generating cold, hard cash.
According to a 2013 report by the Design Council, for every £1 a client spends on design, they reap over £4 in net operating profit, over £20 net turnover and over £5 in net exports. The same study, Leading Business by Design: Why and How Business Leaders Invest in Design also reveals that two-thirds of companies that ignore design have to compete mainly on price, whereas that’s true of only one third where design is integral to the business.
To designers, the benefits of creative work are obvious, but convincing a client that it will yield a return on investment requires tangible statistics from previous outcomes. However, whether it’s a commercial campaign that shifted a larger than average volume of products, a charity campaign that raised a considerable sum of money or a high-profile rebrand that can be credited for helping reverse the fortunes of a business, measuring effectiveness can be a slippery task. Part of the problem is that design work rarely exists in a vacuum. Separating the power of a well-timed rebrand from the appeal of a good product or service, and the consumer trends surrounding it, is often nigh on impossible. It might be possible to measure a packaging overhaul on sales figures, but a rebrand is an investment that could take years to pay off– and sometimes in ways that aren’t immediately apparent or easy to measure.
Bu hikaye Computer Arts - UK dergisinin February 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Computer Arts - UK dergisinin February 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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