We've all been there: that feeling of being caught in an endless cycle of revisions with a “nightmare client.” It happens to the best of us. But this isn't a hopeless situation: with a few simple tweaks to your process, you can avoid the change-order spin cycle.
Showing your work for the first time to a new client can be nerve-wracking. Especially if you have missed the mark for past clients. Imagine what it would be like to know exactly what your clients wanted. How confident would you feel?
In order to produce predictably successful projects, you need to have a well-curated and repeatable process. And most likely, your process is missing something vital. A gap between the creative brief and the design work.
Speak the same language. By translating words into images, you will get alignment with your clients before you ever design anything.
Lose the rapid heart rate and sweaty palms. Present ideas early and collaboratively to help “scaffold” clients to the end result.
This collaborative and easy to use process will help your clients sign off on your work quickly: many times without any changes.
If you've been in the creative field long enough, you know how difficult it can be to source inspiration for a project. In several video lessons, Chris walks you through his approach to building deep resource libraries. You'll learn how to quickly curate and save imagery from multiple sources.
Stylescapes® are not your average moodboards. There is a science to this composition that lends itself to incredible presentations. By focusing on The Three C's—Curation, Composition, and Consistency—you will be able to craft a stylescape that inspires your next steps and allows your client to collaborate at an early stage.
Ever wonder what it would be like to have Chris Do as your Creative Director? Want to know how he critiques work? You'll get all that and more with several student critique recordings. Chris will help you identify how to improve your stylescapes before the presentation.
One of the most important parts of the stylescape process is the presentation. Crafting a narrative around your work will help your clients understand and remember what they see. Chris not only explains how to do this, but also shares real-world video recordings of him presenting to clients. You'll also get to watch other students present their work and get critiqued by Chris.
If you've been in the creative field long enough, you know how difficult it can be to source inspiration for a project. In several video lessons, Chris walks you through his approach to building deep resource libraries. You'll learn how to quickly curate and save imagery from multiple sources.
Stylescapes® are not your average moodboards. There is a science to this composition that lends itself to incredible presentations. By focusing on The Three C's—Curation, Composition, and Consistency—you will be able to craft a stylescape that inspires your next steps and allows your client to collaborate at an early stage.
Ever wonder what it would be like to have Chris Do as your Creative Director? Want to know how he critiques work? You'll get all that and more with several student critique recordings. Chris will help you identify how to improve your stylescapes before the presentation.
One of the most important parts of the stylescape process is the presentation. Crafting a narrative around your work will help your clients understand and remember what they see. Chris not only explains how to do this, but also shares real-world video recordings of him presenting to clients. You'll also get to watch other students present their work and get critiqued by Chris.
If you've been in the creative field long enough, you know how difficult it can be to source inspiration for a project. In several video lessons, Chris walks you through his approach to building deep resource libraries. You'll learn how to quickly curate and save imagery from multiple sources.
Stylescapes® are not your average moodboards. There is a science to this composition that lends itself to incredible presentations. By focusing on The Three C's—Curation, Composition, and Consistency—you will be able to craft a stylescape that inspires your next steps and allows your client to collaborate at an early stage.
Ever wonder what it would be like to have Chris Do as your Creative Director? Want to know how he critiques work? You'll get all that and more with several student critique recordings. Chris will help you identify how to improve your stylescapes before the presentation.
One of the most important parts of the stylescape process is the presentation. Crafting a narrative around your work will help your clients understand and remember what they see. Chris not only explains how to do this, but also shares real-world video recordings of him presenting to clients. You'll also get to watch other students present their work and get critiqued by Chris.
If you've been in the creative field long enough, you know how difficult it can be to source inspiration for a project. In several video lessons, Chris walks you through his approach to building deep resource libraries. You'll learn how to quickly curate and save imagery from multiple sources.
Stylescapes® are not your average moodboards. There is a science to this composition that lends itself to incredible presentations. By focusing on The Three C's—Curation, Composition, and Consistency—you will be able to craft a stylescape that inspires your next steps and allows your client to collaborate at an early stage.
Ever wonder what it would be like to have Chris Do as your Creative Director? Want to know how he critiques work? You'll get all that and more with several student critique recordings. Chris will help you identify how to improve your stylescapes before the presentation.
One of the most important parts of the stylescape process is the presentation. Crafting a narrative around your work will help your clients understand and remember what they see. Chris not only explains how to do this, but also shares real-world video recordings of him presenting to clients. You'll also get to watch other students present their work and get critiqued by Chris.
You’ve just landed your biggest design project to date. Your client gives you some key words to base your work off of: modern, clean, and simple. Surely, you know what those words mean and what they look like, and obviously the client does, too.
You both talked about it.
You break from the creative brief and get moving. For weeks, you pour your heart and soul into every little piece of this project. You’re confident that this is your best work yet. This is going to blow your client away.
Fast forward to presentation day, and you’re pumped up. You're ready to watch your client collect their jaw from the floor.
Then they utter the words that punch you right in the gut.
“This isn’t what I pictured at all. This is not what we talked about. What else do you have to show me?”
How is that possible? Why did they suddenly realize that what you’ve shown them isn’t what they want?
Your client didn’t just suddenly decide that—you were never aligned on the visual direction to begin with. All of a sudden, you start to feel it:
“This client is a nightmare. They don’t understand design. They don’t understand my process.”
Yes, some clients are tough. You might not always see eye to eye. But we can’t read their minds. (Even though that'd be pretty sweet.) We have to know how to speak the same language.
Your process is missing something vital.
You might know them as mood boards, style tiles, or tear sheets. A Stylescape is a curated collection of images, textures, typography, and colors that communicate a certain look and feel. It defines the visual direction and gives clients a crystal-clear picture of the deliverables ahead.
Stylescapes are designed to be shared with clients before the visual design phase to make sure everyone’s in agreement with the direction. When you and the client sign off on a modern, clean, and simple design, you have a visual reference tool to communicate exactly what that might look like.
“Our team used to spend hours upon hours working on detailed design ideas, only to be course-corrected by clients. Clients sometimes felt uncomfortable to comment on work because of how finished everything looked. And it was always at the 11th hour that clients changed their minds.”
“Since incorporating Stylescapes, we get buy-in early on or we don’t proceed. It’s a great gut check that helps our team and clients get aligned in days, not weeks. If clients want to change something, we can quickly adjust within 24 hours. And because Stylescapes are made so quickly, we can explore a broader range of styles and approaches we wouldn’t normally try. It's been liberating to maintain our creative freedom.”
— Chris Do, Founder and Executive Creative Director of Blind
Stylescapes yield seriously positive relationships. They allow you and your client to collaborate and exchange ideas to move the project forward smoothly. Clients feel like their input and involvement is valued, and trust you'll deliver something great.
“Someone took the idea that I’ve been going for, and here it is on a board. And I go, ‘oh, I like that.’ This was extremely helpful for us.”
—Josh Hamilton of Hamilton Family Brewery, a former client of Blind
You might be thinking, “OK...how is this different from what I’m doing now?”
Do you sometimes feel like you and your client are from different worlds, where you just don’t get each other? Or feel nervous every time you present your designs, and let them take over when they’re not happy with what you’ve made?
Instead of making progress, you start running in a hamster wheel of revisions. It’s soul-crushing as a designer to become your client’s—or boss’s—puppet. You can’t figure out what they want, so you rely on them to tell you.
You could ask clients loads of questions but never get clarity on their answers. What 'modern' means to you, could mean something completely different to them. You'd end each brief with a lot of unclear objectives.
And that won't end well. Each project then turns into a constant guessing game of trying to figure out what clients really mean.
Stylescapes help to close the imagination gap and get clients to see what you see. Both parties can get on the same page about the design direction from the get-go, and have something to reference throughout the project.
As designers, it’s easy for us to imagine what something will look like. Sometimes it’s hard to explain our ideas without going the extra mile. But with Stylescapes, you’ll dodge unnecessary, added work and hit your client’s expectations on the mark.
If you're tired of designing with headaches and feeling trapped in an abyss of revisions, this is the course for you.
Whether you work in house at a large corporation, or are freelancing for clients, you can integrate the Stylescapes® process and get approvals faster than ever. Stylescapes® is a perfect resource for:
Speak the same language. By translating words into images, you will get alignment with your clients before you ever design anything.
Lose the rapid heart rate and sweaty palms. Present ideas early and collaboratively to help “scaffold” clients to the end result.
This collaborative and easy to use process will help your clients sign off on your work quickly: many times without any changes.
If you've been in the creative field long enough, you know how difficult it can be to source inspiration for a project. In several video lessons, Chris walks you through his approach to building deep resource libraries. You'll learn how to quickly curate and save imagery from multiple sources.
Stylescapes® are not your average moodboards. There is a science to this composition that lends itself to incredible presentations. By focusing on The Three C's—Curation, Composition, and Consistency—you will be able to craft a stylescape that inspires your next steps and allows your client to collaborate at an early stage.
Ever wonder what it would be like to have Chris Do as your Creative Director? Want to know how he critiques work? You'll get all that and more with several student critique recordings. Chris will help you identify how to improve your stylescapes before the presentation.
One of the most important parts of the stylescape process is the presentation. Crafting a narrative around your work will help your clients understand and remember what they see. Chris not only explains how to do this, but also shares real-world video recordings of him presenting to clients. You'll also get to watch other students present their work and get critiqued by Chris.
If you've been in the creative field long enough, you know how difficult it can be to source inspiration for a project. In several video lessons, Chris walks you through his approach to building deep resource libraries. You'll learn how to quickly curate and save imagery from multiple sources.
Stylescapes® are not your average moodboards. There is a science to this composition that lends itself to incredible presentations. By focusing on The Three C's—Curation, Composition, and Consistency—you will be able to craft a stylescape that inspires your next steps and allows your client to collaborate at an early stage.
Ever wonder what it would be like to have Chris Do as your Creative Director? Want to know how he critiques work? You'll get all that and more with several student critique recordings. Chris will help you identify how to improve your stylescapes before the presentation.
One of the most important parts of the stylescape process is the presentation. Crafting a narrative around your work will help your clients understand and remember what they see. Chris not only explains how to do this, but also shares real-world video recordings of him presenting to clients. You'll also get to watch other students present their work and get critiqued by Chris.
If you've been in the creative field long enough, you know how difficult it can be to source inspiration for a project. In several video lessons, Chris walks you through his approach to building deep resource libraries. You'll learn how to quickly curate and save imagery from multiple sources.
Stylescapes® are not your average moodboards. There is a science to this composition that lends itself to incredible presentations. By focusing on The Three C's—Curation, Composition, and Consistency—you will be able to craft a stylescape that inspires your next steps and allows your client to collaborate at an early stage.
Ever wonder what it would be like to have Chris Do as your Creative Director? Want to know how he critiques work? You'll get all that and more with several student critique recordings. Chris will help you identify how to improve your stylescapes before the presentation.
One of the most important parts of the stylescape process is the presentation. Crafting a narrative around your work will help your clients understand and remember what they see. Chris not only explains how to do this, but also shares real-world video recordings of him presenting to clients. You'll also get to watch other students present their work and get critiqued by Chris.
In each video lesson, Chris will teach you about typographic principles, the history of type, and how to apply the fundamentals across your design work.
Practice what you've learned in the video lectures to push your skills further. Do the homework as many times as you need to fully grasp the material.
See how Chris makes improvements to previous students’ work using typographic principles. Then, take notes of how you can apply these same techniques to your own work.
See your designs take on a whole new shape and meaning as you move through the course. Start to feel comfortable and confident with typography.
Your enrollment includes access to our private Slack channel and an invitation to Circle. Connect and keep learning with your instructor, Chris Do, and Typography students around the world.
I learned more about typography in this course than during my BA in graphic design. This gives me confidence that I can make effective layouts and better design of any kind. I also felt I was part of a community, who learned together. Once a week for seven weeks, Chris critiqued our submitted layouts and this motivated us to put knowledge into practice and submit our work. This course is the best investment I've made in myself in becoming a better graphic designer. And I've invested in a lot of courses and books.
Whether you work in house at a large corporation, or are freelancing for clients, you can integrate the Stylescapes® process and get approvals faster than ever. Stylescapes® is a perfect resource for:
Chris Do is an Emmy award-winning designer, director, CEO and Chief Strategist of Blind and the founder of The Futur—an online education platform with the mission of teaching 1 billion people how to make a living doing what they love.
He currently serves as the chairman of the board for the SPJA, and as an advisor to Saleshood. He has also served as: advisory board member for AIGA/LA, Emmys Motion & Title Design Peer Group, Otis Board of Governors, Santa Monica College and Woodbury University.
The Stylescapes® process will transform the way you work and the way you present your ideas to clients. Say goodbye to never-ending revisions & last-minute changes.