Success Secrets from Debbie Millman:
- Be fearless when asking people for business.
- Find lots of clients. Because it’s impossible to know which of them will be good.
- Work harder than anybody else that you know.
- Shoot for the stars. Seriously.
Beginnings:
I really wanted to work in graphic design. I wanted to be involved with what I thought would be the editing of the school newspaper where I went to school at State University New York (SUNY) Albany, which is a school that is essentially known for its school newspaper.
I went to SUNY Albany because I thought I wanted to be a journalist, and I worked my way up through the ranks of the school newspaper and became the editor of the Arts and Leisure section. Then very quickly found out that, in the grand scheme of things, I was much more interested in what the paper looked like than the specifics of how it ran.
I wasn’t as interested in editing, once I was assigned a story idea, as I was into designing that story. So I very quickly realized that it was really design that I should pursue and not journalism, although writing has had, and continues to have, a very big impact on my life and my career.
However, I don’t have a design degree. Instead I have a degree in English Literature, with a Minor in Russian literature, which has served me very, very well, in that I now make a pretty good living doing what I do.
Debbie’s first job:
After I graduated and started looking for a job, I saw an ad in the New York Times for a magazine job at publication that’s called Cableview and the ad specifically stated “no visitors.” But I figured I would go in person anyway, because it was literally a block away from where I lived. And I thought, well, what’s the harm in just dropping it off.
Apparently I was the first person to come by that Monday morning. The receptionist didn’t even know there was a job opening. When I dropped my resume by, she immediately called the creative director and said, “Oh somebody just dropped a resume by.” He came out. I really thought he was going to come out and yell at me. But instead he came out to see my portfolio and a half hour later I was working.
I ended up being hired as a traffic girl between the design department and the editorial department. So I continued my path of doing both, so to speak. Because I had been doing so much editing while I was in school, I still was doing editing and also doing graphic design. That was my first job.
Starting her first design business:
I went from that magazine to another magazine, a rock magazine, Rockbill. And again, I was doing the editing, the writing, and the design. Shortly thereafter, the creative director and I made a decision to start our own design firm. This was back in 1987. I had only been working for about four years at the time.
Looking back on it now, I do not know where I got the courage to start my own company. We didn’t have any money. We didn’t have any clients. We didn’t have any contacts. But we did it anyway and all of a sudden we had this business. And soon we had twenty people working for us.
Thoughts on cold calling:
To get clients, we cold called. I’m a master cold-caller as a result of that experience. And we just were fearless about asking people for business. And our company really got big within the first couple of years. When I was cold calling, a lot of people weren’t interested, but I never took that as a personal rejection. I take everything else personally though.
Thoughts on rejection:
You just get immune to the rejection. You begin to realize it has nothing to do with you.
As someone who’s constantly seeking approval, what better way than to keep plugging away? (Laughter) I’m very fortunate now, though. I have somebody at Sterling that makes the calls for me.
Changing directions:
This was in the late 80’s, which was time that was very important in the New York school of design. That’s when all of the great New York designers were in the spotlight. People like, Tibor Kalman, Stephen Doyle, and Bill Drenttel. I was enamored with the work that they were doing and I felt that the work that I was doing paled in comparison. I felt that I needed to learn a hell of a lot more before I had the audacity to start my own company.
One of the best graphic design firms was a company called Frankfurt Gips Balkind and they had done the amazing Why? annual report for Time Warner and it had changed the game in annual reports.
I was so taken by that annual report, I decided that, by hook or by crook, I needed to get a job there. And so I sold my shares in my company to my partner and made some connections and ended up being hired by Aubrey Balkind who, upon seeing my portfolio, said that he would hire me but not as a graphic designer. He said I would be better off in account management, doing new business development.
This became a pivotal time in my life. It was a very big step in how I developed, and who I am today, because essentially I did not work full-time as a designer after that. I was more involved in the business development and account management side, and then over the years, in shaping and positioning and growing a business in the way I have.
What’s really interesting is that, although I learned a tremendous amount and made friends that have become lifelong friends, I didn’t actually enjoy my experience at Frankfurt Gips Balkind.
People who impacted Debbie’s life:
If you look back on your own life, you could probably say that there aren’t many people that really impact your future. But, Aubrey said two things to me that have impacted me throughout my career, and until now.
One statement was that he would hire me, but not as a designer. The other was when I was leaving. I told him that I was going to work in brand identity, he just nodded his head and said, “You’re gonna’ do well in package design.”
When I left, I started working full-time in package design and that really was my niche. I found what I was meant to do in graphic design from that point.
Who has influenced your work in design?
Oh my God! Probably every single person in my book, How To Think Like A Great Graphic Designer has influenced my work. I mean, that’s part of what was so remarkable about being able to do that book. I think almost every single person in that book had a profound influence on me, and on the way I think.
If I had to pick specific people out, I’d say Carin Goldberg, Paula Scher, and Emily Oberman. Some other people that aren’t in the book that I might also add to the list would be Ellen Lupton and Marion Bantjes.
Greatest accomplishments:
Probably the thing I’m most proud to have accomplished is still being in this business 25 years later. It’s 25 years this year. And I feel like I’m the luckiest person on the planet to be able to do what I do.
The writer and designer, Michael Surtees used a term when describing me recently, and I thought that it was a great, great term. He called me a “finisher.” (Laughter) And I think that’s because when I start something, I feel compelled to finish it. I’m almost obsessively compelled to finish it.
It’s very hard for me to stop in the middle of something and not get back to it.
What would you do differently, if you had to do it all over?
I would not have been so afraid to want a lot.
Over the years I have struggled with admitting to myself how badly I want things. And I wish that I’d had more confidence and courage to admit that to myself.
This isn’t about how I behaved in my business, but how I behaved in regards to what I could be in my life. Now things are great. But it took a long time.
Thoughts on attending workshops and conferences:
Speaking at conferences and participating in them is a pretty good part of what I do on a regular basis.
I go to a lot of conferences and I’ve been chairing the FUSE Conference of the International Institute of Research for the last 13 years. I helped found the conference in 1996.
This year I’m chairing the GAIN Conference. I speak frequently at local AIGA chapters.
Debbie’s tips on building and sustaining a career:
Work harder than anybody else that you know. Don’t rest on your laurels. Don’t rest on any laurels. And constantly try to find out and learn about the things that you don’t know.
It’s really easy to learn about things that you know. And it’s pretty easy to learn about things that you know that you don’t know. I would suggest that people learn about all the things that they don’t know that they don’t know.
Debbie’s thoughts on working outside of her comfort zone:
I don’t’ think I feel comfortable when I’m only working within my comfort zone. I like to be striving. If I feel like if I’m in my comfort zone, then I know I’m not working hard enough.
Debbie’s suggestions on how to get good clients:
Get a lot of clients. Because it’s impossible to know which of them will be good.
Some of my best clients have come from jobs that I would have considered to be the worst. And some of my worst clients have been with jobs that I would have considered to be the best. So I think it’s very hard to determine who’s going to be a good client and who’s going to be a bad client. There’s going to be good clients and bad clients anyway, and there’s no way to project.
Additional advice:
Shoot for the stars. Seriously.
So many people start out by thinking about all the things that they can’t do and once you take that path, it’s very hard to get off of it.
The only person that can make every dream that you want to come true is you. And if you start out with limited dreams, you’ll only achieve limited dreams. And that’s really sad when that happens.
About Debbie Millman:
Debbie has been in the design business for 25 years. She is a Partner and President of the Design division at Sterling Brands, one of the leading brand identity firms in the country. Debbie is a board member of the National AIGA, and teaches at the School of Visual Arts and the Fashion Institute of Technology. She is also an author on the design blogSpeak Up, a regular contributor to Print Magazine and she hosts a weekly internet talk show on the Voice America Business network titled Design Matters. Her first book, How To Think Like A Great Graphic Designer, was published by Allworth Press in 2007, and her second, Essential Principles of Graphic Design, will be published by Rotovision in Summer, 2008.
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Is There Still Gold in Cold Calling?
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21 Comments:
By Andrew Forcelli 10 Aug 2008
Debbie’s right. Practice makes a master. And by constant cold-calling I’ve built my company to what it is today.
By Amy Tani 10 Aug 2008
I worked with Debbie at Rockbill. Small world!
By amanda.pattavina@thomson.commanda Pattavina 10 Aug 2008
I always wondered who did all that cool stuff…
By Augustin Garza 10 Aug 2008
How ever did you gather all these great people in one place? Well done, Will.
By Kit Bromely 10 Aug 2008
I’ve spent most of my adult career looking for lots of clients, because, as Debbie says, “It’s impossible to know which of them will be good.”
By Kim Dubin 10 Aug 2008
Just like Debbie, I work harder than anyone I know. Thank you for this site Will Sherwood.
By Ken Waltzer 10 Aug 2008
I think my favorite secret is: “Be fearless when asking people for business.” How true!
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I love this especially:
Debbie’s suggestions on how to get good clients:
Get a lot of clients. Because it’s impossible to know which of them will be good.
Some of my best clients have come from jobs that I would have considered to be the worst. And some of my worst clients have been with jobs that I would have considered to be the best. So I think it’s very hard to determine who’s going to be a good client and who’s going to be a bad client. There’s going to be good clients and bad clients anyway, and there’s no way to project.
By china 18 Apr 2012
Love this comment:
Debbie’s tips on building and sustaining a career:
Work harder than anybody else that you know. Don’t rest on your laurels. Don’t rest on any laurels. And constantly try to find out and learn about the things that you don’t know.
It’s really easy to learn about things that you know. And it’s pretty easy to learn about things that you know that you don’t know. I would suggest that people learn about all the things that they don’t know that they don’t know.
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