In the design world Spec Work is short for Speculative Work and it basically means: “Working for Free”. It usually comes in two forms.
Form One
A client asks several designers – or design firms – to complete part of a new project. The client picks one winner, gives them the job, and the others go home with nothing for their hard work.
Form Two
A client starts a “contest” and gather’s submission from hundred’s, if not thousands of designers. They pick one winner, pay a modest fee, and the rest go home with nothing for their hard work.
So What’s Wrong With This?
If you are a client, the best design work should come out of a healthy relationship with a designer, where your needs and wants are understood, and ideas are developed with you from the ground up. Just because you get lots of free designs, doesn’t mean any of them are good and in fact, many can be blatant rip offs. Spec Contests have actually created an underground system whereby some unscrupulous designers will quickly enter as many as possible as they copy work from the web and present it as their own. So that new logo of yours… may actually already be someone else’s… If you are a designer, you just shouldn’t work for established companies for free, period. If you need to build your portfolio there are other ways! Design for a local charity, or your friend’s new business, or just spend the time creating your own projects.
Spec Work would seem absurd in most other professional industries
Could you ask several chef’s to prepare your next meal for free and then only pay for the best one? Could you hold a contest and get 100s of lawyers to write your will and then only pick and reward one? Didn’t think so… perhaps its time we started to treat designers, you know, just like everyone else? Think about it.
[Via Topic Simple on Youtube]