It's very common for customers to feel insulted if they get hit with any design charges. They don't think
sign designers are doing any
real work.
Part of that attitude comes from all the bull$#!t depictions of
computer use they see in movies and TV shows. Finger-rattle some gibberish into the keyboard and the project is done in a few seconds.
Why should there be any service charge for that? They have very unrealistic ideas how much work has to go into certain kinds of artwork requests.
Another problem is the customers have little if any respect for what we do for a living. Artsy-fartsy stuff doesn't sound like work to them, we're just playing in our jobs all day.
We ought to be happy doing our jobs for free, just for the honor of getting our work noticed.
Maybe those kinds of customers will throw in the old "my kid could make that in 5 minutes" cliche.
Well, be my guest! Make you kid come up with your logo or artwork! Bluff called.
I have a list of free/cheap graphics applications customers can download or buy to try their hand at D-I-Y graphic design if they want to go that direction.
Our shop is pretty specific about what incurs additional design charges. Vehicle wraps require a design deposit up front. Pixel-to-vector re-creations of crappy JPEG logos or other pixel-based artwork is the most common design charge. We rarely do those conversions for free unless it's something fairly simple. It's a case by case judgment call. Customers will often send the first JPEG image they find of their logo. When we warn them a design fee could be involved for that vector conversion many of them send over clean, vector-based files not long after that.
If a modest project is pretty simple and doesn't require creating any new artwork elements from scratch we won't charge any design fees for it. A lot of existing, repeat customers fall into this category. We're not doing print shop related stuff like business cards. Profit margins can be very narrow on that kind of work, so any extra design work should be billed on small projects like that. On large projects, like a big lighted
sign with a LED variable message display, we may throw in any additional design work for nothing because it's a big enough project.