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This is Interesting: Free Magazines for Graphics designers and webmasters
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Re: Career in Web Design? |
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Re: Career in Web Design? |
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  12-11-05 - 11:42 PM
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<Shawn@Thrillofthechase.biz> wrote in message
news:1134331509.700145.44410@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
> Hi.
> I have designed a few websites for myself and my boss.
> I like it.
> I'm considering getting a certificate and pursuing this as a career.
> I'm in the Denver area.
> Does anybody have any idea how hard it might be for me to find an
> employer?
> I've checked Monster and Dice, etc. and that doesn't look very
> promising.
> I'd much rather work for someone else than be a free-lancer.
>
> Any thoughts?
No matter which route you go (freelance or working for a company) you'll
need to develop a portfolio of sites. Web design companies would rarely
hire somebody just fresh out of school based upon their school project
portfolio. With freelance there will be a greater dependance upon your
ability to sell than what you've done in the past, but a portfolio will
still come in handy.
In the case of either going to school vs being self taught... Freelance
employers probably won't care how you learned your trade, but in going to
work for a company they probably would prefer somebody who went to school
over somebody self taught. Thats not to say that a course on web design
will necessarily teach you more about web design and programming, but it
will teach you things like team work, project management and structured
programming/development.
If you enroll in a school for a web design course, make sure its one that is
respected and well thought of by potential employers. You'll probably have
a choice between multiple schools for a course in web development... taking
the cheapest one isn't the best answer if nobody has heard of the school...
likewise the most expensive doesn't always mean "the best" either.
One thing you need to watch out for is companies that hire and fire
developers to steal their clients. Most companies will have you sign a
contract that stipulates if you work for them you have to sign over all your
existing clients to them. Not a big deal overall, but there are some
companies that hire people, have them sign the contract, take all their
clients and then fire them a month or two later.
Working freelance you have the chance to make more money... but its alot
more work and doesn't have that safety net of a steady paycheck. On the
other hand, your job at a web design company is only as safe as long as they
can keep the jobs coming in. To this end you want to keep your options
open, even if you have a good and steady job.
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