Make Another Designer Green With Envy
Okay, this is an interesting one, because you can do this on easy mode or hard mode. Easy mode is when you’ve been working in design for a while, and you show off your work to a brand new designer. I myself bestowed this achievement upon many a designer when I was new to the industry, because this design stuff looks like magic until you really get into it. Hard mode is, of course, impressing an experienced designer. You can’t just get them to say “it’s good”. You have to make them wish they were you, and that’s tough to do. Bonus points if you can make a design celebrity publicly lament your superiority on Twitter. My Score: I’ve only managed this on easy mode.Get Your Site Featured on a Website Gallery
This achievement is mostly pointless because, if you’re freelancing, customers usually don’t browse website galleries. This is a distinctly web designer thing. That said, you can get a small in-industry bonus with other designers. It can possibly help you land agency jobs, too. My Score: I have done this once in the long past, when you didn’t have to pay CSSMania to showcase your stuff.Build a Site Full of Easter Eggs
We’ve all seen them: Vogue, of all websites, used to have well-dressed T-Rexes pop up when you input the Konami code. Then there’s Zurb with the cows. Google itself is known to incorporate little gimmicks when you search for things like “do a barrel roll”, and a full game when you search for “Atari Breakout”. Now, it could be said that Easter eggs delight users when they’re found, but they are hardly essential to any website’s core experience. That said, they’re fun to imagine up, and fun to build. The only real downside is the amount of time it may take to implement them, which is why most Easter eggs tend to reside within the text of the code itself. My Score: I’ve put amusing comments to myself in the code. That’s about as far as I’ve gone.Convince a Client Their Logo Doesn’t Actually Need to be Bigger.
Client input is important. However, some clients tend to provide input just because they believe it’s expected of them. They feel compelled to make their mark, and put their stamp on the website, if only so that they feel it’s “really theirs”. You get this achievement by convincing them to leave well enough alone. I mean, as long as you didn’t make the logo ridiculously small, it’s usually fine, right? But you forfeit this achievement if you use “the fold” as an excuse for not making the logo bigger. You have to convince them with the truth. My Score: Nope. Never pulled it off.Send a Client the Exact Same File When They Ask You to “Make it Pop”
Just like in the last example, this happens when you get a client who provides input because their “management style” demands it, and not because anything needs to be changed. Just send them back the same file, and see if they accept it this time. If they do, you’ve saved yourself some time. If not, then at least you know they’re actually paying attention. Either way, you’ve gained valuable information. My Score: I’ve never actually done this one, either. I got lucky, and my clients have nearly always provided more specific feedback, and would have known if I sent the same file back. I have sent the same file back by accident, though.Write Humorous Temporary Copy, Have it Accepted as the Final Text
When you don’t have copy to work with, Lorem Ipsum and such like things often have to suffice. It’s certainly not ideal, but you can’t make content appear out of thin air. You can, however, write some silly things in your mockups, just for fun. I typically only do this with headings and other small strings of text. Paragraphs would be too much. You score if any one of your silly ideas is accepted as actual copy in the final product. It need only be a line or two. My Score: Yup, I got this one!Ezequiel Bruni
Ezequiel Bruni is a web/UX designer, blogger, and aspiring photographer living in Mexico. When he’s not up to his finely-chiselled ears in wire-frames and front-end code, or ranting about the same, he indulges in beer, pizza, fantasy novels, and stand-up comedy.
Read Next
3 Essential Design Trends, November 2024
Touchable texture, distinct grids, and two-column designs are some of the most trending website design elements of…
20 Best New Websites, October 2024
Something we’re seeing more and more of is the ‘customizable’ site. Most often, this means a button to swap between…
Exciting New Tools for Designers, October 2024
We’ve got goodies for designers, developers, SEO-ers, content managers, and those of you who wear multiple hats. And,…
15 Best New Fonts, September 2024
Welcome to our roundup of the best new fonts we’ve found on the web in the previous four weeks. In this month’s edition…
By Simon Sterne
3 Essential Design Trends, October 2024
This article is brought to you by Constantino, a renowned company offering premium and affordable website design
You…
A Beginner’s Guide to Using BlueSky for Business Success
In today’s fast-paced digital world, businesses are always on the lookout for new ways to connect with their audience.…
By Louise North
The Importance of Title Tags: Tips and Tricks to Optimize for SEO
When it comes to on-page SEO, there’s one element that plays a pivotal role in both search engine rankings and user…
By Simon Sterne
20 Best New Websites, September 2024
We have a mixed bag for you with both minimalist and maximalist designs, and single pagers alongside much bigger, but…
Exciting New Tools for Designers, September 2024
This time around we are aiming to simplify life, with some light and fast analytics, an all-in-one productivity…
3 Essential Design Trends, September 2024
September's web design trends have a fun, fall feeling ... and we love it. See what's trending in website design this…
Crafting Personalized Experiences with AI
Picture this: You open Netflix, and it’s like the platform just knows what you’re in the mood for. Or maybe you’re…
By Simon Sterne
15 Best New Fonts, August 2024
Welcome to August’s roundup of the best fonts we’ve found over the last few weeks. 2024’s trend for flowing curves and…
By Ben Moss