How to Use a Design Blog to Find New Clients

Articles   August 11, 2011  by

I recently had an interesting conversation in a freelance design forum about whether it’s worth it to blog as a designer.

While this is an argument that has raged in the design community for longer than I can remember, I was surprised by the very unique response I got this time around.

Disgusted with the state of the design blogosphere, a designer I had been conversing with said the following:

“If I hear of anyone making more than $1,000 annually from their blog … I’ll post it here.”

Put me on the list

Of course, the first thing I said to him was “put my name on the list.”

I don’t bring this up to brag, but I make a significant amount of money from my design blog and I know a lot of fellow designers who do the same thing. Sure, banner ads are not that great. I could never survive on banner ad revenue alone.

But I use my blog to sell products and other services.

And the most lucrative way to monetize a design blog is to use it for finding design clients.

 

Image by Kristina B from Flickr 

Using your design blog to find clients

Today I’d like to offer a few solid strategies for designers who want to use blogging as a tool to find new clients and build their business.

Blog about terms your clients search for.

While it can be useful to establish yourself as an authority in the design community, it’s more important to blog about topics that interest your clients. That means instead of blogging about how to code a slider, perhaps you should blog about the benefits of a CMS business web site.

Similarly, some of the best topics you should blog about are questions your clients might ask. Something like “What makes a good logo?” or “How do I build a web form?”

Once they find your site through these search terms, convert them into clients.

Be helpful to your clients.

Once your clients find your blog through search terms, you want to make your content as helpful as possible.

Some designers would argue that your wasting time and resources giving away free information and advice to potential customers.

The key is to give them just enough that they respect you and deem you an authority on the question they are asking. Once you have offered them some help, they will trust you and are more likely to hire you.

 

Image by Frank331 from Flickr 

Connect your portfolio and your blog.

After getting clients to visit your blog and establishing a relationship of trust with them, it’s important that your portfolio and blog are closely connected. Ideally, these should be the same web site.

The less clicks a client has to make before they can request a quote, the better. So include email contact forms on every page of your blog, include ads to specials or offers you are running. Make it easy for your client to take the next step of hiring you for a design project.

Design high-conversion landing pages.

Lastly, include successful landing pages on your blog. If a client clicks a link titled “hire me now,” they are interested in your work. Make your landing pages easy to follow, easy to use, and high-converting.

What other ways do you use your blog to find design clients?

What else do you do to use your design blog to find clients? Do you think blogging is something that all designers should do? Do you think they can be lucrative or do you agree with my friend at the beginning of the article and think no money can be made from them?

Thanks for sharing!

 

 

Preston D Lee is a designer, internet marketer, and entrepreneur. He founded GraphicDesignBlender.com where he and other designers blog about the business of design: freelancing tips, client advice, and business strategies for designers. Connect with Preston on twitter at @prestondlee or Google+.

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4 Responses
  1. David Christian-Woodruff   -   August 12, 2011 at 1:16 am

    It’s an important point that you raise here. Blogs are useful tools in not only establishing yourself as a recognised and respected designer, but also in pushing SEO on your site. Keeping the content fresh and relevant is a great way of ensuring that people keep returning to your site and keep you near the top of search engine rankings. As such, yes, blogs can, and do, earn you money through the use of your site. Perhaps it’s impact is not directly noticeable, but the traffic that you will gain from your blog will be part of the reason those orders are coming in. For anyone to dismiss blogging offhand is almost to disregard an entire method of promotion for yourself as a designer.

  2. Shaun Hensher   -   August 12, 2011 at 2:21 pm

    I think a blog is one of the most important ways for a designer to get noticed. It effects SEO in a huge way, and really, are people going to share your site or link to if there is no content? Since I added a blog to my site a little more than a month ago, my traffic has gone up more than 1,500%. My traffic is still not massive, but it’s a big improvement.

  3. Kate   -   August 12, 2011 at 9:13 pm

    I am a free-lance designer and after getting fed up with my personal website, I started a design blog. I have only been blogging a couple of months, but found this post really interesting. I would love for you to take a look at it, and give me some constructive criticism. As you can tell, I am not a web designer, but can manage my way through the blog framework. Any comments would be appreciated!

    http://www.designvelocipede.blogspot.com

    If you don’t have time, I completely understand, in which case, I am just thankful for your post and will continue to follow you! I check in about once a week. :)

  4. Rockstar for Hire   -   August 14, 2011 at 1:56 pm

    Aside from connecting you portfolio to your blog, I think it’s a good idea to connect a social media platform to it. Say an fb page or your twitter, that way you can leverage on your clients’ or your friends’ social network… where your next gig could be from.