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Muhammad Usman
WordPress Developer | UI Designer | UX Designer | Web Designer | Frontend Developer | Digital Designer | CMS Developer | Website Developer | Visual Designer | UI/UX Specialist
It would be way too easy to answer this question with: “Whoever pays your bills.” And, honestly, I don’t think you can be a very successful web designer if you’re only driven by what the person paying you tells you to do.
Then again, that doesn’t mean you should swing to the exact opposite end and say that you only serve the end user.
When you take an extreme view or approach to this, you’re bound to leave someone or something important out. Everyone along the chain of command — your boss (if you work at an agency), your client, and their customers — matters.
So, what I’d suggest you do instead is approach the idea of who you really work for the way you would Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.
Establishing Your Own Hierarchy of Needs
Who do web designers really work for? I think the true answer to this question is: “Everyone.” But there’s a catch…
Think about some of the requests you’ve received from superiors, or clients in the past. How many times have you rolled your eyes at their wacky requests?
“The contact form would be better in the header so visitors can always see it.”
“Let’s use this stock photo of two women shaking hands that I’ve seen a few other companies use.”
“Why don’t we redesign all of this and make it look like this site my brother built last night?”
You’re the design professional. That’s why they’re paying you to design their website and they’re not doing it themselves. So, there comes a point where you have to push aside what they want for what they need. And this will ultimately help you figure out who you work for and what you actually owe them (because fulfilling every nitpicky and unreasonable request will never lead to anything good).
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