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2006-10-07 05:25:04 · 7 answers · asked by RAZZEL-DAZZEL 3 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Other - Visual Arts

7 answers

Cowboy Logic has pretty sound reasoning...

My cousin is a former Web Master and was good in his work. The saturation of the market, however, was detrimental to his success. He is now driving 18-wheelers, making money, paying bills, surviving.

My advice is to have a back-up plan. Treat the web design as a hobby to begin with, until/unless it gets off the ground.

Good luck.

2006-10-08 18:01:06 · answer #1 · answered by bundjean 5 · 0 0

Web design is like any other art form.

You go from being a starving artist until you give up and move on or someone finds your sample work and signs you up.

The secret here is to do it for the love of the art form and become prolific. Build sites for Friends and relatives. Become a member of self help groups where you can network.

Get your work in front of as many eyes as you can and when the right connection is made, you can be offered a contract, Job or career.

Take the money aspect out of your efforts and let it come to you. If you are good, the money will come. If you are great you will be overwhelmed.

Good luck on your venture.

2006-10-07 12:38:45 · answer #2 · answered by Cowboy Logic 3 · 1 0

AIGA and Aquent conduct yearly salary surveys and make the information available to the public at http://designersalaries.com/ .

This data is not perfect (for instance, if you're too broke to pay your AIGA dues you probably won't participate in the survey), but it's a good starting point.

2006-10-07 13:23:55 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It depends upon credibility of a designer, which means how his art is and how many people likes it.

2006-10-07 12:45:49 · answer #4 · answered by hm_pearl 3 · 0 0

well it depends on number of pages and space occupied u better be in touch with black n white multimedias which doin excellently for past 5 yrs and real experience of excellent service at reasonable cost ...it has branches all over the world

2006-10-07 12:35:56 · answer #5 · answered by SARATH C 3 · 0 0

a lot. dont take my job. go with.... the security industry, much more interesting.

2006-10-07 13:12:35 · answer #6 · answered by robin 1 · 0 0

depends on ur talent :)

2006-10-08 03:30:59 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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