It’s human nature. For most people even the thought of
having to accomplish a defined task in a certain, limited timeframe produces an
uneasy, queasy feeling. But for illustrators a “deadline” is a sought after condition.
For us, and to many other communication arts professions, it’s just part of the
job. Physically speaking a deadline marks the cure to an assignment, and when
payment can be discharged.
©2014 Don Arday. |
Like other conditions, deadlines present themselves various
ways, with each variant requiring its own form of treatment and consideration. As
such, careful identification and diagnosis of a deadline can provide an
illustrator with a notable benefit, which can be brought to bear on the evolution
of an assignment.
Six Types Of Deadlines
Express Deadlines
These acute deadlines arise suddenly and intensely. They are
usually contracted from a stress inducing client relationship, and if not
managed properly, they can lead to loss of sleep and acute anxiety. Fortunately,
due to their brevity this kind of deadline can be cured
quickly, if not painlessly.
Staged Deadlines
This strain of deadline actually presents itself as a series
of prescribed deadline stages. A typical staged course would include a deadline
for pencil concepts followed by another for a comp, which would then proceed to
the finished art deadline. Staged deadlines, because they are well organized
are generally easier to swallow than other deadline types.
Solo Deadlines
As the name implies, solo deadlines are a one shot deal. All
stages occur simultaneously and for one time only; at the end of the job’s treatment.
The all or nothing nature of a solo deadline makes it difficult to detect any
symptoms or warning signs that may become available during the course of an
assignment that could alter its outcome, and ultimately its acceptance by a
client. Solo deadlines are most manageable when an illustrator has been given
carte blanche.
© 2014 Don Arday. |
Cyclical Deadlines
Cyclical deadlines are those that will need treatment on a
reoccurring schedule. At some point or another, every illustrator has
contracted cyclical deadlines during their professional life. These deadlines
are somewhat less common these days than in the past due to the constant change
that occurs within many periodic illustration commissions. Mild in nature,
cyclical deadlines almost always result in a positive prognosis.
Self-Imposed Deadlines
Also known as self-administered deadlines, a self-imposed
deadline is a form of vaccination against a common deadline. The self-imposed
deadline is meant to head off any anxiety or discomfort that may result from a
client imposed deadline. It works by way of keeping an illustration
assignment’s progress ahead of a schedule imposed by a client.
False Deadlines
Sometimes beneficial and other times not, a false deadline
or blind placebo deadline is meant to keep an illustrator out in front of a
true deadline of an assignment. It is similar to a self-imposed deadline except
that a false deadline is dispensed by a client to an unknowing illustrator.
Arbitrary Deadlines
Whereas a false deadline is the compression of the time
period of an actual deadline, an arbitrary deadline is a deadline that has no
basis for existing at all, and it has no positive effect on an illustration
assignment. It’s a prescription written
for a condition that doesn’t exist, and almost always administered by an
inexperienced, disorganized, or adversarial client.
Why Deadlines Are Healthy
A deadline is an essential ingredient that ensures a wholesome
professional career for an illustrator. And most illustrators can easily digest
a deadline without difficulty or any bad aftertaste. Deadlines are a part of
the DNA structure of the illustration business; they a progenitor to the evolution
of all communication arts. Deadlines are a fundamental factor in commerce and
even business progress.
What A Deadline Does For An Illustrator
1. Prompts an illustrator to foresee the future and manage
time accordingly.
2. Triggers the organization and prioritization of
assignment related activities.
3. Provides motivation to see a project through to
completion.
4. Ensures closure on one assignment so another one can
begin.
5. Combats procrastination.
6. Imparts a feeling of satisfaction, of accomplishment at
having triumphed over a challenge.
7. Encourages an illustrator to engage in a smarter, more
efficiently workflow.
8. Increases the number of assignments an illustrator can
take on by providing a concise schedule.
9. Sets a fixed point in time for a project’s completion
that is understood by all parties involved.
10. Gives support to bringing in a steady income.
In The Too Much Information Category
Printers to denote a line on a printing press, beyond which
text would not print properly, first used the term deadline in the early 19th
century. (The early day version of what is now known as “live area” in print). In
the mid 19th century America to denote a physical lines that were
not to be crossed by either an enemy in a battle, or by a prisoner in a stockade
without death being the consequence for doing so. The first use of the term
deadline as a synonym for “time limit” was coined by the newspaper industry a
nearly a century ago.
Conclusion
Deadlines are good for illustrators and the illustration
business. They dispel the impression that the art of illustration is also one
of self-indulgence. Deadlines prove that illustration, being an art, is also a
business that operates to provide a timely service to commercial clients.
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