Hi, everybody! I’ve been using a system of directory naming for years for tracking all incomingoutgoing files with outsourcers I use, and I’m tweaking it and trying to standardize it. The goal is to be easy to understand and simple to sort. I’d love to get input and feedback on this. Here’s the way I do it now:
/(2012-03-22) INCOMING – SUBMISSION – STUDIONAME (character art for milestone 002)/
/(2012-03-22) OUTGOING – FEEDBACK – STUDIONAME (feedback on characters)/
The syntax is [date] [droptype] [studio] [description]
Date always comes first for easier sorting. The date is written year-month-day to adhere to the ISO 8601 information interchange standard. It sorts perfectly alphabetically so months don’t get mixed up between years. For example, you could write March 22, 2012 two different ways:
2012-03-22
or
03-22-2012
What if, a year from now, I make another directory with the date?
2012-03-22
2013-03-22
or
03-22-2012
03-22-2013
The more directories get dumped in there, the more confusing it’ll be trying to sort out which year which drop came from since it’s not sorted well.
Droptype comes second so I can easily sort out what kind of drop it is. Is it something I sent to the contractor? Is it something they sent me? Or is it a reference or information drop of some kind that doesn’t really count as incomingoutgoing?
There are the different droptypes and subtypes I’ve set up so far:
RFP means “Request for Proposal,” by the way. This means I’ve sent the studio a batch of work, reference and tech docs so I can get the work priced and scheduled out so we can decide whether or not to sign a contract.
I have everything capitalized for easier readability. I don’t like lower-case or mixed-case for important information. And I think all of these droptypes and subtypes encompass pretty much every type of standard communication I have with outsourcers. It’s a short list.
After that I include the studio name, which helps a lot with filtering alphabetically if I’m working with a lot of art studios or artists for a single client. I used to include the studio name in the description, but I prefer this for sorting, especially as projects scale.
From there, I include a short written description of what’s in the drop. It’s a lot more casual than the rest of the naming conventions. I don’t care about capitalization as much and I don’t have a very standard syntax for it. It’s just a brief description of what’s in the directory and why it exists.
That’s the best system I have so far. I’d love for people to pick it apart, though, to see if there’s anything I could be overlooking or doing better. I’ve gone back and forth before on whether or not to put STUDIONAME before DROPTYPE as a means of sorting more easily. It came down to being purely a matter of preference, as I’m personally more focused on seeing at a glance the actual inflow and outflow of information on a daily basis, and the ratio of in vs out. That’s more important to me than sorting first by how many times I interacted with an individual studio on a certain day.
Because of this, I’m better able to assess how productive my artists are and how productive I am, and helps me see relationships with regards to the amount of time I’ve invested on art drops and feedback and how quickly it comes back and from which studios. Again, that’s just a matter of preference.
Seriously though, any and all feedback is appreciated! đ
Everyone’s favorite game dev podcast is back! This week I join Chris Holden, Jesse Sosa and Lee Amarakoon to discuss the business of VFX and the world of interview etiquette. Check it out below, and tell your friends!
Hi all! Back in December I gave a speech at the IGDA MicroTalks on the subject of transitioning from full-time employment to freelance art. It’s an expanded version of an earlier article of mine. Here’s the video:
Hi everybody! Iâm Jon Jones and I run smArtist, a contract art production agency. Iâm a freelance art outsourcing manager, and I deal with art studios and freelance artists on a daily basis. Iâm going to go into some detail on what you need to know if youâre transitioning from fulltime employment into a career as a freelance artist. There are a few things you need to know that Iâve learned over the years.
Iâm going to be speaking primarily to people that are taking the leap into freelance art fulltime, and not people that moonlight or only want to contract until they find another job. Some of my advice will still apply to people in those situations, sure. But I prefer not working with moonlighters or people that only want to contract temporarily, because the second they enter crunch or get a job, I become the lowest priority, I miss deadlines, and it affects my clientsâ projects.
Without further ado, hereâs my background: Iâve been dealing with contract art for nearly fifteen years, and have been a full-time professional for over ten. Iâve been a freelance artist and worked at an art studio, worked inhouse at developers as an artist and as a manager, and now I manage art teams as a freelancer. Iâve been on all sides of the contract art game, and thatâs where Iâm coming from.
A quick but important note Iâd like to make: Always keep your resume and portfolio up to date. Pay attention to whatâs happening at your studio. If youâre getting close to shipping, get ALL of that up to date, because thatâs prime time for layoffs. Do you think the game is going to succeed or suck? Is your team unreasonably large? Is your contract up for renewal? Prepare NOW. Starting a contract or a job will take at least a month and a half on average, and thatâs optimistic. Be ready. If you get laid off, you have a resume and portfolio ready and they should already be in the hands of AT LEAST ten companies by the end of the day. Period.
THE ZEROTH COMMANDMENT
Set up your own dedicated workspace. Do nothing but work there. Fundamentally, just donât work where you play. Youâll feel like youâre always at work and will begin to really resent it and feel trapped. Trust me, it sucks.
Also, donât play where you work. Just donât mix it. Youâll never get any work done when thereâs chores around the house to do, a TV show to watch, more Skyrim, pets to play with, or the promise of Hot Local Teens In Your Area That Want To Chat. (not true.) Do that somewhere else, on your own time. Set aside your own sacred workspace and keep that discipline. Itâll keep you sane.
What I did was turn my only bedroom into my office and put my bed in my living room. Iâll admit that itâs extreme, but that’s my personality and this works well for me.
THE FIRST COMMANDMENT
Thou shalt know the day and the hour.
Amateur: âIâll have it done in two hours!â Delivers it in eight hours.
Professional: âIâll have it done in eight hours.â Delivers it in six hours.
Manager Insight: If an artist blows his time estimates consistently, it erodes my trust in his ability to deliver at all. I always notice and remember. I donât want to have to figure out âAmateur Artist Mathâ and do the conversions in my head: 2h = 8h, 4h = 12h, one day = two days. I am neither nanny nor mathematician. I have deadlines to hit!
Iâve been in a position where Iâve been stuck with an artist that wonât correct his behavior and that I canât replace, so I actually have to lie about when itâs due just because I know heâll be late if I give him the real due date. And obviously I canât tell him I do that, because heâll be onto me and will find another way to weasel out of it, once again leaving me in the dark on delivery dates. If you make me treat you like a child, no allowance for you. Sometimes that has been the only way to get the artist to deliver it on time, and this puts me in an odd and almost parental position. What does it say about him, his competence and his skills as an artist if he consistently fails to understand how long a task takes? Is that someone youâd work with again?
I understand that sometimes you run into problems. Thatâs fine. But if youâre going to be late,tell me. Trust me, I know how awkward it can be to approach someone pre-emptively and tell them something unpleasant. But Iâd rather know so I can plan for it being late than simply not hear from the artist and get a late delivery. I have a boss, too. I report to my boss, and telling my boss itâll be done on a certain day and getting it later makes me look like I canât manage my artists or stick to a schedule. No one wants to feel that way, and that affects you directly, too!
I appreciate honesty and giving advance notice that you will be late. I do not like being surprised by a late delivery with no warning. In fact, that always irritates me. If you make me look like an idiot to my boss because I trusted you, do you think I would ever trust you or want to work with you again? Of course not. Iâd cut you loose without a second thought because it is in my direct, immediate interest to replace you. No matter how cool a person you are, this is still business. Be a Professional.
THE SECOND COMMANDMENT
Thou Shalt Heed the Words of the Technical Guidelines Tablet.
Amateur: âHereâs the delivery!â File’s a technical MESS I’ll spend hours fixing. Textures assigned wrong, files named wrong, directories assigned wrong, total chaos. Bonus points for weird or profane filenames. (note: Not actual bonus points.)
Professional: âHereâs the delivery!â Files are properly named, textures are properly assigned, technical guidelines were met and I donât have to fix anything because he paid attention to my instructions.
Managerâs Insight: I donât know if the Amateur just didnât read the doc, or if he simply didnât understand it. If I explained it badly, I’ll cop to it. But please, try your best and ask questions.
My three options in order from most desirable to least desirable are as follows:
a) Repeat myself. Tell him to reread the doc and hope he suddenly gets it. However, this could be another blown deliverable if he doesnât. High risk, very little time spent.
b) Explain myself. Write up a detailed changelist and tell him exactly how to fix it. Medium risk, lots of time spent.
c) Do it myself. Low risk, excessive time spent.
Ideally, this will never happen. Practically speaking, it totally will.
Donât make me do your job. I respect attention to detail and people that think of ways to do their job well, understand my bottom line, and try to save me time. Itâs good customer service, good business and the Professional way to act. Itâs the mint on the pillow.
Honestly, no oneâs perfect. Sometimes Iâll have to rename a file here, tweak some verts there. That happens. If itâs just one or two issues small enough that it would be faster for me to fix them myself rather than telling you, I may just do that. Itâs likely that a client may not even mention it. But if there are a lot of issues like this and it happens consistently, thatâs more work for me, and itâs going to really irritate me over time. This is Amateur hour nonsense. It makes us both look bad, and will make me rethink working with you again. Your mom doesnât work here. Clean up your own mess.
Be thorough, check your own work, pay attention to the directions I give you, and be a Professional. A manager may not mention this as being one of the reasons he continues to send you contract work, but trust me, it is a major factor.
THE THIRD COMMANDMENT
Thou shalt heed thy clientâs word to the letter.
Amateur: âSure, Iâll incorporate that feedback!â Misses half of what I asked for and acts like nothingâs wrong. Did he not read it, not understand it or just ignore it?
Professional: âSure, Iâll incorporate that feedback!â Nails every single point spot-on and (as a bonus!) verifies point-by-point what was fixed.
Managerâs Insight: This comes down to two points: 1) The Professional is showing me he pays attention to what I say, and 2) heâs focused on details and doing a good job.
Plan for this. I need time to review the assets and generate feedback. If my workday ends at 7pm and I get it long after Iâve gone home, that doesnât do me a lot of good, does it? Especially if I have an imminent deadline.
This all comes down to this timeless adage: Under-promise and over-deliver. The earlier in the day I get a delivery youâve promised, the happier I am. But if you dramatically overestimate when Iâll get the asset and I get it uselessly late, what good is that to me? I can either stay late at work â guess how much I like that? â or put it off until tomorrow morning.
Remember: You are not the end of the pipeline. Youâre an important part of the process, yes. However, other people are lined up after you take your finished product to the next stage of production and finalize it. This takes time, and issues like this pile up and affect a lot of other people down the chain. Do not be the cholesterol in the artery of my project.
Itâs easy for an Amateur to slack off, misread something, not double-check, or just let things slide and hope heâs not called on it because he doesnât want to do the extra work. Maybe he doesnât get called on it and itâs handled in-house. But just because a client may not bring it up doesnât mean it wasnât noticed and remembered. It absolutely should be brought up, but they may not have the time or desire to confront you.
Personally, I have no problem with confrontation, and I will be a jerk if I have to because I have a job to do. I donât like doing that, and you donât like being on the receiving end. Save us both the time and drama. Strive to be the Professional that makes a client think âWow, he nailed it!â instead of the Amateur that makes the client think âWell, he completed items A, C and E but forgot B and D. Again. And now I have to either write it up or fix it myself when I have a mountain of other work to do. Splendid!â
One important point, however, that you may not realize: Sometimes â emphasis on sometimes â the sign of a job well done is the quiet, peaceful absence of problems. Everything flows smoothly, is exactly as expected, people are happy and there is no cause for complaint. Doing the job right simply may not bring open acknowledgement or kudos, but doing the job wrong is going to set off alarms that everyone notices. It took me many years to realize that, sometimes, lack of acknowledgement is something to take pride in. Itâs not ideal and I try extremely hard to acknowledge and appreciate everything I can, but I have a lot to do and may not always be able to afford the time. Remembering this can keep you sane.
THE FOURTH COMMANDMENT
Thou Shalt Honor Thy Customer and Thy Reputation.
Amateur: âIâm just this guy that makes art. Whatâs customer service? If I make good art, thatâs all that matters because thatâs all they really want.â
Professional: âIâm a service provider and I take customer service seriously. I am an artist, but my success in that depends on creating art to my clientâs exact specifications.â
Managerâs Insight: You are in the customer service business. Be responsive and make the client happy and maintain it.
A lot of artists coming from a studio environment donât really have to worry about doing much else besides showing up and doing whatâs asked of them. Itâs usually hard for people to get fired for unsatisfactory performance, so a lot of annoying little habits and behaviors can get glossed over. (note: Everyone notices even if they donât bring it up.)
Itâs a lot like dating. You work out, dress well and try to get in âdating shapeâ so you can look as attractive as possible for potential mates. [Insert charming romantic comedy âhow they metâ story here, possibly starring Gerard Butler and Jennifer Lopez.] Then when youâre in a relationship, you let a few things slide because youâre safe. Contractors do this. Contractors should not do this.
This is the difference between being a contractor versus being employed full-time at a studio. As a contractor, you are ALWAYS dating. You are ALWAYS selling. You ALWAYS have to keep that standard of careful attention to detail, composure, and will to go the extra mile to make your client happy so youâll keep working with them long-term. And even clients like flowers from time to time. (note: Please do not actually send clients flowers.)
THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT.
Thou Shalt Not Mock the Client with Feeble Protestations.
Amateur: âMy dog ate my stylus!â
Professional: âI dropped the ball on this, and I will do my best to correct it.â
Manager’s Insight: I don’t want excuses, I want results. If you screwed up, be honest and let me know so I can plan for that. I’ve heard EVERY excuse. I know the difference between a reason and an excuse.
Iâve seen weird technical issues that are magically resolved when I try to step in to help.
Oh, you never got that email you had actually already replied to?
Wow, your wifegirlfriend DEMANDED that you nap through this deadline (true story!)
The list goes on. For my part, when I make a mistake, I own up to it. It sucks, itâs awkward, and I feel bad. But making lame excuses makes me look irresponsible, sloppy, and insults my clientâs intelligence.
There is definitely a difference between an excuse and a valid reason. Sometimes it can be hard to tell the difference. But if enough of those stack up, thatâs a red flag. Itâs easy to think to yourself âThese are all perfectly valid reasons! If theyâre reasonable, theyâll totally understand and forgive me.â Sure, but the more mistakes there are the less Iâll ultimately trust you, valid or not. If I hear one more âIt was an Act of God!â storyâŚ
Donât be a mistake factory. But if you make one, just fix it. I donât always really need to know the details of why, just that a mistake was made and that youâre on top of it now. Honestly, I just want results and honesty so I can understand the situation, troubleshoot as needed, adjust the schedule and allocate resources to keep production moving.
THE SIXTH COMMANDMENT.
Thou Shalt Start a Website and Find a Good Domain.
you@yourname.com email is professional. If you use webmail, Gmail only. Hotmail, Yahoo, MSN, etc look amateur.
Get a dot com. Second best is dot net.
Avoid weird TLDs (top level domains) if you can. Also avoid subdomains.
Bad example: âieatpaper.iamaprofessionalartist.co.xxx.nz.abc.123.omgâ
If you donât use your real name, be simple. If you say the name aloud, can people find it on the first try?
Bad example: âSuperdeliciousartistboythatmakesart.com/portfolio/lookatmeIamcreative!!11/â
Avoid internet slang.
Bad example: âlolwutplsbesrs.netâ
Avoid bad spelling.
Bad example: âimaektehthreedeemodelz.netâ
If you must hyphenate, use only one.
Bad example: âc-o-n-c-e-p-t-artist.comâ
Avoid complicated words.
Bad example: âwww.archaeologicalartisan.comâ
Avoid unintentional words.
Bad example: www.FerrethAndJobs.com (yes, this is real, it’s a law firm)
If it takes longer than three seconds to speak aloud or explain, itâs too long.
Bad example: âItâs incompatenceingameduhvelopment.com, but âincompetenceâ is spelled âi-n-c-o-m-p-a to be funny blah blah blah”
Donât pick something offensive. If it has to do with drugs, sex, poop, communicable diseases or Nickelback, reconsider your life.
Bad example: âsnotinmyhair.comâ
Short and simple is best.
Good examples: âchrisholden.net,â âautodestruct.com,â and âtwotongraphics.comâ
THE SEVENTH COMMANDMENT.
Thou Shalt Know and Love Thy Web Tools.
(but not the Biblical “know.”)
Manage leads and deals.
Resource: www.zoho.com/crm/ Manage time tracking, billing, invoicing, profit and loss.
Resource: www.freshbooks.com Shareable online documentation, spreadsheets, etc.
Resource: docs.google.com
Man, I really suck at posting notices about events where I’m speaking. Last night there was an event called Infinite Resolution Zero LatencyI at the University of Texas in Austin. They had several game developers taking two minutes each to describe their vision of the future of video games. After that, they adjourned to check out video games on the world’s largest HD screen.
Well, I got a chance to speak there on my vision of the future of games, and I wanted to repost the text of it here. Here it is:
Hi, I’m Jon Jones and I run smArtist, an art production management agency where I specialize in art outsourcing.
“What do I see as the future for video games?”
Iâll take this in a different direction: From a production standpoint, I see the future bringing more freelancing, free agency and freedom. As long as expensive AAAA blockbusters exist, dumb money will follow. Mistakes will be made. Studios will crumble, and layoffs will abound. Behold the system.
I see the rise of contract studios, of mercenaries, hired out on a project-by-project basis. They move nimbly from one client to the next, work with several in parallel and stay afloat to grow and prosper. This, rather than bowing to one master and hoping to see forbearance and returned loyalty where, in fact, that is often a non-reciprocal transaction.
This is a tough industry. And I see a lot more boutique contract art, production, and perhaps design and engineering houses opening and prospering. It’s a safer way to hedge your bets against studio closures, cutbacks and layoffs outside of your control and to take care of yourself and exist outside the system. It’s not for everyone, but I see it coming and I believe itâs a truly viable option for more people than youâd think. Working with people in this capacity is absolutely energizing, and I think itâs the future.
Hi everybody! For those not familiar with reddit, it’s [essentially] a website where people post links, create discussions and comment on them. There are tens of thousands of small communities there, one of which is called “AMA” — short for “Ask Me Anything.” Sometimes they’ll have celebrities, or politicians, or people in interesting lines of work. People submit questions and the person answering them does their best to answer all they can. More often than not, it’s really interesting.
Well, I did one recently on what it takes to break into the game industry. I spent about 12 hours answering almost every single one of the 250+ questions asked. I’m going to take all that content and turn it into a big long Q&A or series of articles for my blog here, but I wanted to link to the original thread:
Another new CrunchCast is up this week! This time we have Chris Holden, Bryan McConnell, Patrick Morrison and me discussing the International Consumer Electronics Show, making better and more hireable students, and the intricacies of relocation!
Artists: Having a great portfolio and blogging about what you know is gold. However, I’ve heard of people selling art critiques and trying to charge for basic information. I’ve always made everything I write 100% free, and here’s why: If your blog is for people that have the time to do what you’re teachingexplaining, it’s awesome for them and if the info is good, you’ll gain respect. However, you’re also showcasing your talent to people that don’t have the time to do it themselves, but instead have the money to pay *you* to do it.
Speaking as an art mercenary, this is the crucial principle: Don’t try to make money off the people that are trying to learn so they can make money. Try to make money from the people that have money.
This is a pretty wild one. Essentially, you can create rules (or “automations”) for Dropbox via this web tool that triggers certain actions based on filetypes. I’ll quote TechCrunch‘s linked article:
Not only are they trigged by file type (e.g. a photo, a .doc, a PDF, etc.), theyâre also triggered based on which Dropbox folder the file has been placed into.
For documents, you can choose from actions like convert to PDF, convert PDF to text, summarize, translate, upload to Google Docs, upload to Slideshare and more. Photos can be uploaded to Facebook, Flickr, rotated, annotated with text, a map or a logo, have effects applied, and downscaled.
Any file can be emailed, zipped, renamed, FTPâd, encrypted or decrypted, saved to another Dropbox, tweeted, or set as a Facebook status.
I use Google Docs extensively, but almost everyone else on earth uses Word Excel etc. I use OpenOffice for dealing with my non-Docs clients directly, but always manually import and sort them into Docs when I’m done. One use I thought of for Dropbox Automator is saving whatever Word documents I’m working with into a special shared Dropbox folder that I use with my crew, so that those files will automatically be uploaded into Google Docs without my having to manually importsavesort it. Timesaver!
Another example is having a secure offsite FTP to automatically back up anything my clientscontractors post into Dropbox, optionally with encryption for security. đ
This is incredibly cool, and I can’t wait to dig into this. Automation tools for the win!
Do you guys have any other cool ideas on how this could work? Would love to hear!
Hi, guys! I’ve been spending the last few months really digging into the most efficient ways to manage my business from wherever I happen to be while having plenty of backup options for staying communicative even if everything starts exploding. First off, I’d like to showcase my hardware!
These are the main tools I use for smArtist! Detailed below:
My command center! HP Pavilion dv6t quad core. Intel i7 Q 820, 8gb RAM, 500gb HD, etc. This is my primary laptop where I do all the heavy lifting, be it art, mass file storage, syncing data everywhere, etc. It’s heavy, but can handle anything I can throw at it. I take this laptop to client sites, set it up wherever there’s room, sync the data to my local HD and mirror onto an external HD then do all my work on this. This helps me work remotely and have everything at my disposal and help save my clients time and money trying to get a new system set up for me.
My Google Chromebook! I got this for free in Google’s very first round of beta hardware, and a year later, I still use it extensively. I use this for responding to email, dealing with documentation and spreadsheets, etc. I’m an ENORMOUS fan of Google and actively use most of their products, especially Gmail and Docs.
For the most part, everything I ever need to manage my business with exists in Google’s cloud — securely passworded a hundred ways, of course — and it’s all automatically accessible from this Chromebook. All I have to do is log into my Google account, and all of Chrome’s browser settings and Chrome web store applications and their relevant data are instantly accessible to me. The best part is that the Chromebook comes with 3G data plan through Verizon, so I can access the internet and all my data from wherever I am, at any time.
My Motorola Atrix laptop dock! This is the most awesome cel phone accessory ever devised. I have the Motorola Atrix phone with Android, which is an absolute beast of a phone. One of its most notable features is the laptop dock accessory.
It’s basically an entire netbook with a dock for my phone, and it’s powered by my phone’s hardware. The lapdock’s OS is actually Ubuntu, but the Android OS runs in its own window as a separate app. That window is everything on my phone. All my settings, apps, everything, 100% exact copy except I can use the lapdock’s mouse and keyboard to click on and run everything. I even unlock my phone and entire my PIN from the lapdock’s keyboard. đ
The way it works it that I dock my phone into the lapdock, then boots into Ubuntu and has a virtualized window of my phone’s Android OS as a running app. It’s incredible. It’s a fully functional netbook with 3G access through my AT&T data plan using my phone, and for no extra charge. The best part? The laptop dock has its own battery that automatically charges my phone when it’s docked, even if the laptop dock is closed.
My first-generation 64gb 3G iPad! This is the best piece of consumer electronics I’ve ever purchased. Except for the graphics work I can only do on my primary laptop, I can do EVERYTHING I need to do for my business through my iPad and with its keyboard dock. Emails, spreadsheets, reviewing portfolios, Dropbox, FTP, reading PDF docs, everything. I have apps to do basically anything I’d ever need to do, and since it’s 3G, I can do it from anywhere. đ I’m writing up an article on how I use my iPad to manage my business, and I’ll be posting that at some point in the near future.
The net effect of having all this hardware is that I can pack as light or as heavy as I need and use any of these devices to access the internet and my data through a) direct ethernet connection, b) wifi, or c) two different cellular networks. I can do face-to-face calls through Skype or various VoIP solutions on basically any of these devices if I need to. Since all my tools are based online and backed up every which way, I can be on the highway in the middle of the desert and have full access to my entire business if I even have a single bar of cel reception on either AT&T or Verizon. I’m always on.
In addition to this, I actually have a really amazing laptop messenger bag from Timbuk2 that’s always loaded with all the cables and peripherals I need to work remotely. This enables me to simply toss my laptop in the bag and go where I need to immediately instead of having to wrappack everything and make sure I didn’t leave anything behind. Among the items in my bag are my earbuds, external speakers, extra mouse, extra USB cables and AC adaptors to charge my phone and iPad, a portable three-port surge protector with two USB outlets so I can split power in busy coffee shops, and so on.
Two of my next purchases are a keyed laptop lock for security and a spare AC adaptor power brick for my laptop so I don’t even need to pack my primary when I need to pack up and go work somewhere without wasting a moment’s time. It may not seem like a big deal at first, but I’m out and about working from a wide variety of locations all the time, and it sucks to spend a ton of time packingunpacking and forgetting something important as I go.
So, in a nutshell, that’s how I run my business from anywhere I am. What kind of cool tech and tools do you guys and gals use for remote work? I’d love to hear!
Art outsourcing and production for the game industry