While I have always regarded design careers as a great option for relaunchers, I started thinking about them again when I received the October issue of Fast Company magazine, their design issue. “Design” is a broad category, encompassing building design, product design, typeface design, interior design, digital design of all kinds, shoe and athletic equipment design, fashion design, graphic design, and more. Flipping through the Fast Company pages, you can find everything from how Italian sporting firm CAMP redesigned their ice ax to mimic the angle of a hummingbird’s beak to how JDSU’s ChromoFlair refractive paints, used on everything from Cadillacs to Trek bike helmets, were inspired by the fine scales on a butterfly’s wing.
One of the biggest benefits of a career in design, shared by other creative careers such as freelance writing, is the non-traditional nature of the work itself. You can’t program people to create during set business hours. They have to work when the creative moment strikes them. Some designers have a strict discipline about the process; setting aside a certain number of hours each day to work. But those hours may not all be in a row and they may not be between 9 am and 6 pm. Others go for days thinking and reflecting, and then have a prolonged burst of intense production.
Cindy Atoji Keene at the Boston Globe recently interviewed Marc Loverin, design director for children’s shoe company Stride Rite. Loverin commented about his work schedule: “I work from home a couple days a week, and my son and daughter sit next to me while I'm drawing. I sketch out my ideas with a ballpoint pen or markers and then scan the drawings in.” A friend of mine was a video game designer for Mattel in the early 80’s. Mattel’s state of the art video game design center was open 24 hours, progressive for that time, so their designers could come in whenever they had a creative inspiration. (This was way before remote home offices.) I do remember hanging out there at 2 a.m. on more than one occasion! Another friend is an independent toy designer. He creates toy concepts on his own schedule and then sells them to toy companies.
Look at the process
outlined at marketing design firm Seltzer Design. You can see
how the work is broken up into components that occur in concert
with each other or sequentially, depending on the project stage.
And you can visualize how that process may play out in the work
environment, with people working remotely or in the office, and
with people working non-traditional and traditional business hours.
Design assignments are usually project based, so there is a start and an end to the finished product. This is why the field lends itself to contract work and freelancing. Companies looking to connect with teams of design freelancers can contract with Aquent, a staffing firm placing design professionals at all levels in interim or temporary positions at companies that often lead to full time work.
“Relaunchers” (mid-career professionals on career break looking to return to work) interested in design careers should consider updating their portfolios with a project for a non-profit, volunteer organization or small company. Check out this month’s Fast Company magazine or Core77.com for ideas, people and companies to contact. Attend conferences like the upcoming A Better World by Design ($40 for students, $100 for non-students), co-sponsored by Brown University and Rhode Island School of Design to hear experts in the field and broaden your network, possibly leading to a work opportunity.
Have you returned to work in a design field? If so, please let us know! We would like to feature your story.
Photo credit: http://education.yahoo.net/degrees/images/articles/_design_five_fashion_forward_careers.jpgCarol Fishman Cohen and Vivian Steir Rabin are the co-authors of the acclaimed career reentry book Back on the Career Track: A Guide for Stay-at-Home Moms Who Want to Return to Work, and the co-founders of iRelaunch, a company providing career reentry programming, events, and information to employers, universities, organizations and to mid-career professionals in all stages of career break.
For more information on Relaunching, see iRelaunch and check out Back on the Career Track. Carol and Vivian can be reached at info@iRelaunch.com.
Attention mid-career professionals on career break in the suburban Washington D.C. area! Attend the Career Relaunch Forum on November 12, 2008 at George Washington University.
Vivian Steir Rabin Carol Fishman Cohen
