Rob and Kristi
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Workspaces

Jan30
2010
Rob Written by Rob

We recently overhauled the office, a long overdue activity that became a much more pressing concern once Kristi and I were both working in it full time. It’s a small room and you can only bang your chairs so many times before something has to change. So we rearranged furniture and made some upgrades in our workspaces.

Kristi’s desk:

kristis_desk.jpg

File cabinet was moved from the right of her desk to the left, and the printer moved on top of that. Lots of free space instantly cleared.

And mine:

robs_desk.jpg

The riser’s new and I like it. It frees up most of my desktop and gives me a practical center area to put my laptop without blocking monitor views, while creating a sort of Illuminati-invisible-hand vibe that appeals to me. It also makes a decent spot for us to watch a movie in the office if we want.

Posted in Everyday Life, House and Yard, Work

Spin Point Bang

Jan25
2010
Rob Written by Rob

I’ve been working in freelance marketing a long time – about ten years. Been through two recessions now. Seen a lot of stupid things. And now that we’re growing up a bit and turning a successful freelance practice at last into a full marketing firm, I’m finding myself looking back and being retrospective. Part of it is Kristi and I looking over old client files together with a dispassionate eye and deciding how we want to conduct ourselves as a company.

Today we’ve had two turns of events with clients. One, an old client who reappeared on Christmas Eve with a big project, finally came back with some first round copy feedback. They loved it, we nailed it. This client is making some big market moves and has had to carefully determine the best path to get there. But they’ve been a successful company for a long time, and they know what they’re doing – and, luckily, we managed to get on the same wavelength.

The other issue is a relatively new client who came into our lives last summer. Nice guy, good company, but I hate to admit that right now the success of his business is highly reliant on current and volatile market conditions. One firm move by the feds, or another twist of fate in the economy, or simply one false move in his marketing, and he could easily be wiped out. The struggle with him since day one has been to somehow turn his fragile market position into one of long term viability.

There was a time, not long ago, that I compared the job of a freelance marketer (in my case, copywriting) with that of an arms dealer. You have no control over what the client does with what you provide. You can tell him not to shoot his foot off. But if he’s bound and determined to point the gun and pull the trigger, there’s nothing you can do – someone’s going to sell him the gun, so it might as well be you. Yeah, it’s a cynical viewpoint, but it’s happened too many times: the second the client starts seeing results, the client gets greedy. And insecure. And then eventually he’s standing there pointing the gun at his foot and spinning the cylinder. You warn and warn and warn, and the client blows his foot off, looks at you and says, “Why didn’t you stop me from shooting myself in the foot?? THIS HURTS!”

After about the ninth or tenth time, you say to hell with it. Sell him the gun, the ammo, a map to his foot, the works. Bill him well. Tell him halfheartedly that you do not recommend shooting himself in the foot. Cash the check and wait for the bang.

But honestly, I’m finding now that I can’t do that as easily anymore. The industry is full of marketing arms dealers. At the risk of losing this particular client, I pretty much told him point blank that his ideas on the current topic were pretty well stupid. And would result in a bloody stump where his leg had been. And of course he didn’t like to hear that. So we’re exchanging heated email back and forth, and who knows, ultimately we may lose him as a client. But worse things have happened, and clients aren’t forever. You contribute when you can make a difference, but when they peak and start coming down the other side, worse things can happen than being fired for not backing their suicidal play.

We had a client a few years ago, same type of situation. Worked solid with him for a year. He got good results from the advice we gave him and the materials we made for him, and then he got greedy. Decided that he wanted his local little Orlando manufacturing concern to become a big multinational conglomerate, and started making dumb decisions – such as wiring virtually his entire cash reserve to Africa to secure a new manufacturing facility. He needed that cash to pay his bills; he couldn’t afford to lose it. Well, the transfer was held by the bank when Homeland Security wanted to know why a foreign national (which he is) was wiring lots of money to that particular part of the world. The money remained in federal pockets for months. When he refused to pay his bills to us, the relationship soured and we went our separate ways. That was right around the time I moved to California.

The frustrating part about that was that we advised him to continue building on his current success and not try to grow faster than he could deal with it. But that’s not what he wanted to hear. And so he went to some trade show, had his ear filled full of gambits and hot moves and dreams of getting super rich, and he got greedy. And then, bang. Today his marketing is in worse shape than before we started working together; it’s obvious that he’s had setbacks in the last few years, and that his dreams of megacorporate stardom are far and distant now. And that’s a shame, because he has a good product. Too bad the good product didn’t have a sound plan.

I really hope the current client isn’t going the same way. I’m tired of watching good clients do dumb things. And as much as I’ve been willing in the past to bill out for that, today I’m gradually seeing it more as blood money. Not worth it.

Posted in Work

2009

Dec31
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Wow, 2009 sucked.

Last year this time, New Year’s Eve was filled with foreboding and dread. Heavy things were coming down at Kristi’s job, and we were beginning to fear that soon our copywriting business would have to do our financial heavy lifting. California was coming apart at the seams; slashed budgets statewide were raising the spectre of unpaid teachers, unpaid tax refunds, unpaid everything. We had big bills and weren’t sure at all how we were going to pay them. We honestly weren’t sure that we were going to make it in 2009.

Then in the first quarter, everything came collapsing down around us. Kristi’s grandmother died. Business dried up; all of our usual Q1 clients had stopped spending, and we depend on Q1 to be our busiest season of the year. Kristi’s job situation went from bad to worse to worst case scenario, and we learned that she would not be teaching in Manteca in the new school year. Bills were still piling up. Due to a bureaucratic screwup between California and Florida, I couldn’t drive: some old fix-it tickets in Florida were coming up in California as points against my license, driving our car insurance through the roof. All we could do is take me off the policy and out of the drivers seat until the points rolled off.

There were only two rays of sunshine for us in those months: we still had each other, and our niece Natalie was born.

Then there was summer. Kristi went to work nights at the cannery, including a two-month stretch without a day off. We hardly saw each other for three months. New client traffic in the business was virtually nonexistent. Relationships in my own family reached a breaking point. By August, we were both exhausted and shellshocked. When fall came around, the last of Kristi’s Manteca paychecks came and went; now we were holding things together with business income and her unemployment. And say good morning to a new COBRA bill.

But things finally started to turn around in October. My brother Chris left Florida for Oregon; we drove up to help him unpack. Natalie began crawling around. While we were still pretty low on new clients, we had managed to get regular work from two or three reliables, and so managed to keep the bills paid and the lights on. Kristi was long off the night shift, and we were busy reconstituting our own suffering relationship. Stress was easing up; it wasn’t any one thing you could put your finger on, but we just started to feel like things were getting better. Business was getting better. Life was getting better.

November and December have been a whirlwind. A big website project for the church turned into a bigger website project for the local Salvation Army, which itself turned into some cool work for Aaron Draper. Kristi jumped into web design headfirst and found she enjoys it. Her migraines have gone away almost entirely. Chris is settling in Oregon, loving it, and doing well. Our friend Em back in Orlando was finally attending to her health, taking steps to cut her own stress; the medical fear we’ve all been harboring in 2009 about her hadn’t come to pass. A Christmas season normally centered around food and presents and such was this year centered around work, contributing to the community, and family togetherness. New clients appeared just before Christmas, and one very old client showed up with a big project – and the promise of a hefty deposit check. And Natalie began to walk.

Last night I sat down here in the office to write the monthly checks to pay our tall stack of bills. I’ve come to dread this time of the month; all year it’s the time to face the reality of the situation, and the reality in 2009 hasn’t been awesome. But as I finished and tallied up the numbers, I turned to Kristi. We still have cash in the bank. We somehow managed, with only a small handful of remaining clients, to bring in 25% more business income than in 2008. And it was enough: we did it. I slowly lowered my hand down on the stack of stamped envelopes and closed my eyes. We’ve officially gotten through this nasty bitch of a year. We made it.

Tonight we plan to spend New Year’s Eve at a party with her parents and people we all know from church. Then we have a relaxing weekend, and get back to work next week for what looks to be an action-packed first quarter.

Kristi’s fond of reminding me that faithfulness is rewarded, and that we’ve been faithful. I’m the cynic in our relationship, looking around corners and preparing for – and usually fully expecting – the worst to pass. But even I must say that we’ve been living on faith this year. And faith indeed got us through.

Happy New Year, folks. May 2010 be a fresh start, a year of opportunity, a time of rewarded faithfulness. After 2009, I think we’ve all earned it.

Posted in Everyday Life

World War Z

Dec28
2009
Rob Written by Rob

A number of things to report, not the least of which being our recent completion of wedding photographer Aaron Draper’s new website and our recent acquisition of a Palm Pre smartphone. But that can wait a day or two.

Last week, just before Christmas, we ducked into San Francisco to catch the big trees and last minute shopping hours and ice skating at Market Square. It was the start of a relaxed, enjoyable holiday, a stark contrast to the harried and stressful Christmas we had last year. Hitting the city right around Christmas is fun.

Anyway, we turned a corner and went walking up a street and I saw one of those big Chase billboards. Ever since the banks failed and Chase bought Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, they’re freakin’ everywhere here. Overnight, half our bills suddenly started arriving under Chase logos. It’s more than a little creepy. We are truly becoming one nation under J. P. Morgan Chase, indivisible, with justice and free checking for all.

So anyway I saw this billboard and it hit me that I’d seen something very much like the Chase logo somewhere before.

chaselogo.gif

And.. umm..

umbrella.jpg

Hmm. Coincidence? Paranoia? Random stray thoughtwave that fills a quick R&K entry? An excuse to have the wife look at me weird?

Or will the great worldwide zombie apocalypse be brought to you by the J. P. Morgan Chase Corporation?

Only time will tell.

Posted in Everyday Life
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