First Ever Web Design Survey Results 170
rainhill writes "In April 2007, A List Apart and An Event Apart conducted a survey of people who make websites. Close to 33,000 web professionals answered the survey's 37 questions, providing the first data ever collected on the business of web design and development (PDF) as practiced in the US and worldwide. Among the findings: over 70% of people in this field earn less than $60K per year. There is little gender bias in salary. And over 70% of Web workers post to a blog; this number shows very little dropoff with age."
And they made a PDF... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And they made a PDF... (Score:4, Informative)
Immediately below the download button you see:
"Findings From the Web Design Survey (1.6 MB PDF)"
I don't think 1.6 MB is too huge for us nerdy Slash-dotters with our high speed connections, especially when we've been warned. And I don't think any reader here can justify clicking the link without first knowing what file type it is.
Additional details about the PDF choice:
"Note: This PDF has been tagged for accessibility, however the graphics representing the complex charts do not yet have equivalents. An updated document will be available soon."
Anyway, they have the raw data available as well in multiple formats (with sizes indicated) so you can avoid charts if you want.
Sheesh.
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Option 1: @@@@@
Option 2: @@@@@@@@@@@@
Option 3: @@
That's beautiful, and don't ask me to draw you a pie chart, because I will.
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The problem is not the charts, but the information itself. Although Google reads PDFs and puts them into it's index, PDF is fundamentally a printing format, and not easily searchable by a browser.
Having the raw data available is fine, but the raw fact is this -- they chose to not express this report in a web format, when it would have been trivial to do so. Also, they have the raw data available in ZIP files!!! Is there a browser out there that does not support gzip? (Well yes, of course, but the are s
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Interesting story: a while back on Craigslist in Chicago I saw a guy who wrote this ridiculous post to "gigs" that said—and I'm paraphrasing here—"I project that my company will be worth $300B in five years. I need an unpaid intern to do all of the technical work, since I don't know how to program." The response from the freelance community was fantastic, seriously. Tons of people posted response posts to his with photos of either their genitals or an extended middle finger in his direction. Thi
First ever?! (Score:2)
Includes the whole group?! (Score:2)
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And yes, I am a shill. But they have taught me many clever things, and turned me into a CSS Nazi to boot. And I filled out the survey way back when it started (feels like awhile).
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In fact, just realised the title is "First Ever Web Design Survey Results", Not Web Designer
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My point is, this is not a representative sample. Maybe representative of the good designers, but definitely not of all designers.
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Bias? (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't mean to start an offtopic discussion, just wanted to point out that the choice of word there might bait people.
Re:Bias? (Score:4, Insightful)
You may turn that into one that is completely on topic by mentioning that their use of the term 'bias' might shine a light on the overall quality of their research on the basis of a self-selecting sample, which they are not shy to advertise to give a 'true' picture, which again shows that they do no less than nothing about statistics based research. They don't even come to a conclusive result regarding the count of items their questionnaire might have, 36 or 37 (here http://www.alistapart.com/articles/webdesignsurvey [alistapart.com] — does not matter, just a fence-post error.
However, the meta-result to me is that they again expose themselves as half-educated and overhyped. Yes, I do not particularly like them, along with Dash, Pirillo,
CC.
Definition Police (Score:2)
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And the results are quite interesting. If a woman *thinks* there is discrimination, she tends to make more money than a woman who doesn't think there is
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Hello??
Gender bias in salary is, somehow, not unfair?
The '80s called. They want their bias back.
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For example, women tend to work at more part-time positions, and part-time positions tend to get paid less per hour (workplaces prefer to hire full-time employees).
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Re:Bias? (Score:5, Interesting)
If you have a man who works 50 hours, and a woman who works 40 hours all year, and the man is 10% more productive as a result of his 25% longer hours, which are you more likely to reward with a larger raise?
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I've only worked for small and medium size companies so far (< 1k employees). So I don't know how the big companies do it, but all the (5) companies i've worked for decided raises and promotions based on performance and networking, both of which you can do better if you work a few extra hours.
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And for productivity, there are metrics in many areas. Web design may not be one, I don't know, I'm not in web design. Even if there are not precise measures, there may yet be ways that management can reasonably gauge performance (peer review, supervisor review, blind code review, etc).
What do you have to back up that assertion? (Score:2)
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Here's a couple of citations for that:
http://www.bls.gov/opub/ted/2007/jul/wk1/art01.htm [bls.gov]
http://jada.ada.org/cgi/content/full/135/5/637 [ada.org] (specific to dentists)
http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/infbrief/nsf06302/ [nsf.gov]
I'm pretty sure there are a lot more, but there's some term for this I can't recall that would probably turn them up.
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Money not Time (Score:2)
The woman produces 100% (as the standard) per dollar. The man produces only 110% of her production, but costs 137.5% of her cost. He is produc
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Assuming salaries are fixed, yes. But most salaries are negotiable -- and it has been shown that women generally wind up with worse deals from negotiations than men do. Whether that is because of cultural issues (women taught not to be assertive, others thinking they can always talk a woman down and therefore pushing harder) or not is a totally separate question from whether actual bias exists in salary
Good design also has to look good (Score:5, Interesting)
For inspiration, I visited the home-page of this arch aesthete. I discovered that his page, entirely in an overlarge Times font, used big thick-bordered frames (with scroll bars) a fantastically pixellated jpg of him and big flashing "new!" buttons next to various bits of the page.
Somehow, I managed not to laugh next time I discussed the page with him.
Re:Good design also has to look good (Score:4, Insightful)
For me it's music, I don't hear in a very wide range (so say my hearing tests), and I exasperate my co-worker, who is an audiophile, because I simply can't hear the difference, like he can. The "horrible" pop music, with terrible range, sounds the same as "good" music to me.
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I think often it's only one of those two skills
I completely disagree. I think most programmers just aren't interested in design and have spent all of 20 minutes, or less, thinking about it. If someone spent 20 minutes learning how to program, they'd hardly be any good at it.
What makes beautiful code --code that is simple yet complete, powerful yet flexible-- is the exact same things that makes beautiful design. I believe that "beauty" is an intrinsic truth of the universe; wether mathematical, musical, or visual. If you are creating, no matter what
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Re:Good design also has to look good (Score:5, Insightful)
You should give him the benefit of the doubt. A lot of art critics are not, themselves, artists.
Sounds like he knew of this deficit an gave you the job.
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For my part, I can do HTML, JS, CSS, etc; but I'm a programmer, not a designer. You want functional, I'm your man. You want stylish, good looking - go talk to someone else. I'll happily do the back end, and integrate the finished HTML page to make it function, but you'll be wanting someone else to do the artistic stuff.
Surprised? Not really. (Score:1, Insightful)
People who don't suck at graphic design are a dime a dozen. People who can chop up a PSD and write valid XHTML are a dime a dozen. People who can apply cheap hacks to make it work in Internet Explorer are slightly more expensive at a quarter a dozen, but that's still damned cheap.
The real money's in development of all this fancy Web 2.0 Ajaxy crap, web-based services, et cetera. Bit more involved than mere 'web design'.
'sides,
Wrong survey (Score:5, Interesting)
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That said, I've talked many, many clients out of building a site entirely in Flash - and they promptly found another designer.
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For example, everyone says they dislike blue underlined links. But in my (admittedly anecdotal) experience there is no better way to let a user know where to click.
So I'd like to see the data you're looking for too... but I bet a test vs. a survey would yield very different results.
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A lot of the stuff you're complaining about isn't really in the hands of web designers or developers. I will come clean, now, and confess that I have committed some of those sins you describe, but only at the urging of a client. And when the client's paying my bills, I do what they say, even if it feels a little dirty sometimes.
A couple of examples of bizarre client behaviour....
I once had a client (and I'm going to spare them the embarrassment of saying who they were; suffice it to say they're among the
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What does server side dynamic pages (PHP, etc) have to do with cross browser support? You can dynamically generate the exact same content you host statically, it just takes more processing power on the server.
But I'm a fan of the dynamic pages that fill the pages based on how big your window is.
A proper web browser will reflow the text on any web page static or dynamic. In fa
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Then you, and your client, won't care if I don't read your site. There are billions of sites on the internet, if you want my eyes on your site you better make it nice for me to use. Otherwise I'll go read your competitors site.
So what's the problem? With a web page, you have statically-sized images in terms of pixels, but you have scalable text. Those two
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OK, I see what you mean. I hate those fixed width sites with a passion.
This is true, but like I said I've seen a trend where companies are doing this static layout, because the dynamic way has
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Surprisingly there were good points to be made on both sides - liquid designs don't always scan well to the human eye when they flow out across a maximized, high-res 24" widescreen monitor (or even a 17", sometimes) - you can often end up with one very long line of text and some enormous menu bar with 5 options.
The upshot was that there wasn't really a hard-and
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I don't know if I fully agree with that - the browser *should* be able to do its job...but sometimes how the browser does its job and the requirements of the content conflict.
Glad it's not a profession that I chose (Score:1)
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Re:Low? 60k for web design? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Web pages are not critical", are you for real? You might not have seen this, but sites like MySpace, Friendster, et. al. are making more money than many "real" programs on "mainframes".
zomg, I think I just got trolled. I tip my hat to you, sir.
Re:Low? 60k for web design? (Score:4, Informative)
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A web designer doesn't go near a sql server.
I do, and I consider myself most of the time to be a graphic designer. I'm a programmer by trade but I design printed items, web sites, clothes, things. I'm also the world's worst sculptor and a somewhat decent illustrator/cartoonist.
However, for most designers, you're right. It's incredibly frustrating actually working with them because I could speak their language just fine but they couldn't speak mine, and I think it really bothered them too. That's why, at around $60K, I was making more than most of
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Web designer != Web developer
But sometimes the same person can do both jobs.
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243324? He's a young whippersnapper.
He certainly talks rubbish, but that's due to severe intellectual deficiency, not age: note such warning signs as the use of "your" instead of "you're", misuse or non-use of commas, "its" instead of "it's", "desinger" instead of "designer", complete lack of understanding of any technology whatsoever...
I diagnose a low-grade troll, but his gross stupidity isn't due to being an old-timer; he was born with it.
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$65k maybe.... but not a nickel over!
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The four I can get my hands on doing the front seen by others, they aren't responsible for writing the services that get the data, maintain the data, or update it. Perhaps it is different at other places but what I deal with are people are merely presenting data from established systems.
Making more money? If you ask management mainframers and similar large systems only cost money. The problem is that its where the business's data resides and keeping it going and brin
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None of that is web design, which is what the GPP was referring to. You are describing web development. Web _design_ involves making things look good, not making complex behaviors work.
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Re:Low? 60k for web design? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've done both: server work and front end web design. The difficult part of server work is usually integration with other systems as well as designing for performance. There are two back-ends: the internal architecture that encompasses your database, support scripts, and custom server code, and then there is the CGI layer, which queries and formats the data for presentation. The easy part of back-end work is with CGI scripts, which is the link between the real back-end and the front-end (browser). Writing CGI scripts to serve those pages is stupid simple, usually performed by junior developers, so it's not like all back-end work is touchable only by the resident genius guru.
Your insulting comment is correct in that parts of web design work is easy. Processing images, slicing pages, and uploading them is quite easy, but so is writing a CGI form that gathers a user's information and inserts a record into a database. The difficult part of web design is with managing the information architecture of the site, integrating various applications and their project files, as well as dealing with browser and CSS idiosyncrasies. Those aspects are similar to database architecture, systems integration and project files, and dealing with operating system and language idiosyncracies. It's not surprising to me that the difficult parts of both happen to be logically very similar.
The reason web designers are paid less is due to the fact it's a creative and desirable job, so more people are going to apply. It's also a field in which your portfolio makes or breaks you. You are judged quite heavily on the visual quality of your work. Producing visually stunning output, does does not mean you're a HTML/CSS/Javascript god. The problem with this scale of judgment is that it's based on what a manager sees. You and management see a nice illustration and you drastically under-estimate how time consuming creating that illustration can be. Of course, you don't try to reproduce it yourself and find out, but you judge anyway.
Software developers are judged with a different scale, which is generally work experience and education level. You aren't judged by the quality of your code*. You get to hide behind the cloak of mystery, safe in the knowledge management will never see or understand your work. Management only sees whether your product performs the task it's supposed to do or not. It could be an architectural nightmare slapped together with a fragile hodge-podge non-framework--a spaghetti code mess. But, do you lose income if you produce such a colossal piece of shit? No. You get a raise because you "optimized" a query to return results back in 2 seconds instead of the 10 seconds as before.
Which, you posted using a web page. Irrelevant, but funny.
Maintenance changes to the back-end often follows along the lines of adding a new column or table to the database, so it's not like those changes you make are all that complicated to begin with.
Difficulty is relevant. If you're a mainframe developer, you are expected to know your trade. Lots of people can't do what you can do; accountants, lawyers, salesman, delivery boys, etc. Big deal. I know what you do is not that difficult. I've done work in assembler and writing network server processes that many consider "difficult", but in truth it wasn't. Knowing how to do it doesn't make me smarter than a we
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That's why there's acts_as_enterprisey [agilewebdevelopment.com] for us Rails developers.
45k in california, man. (Score:2)
I make $45k.
At least it's up from my first post-college job at Clear Channel Radio -- that was $43k.
The problem is the guy right above me in the reply t
In other news... (Score:2, Funny)
I thought that, for many people, it was very much an "on the side" activity.
Oblig. web design site. (Score:2, Funny)
In summary: don't be doing this [hrodc.com]. It's not big, and it's not clever.
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Holy crap.
It's the mother that spawned MySpace!
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I agree it's not clever, but boy was it big!
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Incredibly, they do offer web design courses:
http://www.hrodc.com/WEB.DESIGN.htm [hrodc.com]
(Surely it's a joke though? A standard page format, each one populated by "Eliza"?)
How the fuck? (Score:2)
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While that page was loading, both cores were 100% utilized on this laptop. I couldn't click on any other tabs, and the Firefox window was ignoring input for a good 15 seconds straight.
Also, 2.0.0.7 is out of date. You should update!
I don't know what's scarier (Score:4, Funny)
About the wages (Score:5, Insightful)
The sign industry went through the same problem when it computerized. Prior to computerization, signmakers had to have the skill to produce letters using a brush. After computerization, anybody could crank out vinyl letters quickly and cheaply. What the signmakers learned was that, if you wanted to make decent money, you actually had to be a good designer. People will pay good money for signs that work. IMHO, people will also pay good money for websites that work. Ah but there's the rub. WORK. For a sign, 'work' means that you get twice as many customers walking into your business. It probably means the same for a website.
To prosper, web designers should probably know a lot more about 'design' (design doesn't mean 'pretty' or 'eye candy') and they should know a lot more about marketing.
PS, to the major (radio, tv and print) advertising company whose website is very pretty but takes five minutes to load - you guys are clueless.
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Sadly, it does not. A person who knows nothing about sign-making can easily look at a sign and see whether it "works" or not. A person who knows nothing about web design can't look at a website and judge whether it "works" or not. Chances are they are using Internet Explorer. Do
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What About IE? (Score:2, Funny)
and then why?
Arrgh (Score:2)
And with the giant turd-ball of shite known as Flash 9.
We just went through this with a design company that others-who-shall-not-be-named hired to "design" our new corporate web site. They delivered pages that were only compatible with IE7 and Flash 9. Actually, they worked with Firefox and Flash 9, too,
Not really just design here... (Score:2, Insightful)
The Job Title for example shows 25% are in fact developers, 19.9% are web designers and even includes writers/editors making up the other 55%. Without understanding which job titles correlate to all the other questions it seems a bit pointless. I know some of the biases compare the different titles but not many.
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But How Many Web Designers Read Slashdot? (Score:2)
My experience -- not academia, not corporate intranet, not "blogosphere," not Church Group, but entertainment industry -- is that people pay pretty well for a new site design. But my guess is that better than half of the people who responded to the survey hardly even speak the same lan
Perception of design. (Score:2)
It has made design tools pervasive. It's created this attitude that good design is something anyone can do provided they know how to use to the software. It's completely screwed with expectations on the part of clients. Some guy in sales believes it should take me a
Not enough VACATION (Score:2, Interesting)
$60k!! (Score:2)
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