September 2nd, 2008
What We’ve Learned in 3 Years at Project83
On Monday, we celebrated Project83’s 3rd Birthday! As with most any birthday, we had the opportunity to reflect on how the company has grown, talk about the cool stuff we have achieved and dream a bit for the future. Although the photo below may be slightly confusing, these are green, blue and grey (sort of) cupcakes my lovely wife made to celebrate.

I’ve been lucky to partner with fantastic guys from the beginning that make our work something to be very proud of. A huge thanks goes out to Denny and Jared, also my partners in our little software startup. I also owe a great deal of thanks to the newest member of our team, Jack Behar. I am continually challenged by these guys every day, and they make what we do a lot of fun.
In order to create value with this post, I wanted to talk about a few things learned over the last 3 years. So here goes …
1. Get Serious About Customer Service
People in our business are not always very good at customer service. Usually it’s a mixture of pride, procrastination and bad communication skills that give geeks in our business a bad name. I continually struggle with the first of these things, but luckily I have been taught the importance of customer service.
I don’t really care how smart you are or how good your work is. Success is still measured by your ability to help people and deliver on what you promised. We’ve never spent a dime to market this business, and have always had plenty of work solely because I take it upon myself to make sure the customer is happy.
We have clients that would probably be happy to point out that I am not perfect, but I believe they could all agree that I give everything I have to helping them succeed on the web.
2. Learn from Mistakes
I have never worked for a web company other than my own. Some might consider it a rather daunting task to start something with no real understanding of how the industry works. I saw it as an extraordinary opportunity to make a lot of mistakes, and learn quickly from them.
Everything I know about managing projects, doing proposals, writing contracts, designing comps and building websites is the result of trying different things and making mistakes. In order to properly learn from a mistake and take action, keep in mind you have to recognize it as a mistake and not make excuses or blame the client.
We have learned something new in every project, and after 3 years of making mistakes, I think we are really starting to do fantastic work. What we have learned by doing in 3 years could never happen by reading textbooks or working at some big agency with silly rules. Just get out there, and savour every single opportunity to learn from a mistake.
3. Promote Yourself!
I see companies all the time that are so mixed up in client work and other priorities that they have no time to spend on their own brand and long-term vision for the company. Why is it that marketing companies always have the worst websites? Why don’t they practice what they preach in marketing their own business? I for one would never hire a web company that did not have a website I really liked.
Fact is, your website, your logo, your copy and your other stuff is the best opportunity to gain new business and make a great first impression. Don’t get so mixed up in the here and now with client work that you forget to always be making your own stuff better.
We are actually working on a re-design of this site right now. It’s hard because it takes a ton of time and does not bring in immediate income, but seeing the big picture means knowing how important the new site will be in attracting our ideal clients down the road. It is a great long-term investment and gives us the opportunity to work on a project where WE are the boss.
Here’s to many more years of helping people, making mistakes and trying to improve all that we do to promote our services.
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