The Business Side of Graphic Design: Client Briefs, Revisions, and Project Management
By Delight Technical College | School of Media & AI- Graphic Design | 2026
Creative talent gets a graphic designer noticed. Professional project management gets them paid, repeat business, and a sustainable career. Many talented designers struggle commercially not because of weak design skills but because of poor client management (unclear briefs, scope creep, endless revision cycles, and frustrated clients). Delight Technical College’s Graphic Design training addresses these business realities directly, alongside the creative and technical curriculum.
📋 Taking a Proper Client Brief
A poorly defined brief is the root cause of most problematic design projects. Before any design work begins, a professional designer must extract clear, specific information from the client:
- What is the deliverable, specifically? (a logo, a full brand identity, a single social media graphic, a brochure)
- Who is the target audience for this design?
- What is the timeline, and is it realistic for the scope of work?
- What is the budget, and does it match the scope?
- What examples does the client like and dislike, and why?
- Are there existing brand guidelines or visual assets that must be incorporated?
- What is the approval process, and who has final sign-off?
📑 Creating a Clear Proposal and Contract
Once the brief is understood, a professional response includes a written proposal specifying exactly what will be delivered, when, for what price, and under what terms protecting both designer and client from misunderstanding:
- Scope of work- precisely what is included (and, by implication, what is not)
- Number of concepts or initial directions to be presented
- Number of revision rounds included in the price
- Timeline with key milestones
- Payment terms- deposit, milestone payments, and final payment
- Usage rights and final file delivery format
🔄 Managing Revisions Professionally
Revision requests are a normal and expected part of design work but unmanaged revision cycles are one of the most common sources of designer frustration and unprofitability. Professional designers manage revisions by:
- Defining how many revision rounds are included in the original price
- Charging clearly for revisions beyond the agreed scope
- Asking clients to consolidate all feedback into a single round wherever possible, rather than responding to feedback piecemeal
- Distinguishing between revisions (refining the agreed direction) and new requests (a fundamentally different brief)- the latter requiring a new scope and price
⏰ Project Timeline Management
- Building realistic timelines that account for client review and feedback delays, not just design production time
- Communicating proactively about progress- clients who feel informed are more patient and trusting
- Setting clear expectations about response times for both designer and client feedback
💳 Getting Paid Reliably
- Requiring a deposit before beginning work- protects against non-payment for completed work
- Milestone payments for larger projects, releasing final files only upon final payment
- Clear, professional invoicing with defined payment terms
🎓 Business Skills Within Delight’s Design Curriculum
Delight’s Graphic Design Trade Test integrates these professional practice principles alongside technical design training recognising that commercial success requires both creative skill and professional process discipline.
“The most talented designer in Nairobi will struggle commercially without clear briefs, fair contracts, and managed expectations. At Delight, we train designers who are as professional in their process as they are creative in their output.”
📍 Delight Technical College | Muindi Mbingu Street, Opposite Jevanjee Gardens, Nairobi | +254 722 533 771 | www.delight.ac.ke


