So I’ve left my previous job where I’ve spent a large majority of my professional career to start my own firm. I am developing my website and I probably have 10 projects that I would like to prominently display, with my own professional photos and descriptions. The question is, how do I go about giving credit to my previous employer on these projects in a discreet way? Do I skip the credit and add my role in the project as to be specific? I guess it’s part legality and part morals. I was not the architect of record on any of them, however, I was the lead designer and full time project manager on all of them, direct to client and GC. In fact the architect of record was rarely on any of the projects. Simply asking my previous employer is not an option since my resignation was shocking to them and may not be in a ‘giving’ mood.
Thoughts?
Wilma Buttfit
Mar 6, 18 4:11 am
I have a portfolio on a website instead of a business website. I list the firm name with the images and say "work completed while at xxx firm". No client calls me because they stumble across my website and want to hire, it serves as a quick way to flip through work I've done and then I get hired. Seems to work well for the start-up phase. Good luck!
Non Sequitur
Mar 6, 18 7:37 am
Give full credit to past firms. We’ve recently set the lawyers on a past employee for claiming past projects as theirs without acknowledging our firm.
So I’ve left my previous job where I’ve spent a large majority of my professional career to start my own firm. I am developing my website and I probably have 10 projects that I would like to prominently display, with my own professional photos and descriptions. The question is, how do I go about giving credit to my previous employer on these projects in a discreet way? Do I skip the credit and add my role in the project as to be specific? I guess it’s part legality and part morals. I was not the architect of record on any of them, however, I was the lead designer and full time project manager on all of them, direct to client and GC. In fact the architect of record was rarely on any of the projects. Simply asking my previous employer is not an option since my resignation was shocking to them and may not be in a ‘giving’ mood.
Thoughts?
I have a portfolio on a website instead of a business website. I list the firm name with the images and say "work completed while at xxx firm". No client calls me because they stumble across my website and want to hire, it serves as a quick way to flip through work I've done and then I get hired. Seems to work well for the start-up phase. Good luck!
Give full credit to past firms. We’ve recently set the lawyers on a past employee for claiming past projects as theirs without acknowledging our firm.