It's easy for me to say this, but the smartest business owners I have met are those who seek the advice of experts outside their comfort zone. The ones who think they're experts at everything, are typically their own worst enemy. A lot is tied up in ego, and I think I may have posted my blog post once before on building a company of giants (here it is again in case you hadn't read it before
http://graphicd-signs.blogspot.com/2011/04/how-your-ego-may-be-holding-back-your.html ). But the points I make in it I truly believe.
We've certainly done a lot of sign company logos, but I don't consider it to be false advertising to brand a sign company. Some are not design-centric, but does that mean they themselves should promote an amateurish brand? Some are doing great production work, going after larger accounts, and they need to look the part if they're going to go after those lines of business.
A good brand sets the level of expectation for every subsequent interaction with that company. What expectation do you want your brand to set with potential clients?
If one truly believes their brand is their company's most valuable asset, you wouldn't be going to 99 Designs, and getting a $100 worth of crap. The story above from Tim is so typical, yet ironic in so many ways. People's buying habits are first influenced by brand perception. If you want to look homegrown, don't expect clients to pay non-homegrown prices. If more shops understood that, they'd make so much more money themselves. Seems to painfully obvious to me, sometimes I just scratch my head.
The frequent refrain 'I can't get that money here' or 'I can't get that type of work here' is just a crutch for refusing to look in the mirror. I can tell you why you can't the money. Because you don't look like you
should get the money. Simple as that.
There was a point in my career when I was slugging it out for $350-400 for a set of truck doors, like every one else. I just decided it wasn't for me, took a hard look at where I wanted to go, and presented a different image, a different approach, and said design is what I want to sell, not vinyl by the pound. It's not rocket science.