Professional discourse and professional identities at cross-purposes: Designer or entrepreneur?

What happens when designer dreams meet business reality? This paper illustrates how a group of professional designers experienced emotional tensions and conflicts of personal and professional identity during an eight-week voluntary course on business and entrepreneurship for the creative professions...

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Main Author: Birgitte Norlyk
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Aalborg University Open Publishing 2016-06-01
Series:Globe
Subjects:
Online Access:https://somaesthetics.aau.dk/index.php/globe/article/view/1244
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author Birgitte Norlyk
author_facet Birgitte Norlyk
author_sort Birgitte Norlyk
collection DOAJ
description What happens when designer dreams meet business reality? This paper illustrates how a group of professional designers experienced emotional tensions and conflicts of personal and professional identity during an eight-week voluntary course on business and entrepreneurship for the creative professions. The designers' discourse, which revolved around ideals of commitment towards artistic integrity, aesthetics and design clashed with the hard core discourse of business which highlighted practical concerns relating especially to market considerations and the necessity of adapting designs to existing means of production. Intellectually, the designers agreed on the need to develop business skills to improve their financial situation and enhance their employability. Emotionally, however, their choice of discourse, metaphors and framing strategies reflected a series of professional and personal conflicts and struggles of identity.      The study illustrates the oscillating nature of designers' identity negotiations between business and design but offers no one-size-fits-all solution to business training for the creative professions. The data reflect that identity negotiations do not take the form of a liniar process in which logic, material concerns and business sense will eventually prevail. To facilitate the potential incorporation of business thinking into the professional identity of designers, the data indicate that business related training targeting the creative professions would benefit from paying increased attention to the influence of professional discourse and sensemaking patterns on the construction of personal and professional selves.
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spelling doaj.art-d2f8dc02a3ae45f3932670e5ae2e86d62024-04-02T09:53:44ZdanAalborg University Open PublishingGlobe2246-88382016-06-01310.5278/ojs.globe.v3i0.1244Professional discourse and professional identities at cross-purposes: Designer or entrepreneur?Birgitte Norlyk0University of Southern DenmarkWhat happens when designer dreams meet business reality? This paper illustrates how a group of professional designers experienced emotional tensions and conflicts of personal and professional identity during an eight-week voluntary course on business and entrepreneurship for the creative professions. The designers' discourse, which revolved around ideals of commitment towards artistic integrity, aesthetics and design clashed with the hard core discourse of business which highlighted practical concerns relating especially to market considerations and the necessity of adapting designs to existing means of production. Intellectually, the designers agreed on the need to develop business skills to improve their financial situation and enhance their employability. Emotionally, however, their choice of discourse, metaphors and framing strategies reflected a series of professional and personal conflicts and struggles of identity.      The study illustrates the oscillating nature of designers' identity negotiations between business and design but offers no one-size-fits-all solution to business training for the creative professions. The data reflect that identity negotiations do not take the form of a liniar process in which logic, material concerns and business sense will eventually prevail. To facilitate the potential incorporation of business thinking into the professional identity of designers, the data indicate that business related training targeting the creative professions would benefit from paying increased attention to the influence of professional discourse and sensemaking patterns on the construction of personal and professional selves.https://somaesthetics.aau.dk/index.php/globe/article/view/1244Professional discourseprofessional identityDesign
spellingShingle Birgitte Norlyk
Professional discourse and professional identities at cross-purposes: Designer or entrepreneur?
Globe
Professional discourse
professional identity
Design
title Professional discourse and professional identities at cross-purposes: Designer or entrepreneur?
title_full Professional discourse and professional identities at cross-purposes: Designer or entrepreneur?
title_fullStr Professional discourse and professional identities at cross-purposes: Designer or entrepreneur?
title_full_unstemmed Professional discourse and professional identities at cross-purposes: Designer or entrepreneur?
title_short Professional discourse and professional identities at cross-purposes: Designer or entrepreneur?
title_sort professional discourse and professional identities at cross purposes designer or entrepreneur
topic Professional discourse
professional identity
Design
url https://somaesthetics.aau.dk/index.php/globe/article/view/1244
work_keys_str_mv AT birgittenorlyk professionaldiscourseandprofessionalidentitiesatcrosspurposesdesignerorentrepreneur