I think what most of the younger members are missing, and what us "geezers" are getting at is that it's
not the fact that you
are 14, 15, 16. It's the fact that people won't take you seriously, much less give you money (unless they're family of friends), if you don't present yourself in a professional manner. Did you read the original post?
Quote:
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i am looking for neone looking for a website layout to be sold at an offerable price, if u r looking for one either post back on this board or im me on aim at rollerrebel919
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If not, let me break it down for you.
(1) Spelling like Prince is just fine and dandy if you're chatting with friends on ICQ. If you're trying to sell your work, you
must be professional about it. I would never trust anyone that wants to take my money by writing "i can design ur website 4 real cheap. r u interested?"
(2) Puctuation and Grammer. Regardless of how talented you are, if you don't know how to capitalize letters, use periods where necessary,
not use commas where unnecessary, learning the value of the Return key, not only will people not be able to read and make sense of what you wrote, but they won't take you seriously.
(3) Spelling and Word Definitions. Learn how to spell. Learn the meaning of words. Know when a word you are using does not exist. Example:
Offerable. Capable of being offered. Used in the sentence above,
"looking for a website layout to be sold at an capable of being offered price"
I have nothing against younger people getting into webdesign/programming. In fact, I fully support it. But first and foremost, you have to
learn. Not just learn how to code, how to use Photoshop, how to do relational tables in a MySQL database....but learn the etiquette of the professional world. At 14, you aren't old enough to have a 9-5 job that you absolutely hate because you deal with stupid people day in and day out. You haven't had to bite your tongue when an irate customer (who is totally wrong, btw) will not let you get a word in edgewise when you're trying to explain a situation that cannot be helped. You have not learned the value of "professional appearance" yet. You are still, for lack of a better word, naive.
But it's okay. Because you're still 14.

Just don't try to enter into the adult world when you're not ready for it.