Dribbble was once the creative community, and I loved it. I still remember how excited I was just to get an elusive invite to join. It was a place where designers connected, shared work in progress, and built careers — including my own.
Ten years ago, Dribbble played a pivotal role in our growth, helping us reach instrumental new clients and build lasting relationships. It was a platform fueled by creativity and connection.
Last week, Dribbble changed their Terms of Service, most notably forbidding any contact details or links, and requiring all payments to go through them. For a creative portfolio site, that’s a big dealbreaker for a lot of people.
This isn’t a rant; I swear I have a point.
It is: When a brand shifts from serving its community to taking from it, the brand suffers — massively. Dribbble’s continued push over the past few years has sent a clear signal, intentional or not, that its mission is to drive revenue.
As a business, I understand their desire to grow revenue, but if you lead with that as your “brand,” you no longer have a brand. It’s just a business.
This isn’t just a Dribbble problem. It’s a fundamental branding lesson for any business: You can’t build lasting success by prioritizing transactions over trust. The strongest brands don’t extract value; they create it. They solve real problems, foster real connections, and let revenue become the result.
So, as you think about your brand’s next move, ask yourself: Are you building for people — or just for profit?