Thursday, 17 May 2012

Category » Marketing

Turn Your Marketing Pieces into Marketing Masterpieces with These Five Design Techniques

by Karen Saunders

It’s almost 5 o’clock on Friday afternoon. Do you know where your newest marketing pieces are? If you’re a small business owner, they may be buried on your desk because you’ve got so many other important details to handle. Or they’re still sitting on your assistant’s desk where she’s staring at them hopelessly. She’s an admin assistant, for heaven’s sake, not a designer, and she knows what she’s produced so far is not very memorable or effective.

All of us would like to think our product is so good, our services so unique, they’ll simply sell themselves. Not so! Strong branding, powerful images, compelling web pages and outstanding marketing pieces make or break that upward sales curve you crave so urgently. In today’s market, your customers and clients are influenced more than ever by the visual presentation of your marketing pieces. If they are well designed, they’re likely to be read, remembered and respected.

Here are five simple, but essential tricks of the designer’s trade that you can use immediately, at little cost, and with excellent results to profit you both short and long term.

1. Take advantage of quality clip art and stock photos
Chances are you’re not an illustrator or photographer, but that shouldn’t stop you from using professional illustrations or photos in your marketing piece. You can use clip art–sometimes at a very low price–to enhance your layout. Check out the Internet for sites that feature clip art or stock photo libraries that provide a wide variety of quality and prices to choose from. Use the same style of graphics throughout your piece to create a consistent look.

2. Add dramatic contrast
Using contrast means having clearly apparent differences among the design elements that come together on a page, business card, or computer screen. These include contrasting colors, shapes, fonts, and sizes of text and graphics. A high degree of contrast helps create dramatic interest and draws the viewer’s eye to specific areas of your page. White space also provides contrast, aids legibility, and gives the reader’s eye a resting point. Controlling the amount of white space you use affects the overall page design.

3. Repeat certain elements
Good design calls for repeating certain elements throughout your piece to make the whole piece come together visually. For example, use the same color, shape, and size for all your bullets. Also make all your headers the same size, color, and font. Go for more and repeat specific graphic elements (e.g., boxes, banners, rule lines, etc.) throughout the piece.

4. Pay attention to proximity
Proximity refers to the exact spatial relationships between elements. For example, you create visual relationships between photos and their captions by keeping the captions close to the photos. For subheads, a pro positions them closer to the text below than the text above. Apply this principle of exact spatial relationship to all other graphic and text elements where appropriate. When you review your work, make sure you’ve applied this spacing consistently throughout.

5. Know when to use serif and sans serif fonts
In general, when you have a large amount of text, it is best to use a serif font because it is easier to read than a sans serif font. Serifs are the tiny horizontal strokes attached to the letters which help the reader’s eyes flow from letter to letter. Bold sans serif (without serifs) is good for headlines and subheads because they slow the reader down thus bringing more attention to each word or concept. Some examples of serif fonts that are good for body copy are: Times, New Century Schoolbook, Garamond and Goudy. Some examples of sans serif fonts that are good for headlines are: Arial Bold, Helvetica Black, Univers Bold and Trade Gothic.

It’s 9 o’clock Monday morning. You’re smiling because you have incorporated these important design elements into your marketing strategy. You’re ready to face a new week with vastly improved opportunities to keep smiling at a growing bottom line.

Copyright © Karen Saunders

Karen Saunders is the owner of MacGraphics Services, a unique design firm for today’s entrepreneur.  Karen’s book, Turn Eye Appeal Into Buy Appeal: How to easily transform your marketing pieces into dazzling, persuasive sales tools! is a comprehensive resource that teaches you how to create effective marketing materials, give marketing projects a professional appearance, and execute projects using ready-made checklists to immediately begin assisting clients with the planning, developing and creating of marketing materials.  To learn more, visit http://www.marketerschoice.com/app/?af=1090208.  You can contact Karen at 888-796-7300, or Karen@macgraphics.net.

Popularity: unranked [?]


Leave your comment

Three Visual Branding Secrets To Make Your Business Memorable

by Karen Saunders

Have you ever asked yourself why a competitor’s business gets more attention than yours? The answer just may have to do with the elements that go into how memorable the business is. And that has to do with branding.

But exactly what is branding, anyway? Think of branding as predefining what a company is all about in the minds of its clients. Good branding differentiates your products and services in a positive way that really sticks in the minds of potential customers.

Let’s say you are traveling around town in your fifteen year old compact car with its miniscule trunk and long lost shocks. There is no way this vehicle can haul the two tons of flagstone you want for your patio, let alone manage the turf, trees, soil and other materials you will need for your backyard landscaping project. It is definitely time for a new set of wheels, but whatever you buy has to be sturdy and commodious. You ponder the possibilities. Almost immediately the perfect vehicle comes to mind, you make a u-turn, and you head to your local Chevrolet dealer to look at Chevy trucks, unconsciously singing the words “like a rock,” under your breath. Why did you think Chevy truck?

  • Attractive, easy to read, and memorable logo;
  • Great tag line; and
  • Consistency of product marketing design elements.

Assuming your own product is fabulous, it all comes down to image. Graphic design can play a huge part in that image. But what are some key things to consider?

A great logo is key.

You have already given a great deal of attention to your company name and believe it speaks to who you are and what you do. Great! Now you need to wrap a graphic image around that name to carve out a prime piece of real estate in the mind of your target customer. That is exactly what a great logo can do.

Keep in mind that a powerful logo:

  • has a strong, balanced image with no little extras that clutter its look;
  • is distinctive and bold in design, making it easy to see at a glance;
  • has graphic imagery that looks appropriate for your business;
  • works well with your company name;
  • is done in an easy to read font;
  • communicates your business clearly; and
  • looks good in black and white, as well as in color.

A distinctive tag line is key.

A tag line is a 3 to 9 word phrase that accompanies your logo. It expresses your company’s most important benefits and/or what you want your customers to remember about working with you. Think of it as the words you want to linger in your target customer’s mind about you and what you have to offer.

Great tag lines appear to be effortlessly created because they just seem to flow. In fact, creating and refining one takes time, just like designing a great logo. The benefits of taking the time to do craft a great tag line lie in their stickiness. Great tag lines stick in your memory.

For example, if you saw only the words “Don’t go into the water,” flashed on a screen, there is a good chance you would see the gaping jaw of a shark in your mind’s eye, an image straight from the poster for the movie, Jaws. That phrase just happened to be the movie’s tag line and it worked so well that when Jaws 2 was released, it was accompanied by the tag line “Just when you thought it was safe to go back into the water…” The Jaws tag line worked because it summarized the entire movie in five words and left an indelible mark on the memory of anyone who saw the movie.

Similarly, the phrase, “Like a rock,” expresses what Chevrolet wants people to think about their trucks.

Consistent visual identity is key.

If you are going to capture that prime piece of real estate in the customer’s mind, you must provide not only a compelling image, but a consistent one. The Statue of Liberty just may be one of the most compelling images in the world. But what if you owned the rights to that image, put it on your business card, then put the image of an American Bald Eagle on your stationery and the Liberty Bell on your web site. The American Bald Eagle and the Liberty Bell are also compelling images, but as a group, each dilutes the impact of the other.

Each of the three images has its own distinct personality. You may be tempted to give your stationery, website, business card, brochures, and other marketing materials different visual personalities, but to do risks the equivalent of having the Statue of Liberty competing with American Bald Eagle and Liberty Bell.

Likewise, if Chevrolet used the famous image of Rosie the Riveter as a design element to sell their trucks, it would certainly convey toughness, but it would be inconsistent with their logo, tag line, and the product itself. They stick to images of trucks eating up dirt roads, along with their famous logo and tag line.  It works, in part, because it is consistent.

All of the materials that represent you, from business cards to brochures, need to have image consistency in order to be immediately recognizable by your customers…and potential customers…as being related to the unique brand that is your company. Logo, color scheme, fonts, and layout that are consistent from letterhead to business card and from envelope to ad suggest credibility and stability, in addition to taking up more of that prime mental real estate by virtue of repetition. Inconsistency of graphic elements among materials not only suggests uncertainty and sloppiness, it is just plain forgettable.

Creating a great logo, writing a distinctive tag line, and maintaining consistency among all your marketing materials will take you a long way towards creating a brand that just might be memorable enough to give your company the beach front property in the minds of your customers that leaves them thinking only of you.

Copyright © Karen Saunders

Karen Saunders is the owner of MacGraphics Services, a unique design firm for today’s entrepreneur.  Karen’s book, Turn Eye Appeal Into Buy Appeal: How to easily transform your marketing pieces into dazzling, persuasive sales tools! is a comprehensive resource that teaches you how to create effective marketing materials, give marketing projects a professional appearance, and execute projects using ready-made checklists to immediately begin assisting clients with the planning, developing and creating of marketing materials.  To learn more, visit http://www.marketerschoice.com/app/?af=1090208.  You can contact Karen at 888-796-7300, or Karen@macgraphics.net.

Popularity: unranked [?]


Leave your comment

More Articles


  • What is a Social Media Manager?
  •  
     
    You may not be familiar with the title, Social Media Manager.  Well there are alot of us out there.  To give you an idea what we do, I’ve come up with this list.
    Save your business time and money by outsourcing these social tasks.
     
     

    Posting of content, including articles, events, photos, and starting discussion groups,
    Moderating comments on [...]


  • Networking 101
  • by Caroline Jarzabek, CMJ Virtual Office Manager
    Lately there seems to be a lot of talk about how to get your business known and how to find clients. Since September is rolling around before we know it, this might be an opportune time to address networking.
    Networking is such a vital part of growing a business, especially [...]


  • Turn Your Marketing Pieces into Marketing Masterpieces with These Five Design Techniques
  • by Karen Saunders
    It’s almost 5 o’clock on Friday afternoon. Do you know where your newest marketing pieces are? If you’re a small business owner, they may be buried on your desk because you’ve got so many other important details to handle. Or they’re still sitting on your assistant’s desk where she’s staring at them hopelessly. [...]


  • Elements of Financial Planning
  • by Sharon Alderson, CFP, FDS
    Your chances of success are heightened by clearly defined objectives and a strategy for reaching your goals. So to get the most for your money, you need a plan. But how should you go about formulating an investment plan?  The following steps will get you started
    Establish goals: Consider why you want [...]


  • Three Visual Branding Secrets To Make Your Business Memorable
  • by Karen Saunders
    Have you ever asked yourself why a competitor’s business gets more attention than yours? The answer just may have to do with the elements that go into how memorable the business is. And that has to do with branding.
    But exactly what is branding, anyway? Think of branding as predefining what a company is [...]