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Designer VS. Client - Comedy Series
- Created on Tuesday, 19 April 2011 12:10
Found these videos on YouTube. Although they were made to be comical. This is the life of a graphic designer! Enjoy in good fun.
Introducing yourself as a "Graphic Designer" to the uninitiated, is a nightmare. Getting started is awkward and the conversations turn out to be bizarre. This scenario has been based on the creator's personal experiences. I am sure many designers have had similar experiences of this nature.
Jill the graphic designer deals with a cheap and stingy client. What she does, is what many graphic designers wish they could say but can't.
Web Designer vs. Cheap Client
The Normal Design Client
D-I-Y – Graphic Design Rules
- Created on Thursday, 14 April 2011 10:07
Below are some rules-of-thumb the next time you plan to throw together a flyer, postcard, or brochure on your own. Remember, never compromise your image or brand. If you can’t figure something out, contact us, and we’ll take care of it for you!
Fonts
- No more than 2 fonts per project. Try pairing a decorative font for headlines, and a readable font for the text.

- The standard font sizes for readable body copy is 12 pt, but consider using 14 pt for flyers that have minimal text, and for pieces that will be distributed to children or elderly.
- Avoid hyphenating text, or leaving one word left on a line by itself (orphans).
Images
- Make sure you are using higher resolution images for printed pieces. A standard high resolution image is 300 dpi.
- Do not take a small jpeg or gif and try to blow it up, it will become pixelated.
Layout
- Make sure there is enough contrast between your text, and your background.
- Leave plenty of white space around your paragraphs of body copy and graphics. It allows the eye to rest.
- Use borders when you want to frame and draw attention to information.
Templates
- Microsoft offers some great templates to get you started publishing documents on your own using Microsoft Office software. Check them out, and call us when you are ready to energize your piece.
Branding Basics
- Created on Thursday, 14 April 2011 10:20
WHO ARE YOU?
Take a close look at your company and why it exists in your market. What is your story? Sometimes the product or service that we are selling has a positive benefit within our local communities. If this sounds like you, then part of your brand experience is how you benefit the community. You are now selling something with a by-product involving a social benefit. A recycler would fit into this model nicely. This would make an outstanding brand story.
YOUR BRAND NAME…
In my daily reading of my favorite blogs from around the planet, one I especially enjoy is David Airey from Scotland. The discussion there centered on company naming and the use of mongrams. If you’d like to use initials as your name be sure that, that is how you answer your telephone and it is how you are known. Many times I seen companies use a monogram as their logo but answer the phone as a full or partial name. This is absolutely confusing to your customers. Personally I frown on monograms because they say nothing about what your company does. It doesn’t inspire. Over time after a brand has matured can monograms take on a meaningful life of their own. Examples could be IBM, A&P and BMW. None of these companies started out this way.
As a fall back, you could adopt a monogram as an icon that works with the main name. I did this with a firm named Commerceworx and it’s monogram CWX.
YOUR BRAND IMAGE
What can you do to strengthen your brand image?
One excellent way is to choose a color icon. ING Direct does it with orange. UPS with brown. Use a color palette that uniquely identifies your company within it’s market environment. Take a look at all the competition and choose a color that all the rest are not using and then incorporate that color in everything that you do. Another thing to remember is to make sure that all your marketing materials portray a professional brand image. Every item should be consistent. There is nothing more important than this when you want your audience to take you seriously as a professional. An inconsistent brand image not only confuses the viewer but does nothing to help build your brand story. You want to build a culture of familiarity. Over time the viewer builds a comfort level and trust with your brand image.
YOUR BRAND LOGO
As with your brand image your brand logo identifies who you are. If it has been professionally developed it will be consistent with your color icons and total brand image. Your brand logo should position your company from an emotional vantage point. In the hands of a professional, your logo can make your company look bigger if you wish. It can position you as a progressive or a traditional company. How old a company do you want to appear? Your brand logo communicates on an emotional level. Your brand logo is the introduction to your over all brand experience. Be sure it tells the story you want told. Amateurs design logos as art. Brand professionals design communications solutions – there is a huge and costly difference. The cost is price of communicating an effective brand message.
YOUR PERSONAL BRAND
Your personal brand is every bit as important to your overall corporate brand in that it too must be consistent with what you brand stands for. If you have taken the time to discover and analyze your corporate brand, the brand values you possess should be a part of your personal brand as well. In your day-to-day operation of your company, how you are perceived also impacts your overall brand experience for your customers. Whether they trust you, enjoy your company or look to you for advice speaks to how successfully you’ve grown your brand. Since you are your brand, it benefits you stay on top of every touch point of brand.
These are just some of the Brand Basics you should adopt to increase sales with a successful brand.
3 Creative Things You Can Do With Your Business Cards
- Created on Thursday, 14 April 2011 10:20
Below are just a few tips to consider, and examples, the next time you need to order a set of business cards.
- Make your business cards a unique size or color.
- Dollar Bill Sized Card – Print a photo of a dollar bill on one side of the card, and your information on the other side with a tagline on how your product/service will save your client money.
- Eye-Catching Color – Don’t print a business card with a blank back ever again. Instead, consider making the background on that side a bright color, and placing your website address in the middle of it.
- Include valuable information on your business card.
- Industry Fact – Print a compelling industry fact on your business card to help establish creditability with your clients…Example: “Did you know 68% of emails are never opened? Increase your delivery stats by working with Janicco on your next email marketing campaign.”
- Personal Fact – At networking events, we exhaust ourselves trying to make lasting impressions with our new contacts. Try adding a couple personal interests to your business card so others can remember you on Monday morning when they return to the office. Example: Jaime Conway, CEO, Loves Jazz and Oil Painting
- Once you have business cards printed, it’s important to get them in the hands of other people. People generally hold on to business cards more than they do flyers, so distribute them just as aggressively.
- Send a few more cards to a client at the end of a project/service and ask for the referrals.
- Include a business card in all your outgoing mail, including payments.
- Share your cards with everyone you come in regular contact with; coaches, teachers, beauticians, bankers, lawyers, bus drivers, etc.
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