Posts Tagged ‘Design’

Typos that look pretty

May 11 2010

We dug up a nice blog post about typography that reminds us to pay attention to more than words. Discussions about typography sometimes regress into snobbery. Sometimes we over think font selection, but it’s important. Legibility, thematic tie-ins, and mood are all important considerations when picking the right font for you microsite or website.

From time to time we surf the web looking for content made credible by the designer’s choice of font. Our next design could undoubtedly be influenced by the work of others and often is. Take a look at the work on I Love Typography and recommend others. Always nice to share.

Too much red, neat font selection

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Good vs. Bad

January 28 2010

Over the years we know only a handful of things to be true 99% of the time. One is that the more people empowered to make suggestions that “have” to be included in a website the worse that website becomes.

A good analogy and example of bad is your t.v. remote control. Just because it has room for 100 buttons doesn’t mean it has to have 100 buttons. Keep the message simple. Keep the site clean and navigable.

Think about a remote with 10 buttons. What would you keep and what would you throw away?

blog_g_v_b1

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Clever Bags and Buses

January 25 2010

This will help kick start your brain on a Monday morning.

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Chest Thumping

February 27 2009

Sometimes you build something good. Our recent self-promotional campaign is really starting to turn heads, ours included. It’s success is the stuff of legend. If I told you more it would ruin the surprise, instead send you name and address to contact@wefightboredom.com. You’ll be in on our little secret. Read what others are saying:

“This is the best landing page series/microsite I’ve ever experienced! Just amazing.”
Susan Marie
Advanced Image Direct

“Awesome example of imagery and interaction.”
Curtis DeGroote
Bulldog Marketing Technologies

“I just went to your company’s site - VERY GOOD! You’re doing very good work. In fact, I think it is EXTREMELY good.”
Dean Sparks
BrightDart

“Keep up the good work - there is way too much boring creative out there so lots of clients need your help.”
Steve Tingiris
Prospect Smarter

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Can the “Less is More” Principle Build Trust?

December 10 2008

At VLG we consistently have to guide our clients toward the “less is more” principle. Marketers want to make the most of their valuable advertising real estate, whether its on a billboard, in a print ad, in direct marketing collateral or even their corporate website, to name a few. Can you blame them? That white space is expensive! When you consider the massive number of messages your target audience is exposed to on a daily basis, how do you reach them, stand out and make them want what you”re offering?

Keep your message simple. You all know this, but the pull to tell your audience everything at once is so great, the reality is that few messages in advertising actually deliver a focused message. The result? The message gets lost, overlooked and reaches no one. Expand your reach and get the results you want from your message by following these five simple, and often overlooked, steps:

1. Do your research. What is your competition offering? What does your product or service offer that is different. Highlight that and explain it concisely without using industry jargon or buzzwords.

2. Get to the point. Keep your message focused on one product or service at at time. Don”t try to be everything to all people, but be everything to some people.

3. Change your perspective. Instead of screaming how great your company or your product is, change your perspective to that of your ideal customer. What message would they like to hear that will make them take action? Be respectful of their time while you speak to them.

4. Initiate a dialog. Your customers and potential customers want to have a say. Don”t do all of the talking. Encourage them to reach out to you to share their side. You”ll learn more by listening than by telling them everything you have to offer at one time. Joseph Jaffe, President of the marketing agency, Crayon, and author of “Join the Conversation”, proves this point by clarifying the distinction between talking “at” someone and talking “with” someone. Jaffe further discusses his five conversation don”ts in this video clip provided by Ad Age: http://adage.com/brightcove/single.php?bcpid=1370868150&bctid=1612710731

5. Test. You”re eager to see how successful your message will be. Improve that success by testing your message on members of your customer base or prospective customers - not your colleagues. Your audience will provide much better feedback about what resonates with them and how well it reaches them in the market.

Used together, these five steps will better position you as a problem solver, who respects their customer’’s time and cares about listening to what they have to say, their problems and challenges. It positions you to develop a relationship which builds trust and don”t people buy from people they trust? Take a look at your current marketing message. Could your message benefit from a stern application of the “less is more” principle?

http://adage.com/brightcove/single.php?bcpid=1370868150&bctid=1612710731

More links to Joseph Jaffe’’s marketing insight:

www.crayonville.com
www.jaffejuice.com

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