Good Design Makes Good Sense
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Title: Good Design Makes Good Sense
Word Count: 404
Author: Wendy Maynard
Email: receipts@kinesisinc.com
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Good Design Makes Good Sense
Copyright 2005 Marketing Maven
Organized your pencils and pens lately? Sorted your clothes
into a logical system in your drawers? Then you already
understand the basic elements of good design: it's
practical, it's systematic, and it makes life easier.
In the same way, marketing materials that use good design
make business easier for your customers. Layout and
presentation make the difference as to whether people will
understand your products and services. This is why a
well-designed ad outperforms one that's thrown together
using intuition alone.
Well-designed materials become even more important as their
complexity grows. For instance, an ad typically gets
someone's attention for five seconds. In contrast, a
brochure has the potential to claim much more of your
prospect's time and commitment. Hand a customer a
poorly-formatted, hard-to-read piece and you may lose them
forever.
So is good design really as simple as organizing your tie
collection? Well, not quite. But there are some hard and
fast rules you can follow. Use this checklist for your next
project. Structure and time your piece correctly, and then
brace yourself for every businessperson's dream: informed
customers who are ready to do business with your company.
Five Basics of Good Design
1. Never obscure your message. The KISS (Keep It Simple,
Smarty) rule applies equally well to writing copy, creating
graphics, and choosing a format.
2. Work backwards from your goal to your marketing piece.
Listen to your customers' needs before you make a decision
about how to fill them. A website may not initially appeal
to you as a tool, but if your customer base is using the
Internet, it may be a great way to deliver your message.
3. Present similar kinds of information in similar ways.
People love to look for patterns. And we feel good when we
find them, so let your customers in on that happy feeling.
Chances are it will help them retain your information
better and use it more effectively.
4. Save special effects for the 4th of July. Just because
you can print in all caps in that cool new font, it doesn't
mean you should. Readability wins out over gimmicks every
time.
5. Be practical and be dedicated. Consider all the steps
involved in a project, from the time you spend creating it
all the way through to postage or follow-up calls. Commit
to following through on every item or your project may not
succeed.
About the Author:
Wendy Maynard, your friendly Marketing Maven, publishes
REMARKABLE MARKETING, a free weekly ezine for
entrepreneurs, business owners, and freelancers. If you're
ready to skyrocket your sales, easily attract customers,
and make more money, sign up for her FREE ezine and
marketing report now at www.gomarketingmaven.com
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