Landing pages are a fantastic way to convert leads into customers. A potential customer sees something that interests them. They click your call to action link or scan a QR code on an advertisement and end up on a page specifically designed to convert them. So how do you maximize the potential of your landing page?
Make the value immediately relevant
Landing pages are typically created to entice potential customers who have seen something of interest. When people arrive at the landing page, you want to capture their attention by showing them immediately the value you have to offer. Use a short paragraph or a bulleted list to outline exactly what the customer can hope to receive from you.
To make the value even more obvious, include positive customer reviews regarding the product or information you're offering. A line or two of customer recommendations at the bottom of the page will help boost sales, as prospects will feel encouraged to join the group of already satisfied customers.
Provide enough value that people won't mind filling out a form or request
The landing page is a page of give and take. People arrive looking for the value they were promised. In return, you ask for information you can use to improve your marketing to them and others like them. The trick is asking for information that's comparable to the value they're looking to receive.
If your offer is a two-page PDF with tips for caring for a washing machine, you won't receive many conversions if you ask people to fill out a 20-line form to receive it. The form is kind of like the payment you're asking customers to make, so you need to make sure you price what you're offering accordingly.
Have a layout that encourages people to convert
Never underestimate the importance of a good layout to encourage conversions. Pictures are a fantastic resource for helping customers connect with your product or service. Include a basic picture that helps customers connect with your offer. For example, you might include a stock image of a book, with the title of your ebook on the front. This will help customers resonate with your tangible offer.
Your layout should also be oriented entirely toward encouraging customers to convert. Remove your navigation links along the top of the page to encourage people to stay on the page and move forward. Include social share buttons along the bottom of your page to make it easy for customers to let their friends and social circles know about the amazing deal you have to offer. One of the best types of advertising is word of mouth. People inherently trust what they hear from people they know more than what they read from a company's advertising.
Building a landing page that's been optimized is a fantastic way to encourage page visitors to convert into customers. Keep in mind, though, that a landing page isn't build like other web pages. Use the tips above, and build a landing page that will maximize your conversions.
Friday, November 7, 2014
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
3 Marketing Lessons Netflix Has Taught Us
Over the past few years, Netflix has revolutionized how people think about television and movies. As people have become increasingly disenchanted with cable options and the price of TV, Netflix has risen to become a major entertainment provider. Recently, the service has even begun producing movies and shows of its own. Whether you subscribe to Netflix yourself or know someone who does, here are some valuable Netflix-inspired lessons to consider for your company.
Research, research, research
We know it's important to research our potential audience and customers, but Netflix has taken that research to a whole new level. Just consider the research that came with the company's production of its own original shows. Netflix researched everything from viewing habits to actor popularity to the types of shows and movies people like in order to create the perfect recipe for success.
Conversely, Netflix has also shown us the importance of research with its hiccup a few years ago when it split the charges for its streaming and DVD options. While the company did manage to bounce back, people were very upset with the price hike and were so outraged at the company's attempt to rename part of its brand that Netflix had to drop the idea. Knowing where your customers' sensitivities lie can help you avoid such a debacle. A company that was not as popular as Netflix might have struggled to weather the storm.
Solve people's problems they didn't even know they have
Netflix has become popular precisely because the company has mastered this skill. Before Netflix came on the scene, people didn't really have much of a choice besides cable. Netflix came and offered people a solution for watching movies and TV shows. The company was also able to predict customer trends and started producing and advertising a streaming service before people even realized there might be something better than waiting two days for DVDs to arrive in the mail. Netflix stayed one step ahead of its customers, which gave the company a strong reputation as a superior provider.
Encourage word-of-mouth advertising
Word-of-mouth advertising is some of the most valuable in any industry. When people receive a recommendation from someone they trust, such as a friend or a family member, they automatically give the advertisement more credence. Encouraging people to tell their friends and family, and making it easy for them to do so, has been fantastic advertising for Netflix. Just about everyone has seen those little '1 month free for friends and family' cards Netflix gives out to subscribers. These cards make it simple and productive for current subscribers to encourage signups among their social circles. Once these new signups experience the convenience of Netflix firsthand, they're more likely to stay with the company long-term.
Netflix has built success by anticipating customer needs, understanding what drives customer demand, and capitalizing on industry opportunity. As you settle into your chair tonight for a marathon of your favorite show, keep these marketing techniques in mind and see what lessons you can apply to your own business. If you're ready to begin a new marketing campaign, contact us today for assistance.
Research, research, research
We know it's important to research our potential audience and customers, but Netflix has taken that research to a whole new level. Just consider the research that came with the company's production of its own original shows. Netflix researched everything from viewing habits to actor popularity to the types of shows and movies people like in order to create the perfect recipe for success.
Conversely, Netflix has also shown us the importance of research with its hiccup a few years ago when it split the charges for its streaming and DVD options. While the company did manage to bounce back, people were very upset with the price hike and were so outraged at the company's attempt to rename part of its brand that Netflix had to drop the idea. Knowing where your customers' sensitivities lie can help you avoid such a debacle. A company that was not as popular as Netflix might have struggled to weather the storm.
Solve people's problems they didn't even know they have
Netflix has become popular precisely because the company has mastered this skill. Before Netflix came on the scene, people didn't really have much of a choice besides cable. Netflix came and offered people a solution for watching movies and TV shows. The company was also able to predict customer trends and started producing and advertising a streaming service before people even realized there might be something better than waiting two days for DVDs to arrive in the mail. Netflix stayed one step ahead of its customers, which gave the company a strong reputation as a superior provider.
Encourage word-of-mouth advertising
Word-of-mouth advertising is some of the most valuable in any industry. When people receive a recommendation from someone they trust, such as a friend or a family member, they automatically give the advertisement more credence. Encouraging people to tell their friends and family, and making it easy for them to do so, has been fantastic advertising for Netflix. Just about everyone has seen those little '1 month free for friends and family' cards Netflix gives out to subscribers. These cards make it simple and productive for current subscribers to encourage signups among their social circles. Once these new signups experience the convenience of Netflix firsthand, they're more likely to stay with the company long-term.
Netflix has built success by anticipating customer needs, understanding what drives customer demand, and capitalizing on industry opportunity. As you settle into your chair tonight for a marathon of your favorite show, keep these marketing techniques in mind and see what lessons you can apply to your own business. If you're ready to begin a new marketing campaign, contact us today for assistance.
Thursday, October 30, 2014
PGP Tip: 3 Things to Avoid in Your Marketing Materials
To improve the quality and effectiveness of the messages in your marketing materials, train yourself to avoid three things:
- Listing product or service features without translating them into benefits. This forces the prospect to figure out why a feature is important or how it might be useful. Don't let this happen - the prospect may miss an important benefit or ascribe a benefit that doesn't exist. To determine the benefits associated with a specific feature, name the feature and say the phrase "what this means...."
- Providing vague and unmeasurable benefits. A vague benefit is one that can't be quantified, such as "reduces cost" or "improves productivity". Make benefits tangible by attaching a numeric value that the prospect can calculate: "reduces cost by $3 per item" or "improve productivity by 37%". Any business can make a vague claim. Set your business apart by using a concrete example.
- Describing benefits in generic or jargon-laden words. A benefit description written in industry jargon risks confusing the prospect or causing him to lose interest quickly. It also fails to articulate why the benefit is unique.
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
When Your Marketing Materials Talk, Does Anybody Listen?
When Your Marketing Materials Talk, Does Anybody Listen?
Businesses today have an immense arsenal of marketing materials, ranging from printed material (business cards, brochures, product and service flyers, newsletters and direct mail marketing pieces) to digital formats (web sites, web-based marketing and social media). While there is significant potential power in having so many ways to reach customers and prospects, this comes with a responsibility to align all the materials with their interests and behaviors. Marketing materials now bear the burden of being consistent, relevant and beneficial to the intended audience. As marketing guru Seth Godin puts it, "In a world of too many options and too little time, our obvious choice is to just ignore the ordinary stuff."
Avoiding the ordinary
It may surprise you that avoiding the ordinary is rather simple: know yourself, know your audience, and tell an accurate story clearly.
Businesses today have an immense arsenal of marketing materials, ranging from printed material (business cards, brochures, product and service flyers, newsletters and direct mail marketing pieces) to digital formats (web sites, web-based marketing and social media). While there is significant potential power in having so many ways to reach customers and prospects, this comes with a responsibility to align all the materials with their interests and behaviors. Marketing materials now bear the burden of being consistent, relevant and beneficial to the intended audience. As marketing guru Seth Godin puts it, "In a world of too many options and too little time, our obvious choice is to just ignore the ordinary stuff."
Avoiding the ordinary
It may surprise you that avoiding the ordinary is rather simple: know yourself, know your audience, and tell an accurate story clearly.
Know Yourself
Why does your business or organization exist? How would things be different if your business or organization wasn't operating? What are its core values? Is it industry leader? The answers to these questions are embodied in the mission and vision statements and tell your employees and target audience exactly what to expect form doing business with you. Having a mission statement provides focus for marketing activities, while the vision statement describes the business or organization's future aspirations.
Know Your Audience
Who is your ideal customer? To help answer this question, create a customer profile to include age, gender, job title, ethnicity, material status, skills, interests, personality traits, values, frustrations, likes and dislikes. Think about who specifically is looking for the products and services you offer rather than everyone you might possibly sell to.
Your target audience can be defined by demographic information - the physical attributes of a population. The most commonly used demographic information for marketing is age, gender, income level, race and ethnicity. Psycho-graphic information adds to demographic information by incorporating the interests, attitudes, opinions, values, lifestyle and personality of a population. Psycho-graphic information is used to predict why a prospect might buy.
Tell Your Story
A business or organization's story uses clear language and visual images to explain how customers will benefit. The focus of the story is on the customer, not on the business or its products and services. Here are some questions that help craft the story:
- How will your products or services benefit you audience (i.e., what's in it for me)?
- What needs do your products or services fulfill? What problems do they solve?
- What value does your business or organization bring to the audience that can't be found from your competitors?
Creating a brand identity
The brand identity of your business or organization is embodied in its visual images: logo, printed materials and web site. Taken together, they define the character of your business. Because most successful sales are based on establishing a trusting relationship between buyer and seller, it is important that the brand identity accurately represent the values of the business and that it be consistent across all marketing channels.
Here are some of the elements of brand identity:
Here are some of the elements of brand identity:
- The promises you make to customers and how well you keep them. Besides the promises related to specific products and services, this also includes overall business practices like meeting deadlines and delivery dates, delivering added value, and the process for solving problems or making good on mistakes.
- The benefits that accrue to customers from using your products and services. These include tangibles like more time or money and intangibles like enhanced status or greater feeling security.
- How you nurture the business relationship. Regular communication via printed and web-based newsletters, social media, in-person visits, and personalized messages demonstrate that the relationship with the customer matters to the business.
Brand identity extends to the communication style used by your business or organization to provide information. The elements of communication style are words, grammar, syntax and meaning. The most effective communication style is clear (uses commonly-understood words), economical (uses simple sentence structure), free from jargon and obscure references, and has variety.
Pamela Wilson, a graphic designer and marketing consultant in Nashville, Tennessee, suggests that all brands have a personality, such as friendly, reserved, classic or contemporary. The brand identity embodies this personality in the choice of visual elements - color palette, typography, symbols, graphics, photographs, logo, communication style. For a traditional, established business, Pamela suggests using a classic typeface, conservative, rich colors, and more formal, corporate communication style. In contrast, a contemporary, high-energy company can use more edgy visual elements, a non-traditional typeface, and a friendly, casual communication style.
By carefully establishing your brand identity, all your marketing materials will appear to be coming from the same source over time, creating a sense of dependability in the mind for the customer.
Basic marketing package
A basic marketing package consists of five elements: business cards, company brochure, product and service flyers, newsletter and web site.
- Business cards: Business cards are often the first point of contact for a prospect and start the process of establishing a relationship. To avoid visual clutter, edit the information down to the essentials: company name, address, logo and tagline; the individual's name, title, and preferred ways to contact; and company web site URL. The business card will look best if it has sufficient white space. Consider using the back of the card if needed.
- Company Brochure: The company brochure introduces the company, defines the most important benefits that will accrue to the customer, tells how results have been produced for others, and issues a call to action. It also includes company contact information- company name and logo, address, telephone number, e-mail and web site address.
- Product or service flyer: A product or service flyer defines what the company is selling. It discusses the features and benefits of a single product or service or group of related products and services, and includes photographs and illustrations to attract the reader's attention and draw him into the message. The flyer needs a call to action and the specific way to make contact about the product or service. Company information- name, logo, address and web site address- is also part of the flyer.
- Newsletter: A newsletter is an effective way to stay in touch with customers or introduce the company to prospects. A rule of thumb is that at least 80% of the information should be of interest and relevant to the customer or prospect, and not more than 20% sales message. The newsletter can be delivered by the USPS or sent digitally.
- Web site: Because the company web site effectively has no space limitations, it can incorporate all the information from the company brochure and product and service flyers plus tell an expanded version of the company story- its history, specialty area, geographic reach, size and client base. Customers and prospects are free to browse at will for the information they desire.
Use us as an extension of your marketing department
If you don't have the time to write, design and or print your marketing materials, call us to help. We will work with you to plan the creation of marketing materials, ensure consistent brand identity, and help with any or all of the production steps. To get started, call Dennis Smith at 254-773-7391 for an appointment.
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Monday, October 6, 2014
PGP Tip: Promotion on a Budget
PGP Tip: Promotion on a Budget
The lifeblood of any business or organization is
keeping current customers interested in your product or service while finding
prospects to become new customers. This necessarily means that your business or
organization must devote time and resources to promotion – using various
methods to reach a target audience with a specific message.
Effective promotion is not limited to large
businesses with substantial budgets. Smaller businesses and organizations can
be successful by understanding how promotion works and adapting strategies and
techniques to fit the available resources.
Promotion
objectives
There are many possible objectives for a
promotion strategy. Each is intended to produce a specific outcome and can be
used singly or in combination. Here are the most common objectives:
- Build
awareness. Although your current customers know you well, your prospects –
the businesses or individuals you have identified that you want to have as
customers – may not know you at all. Promotion helps introduce your
business to your prospects, and is often the first step in gaining a new
customer.
- Create
interest and build trust. People buy things they need or have an
interest in from those whom they trust. And long-term, loyal customers are
the result of many positive interactions and transactions that become a
trusting relationship. Promotion begins the process of building a
relationship.
- Provide
information. If you are launching a new product or service, whether to
existing or new customers, the object of a promotion may be to explain it
and its benefits. If your product is well established, an
information-based promotion establishes you as an expert and creates
interest among prospects who don’t yet know your company.
- Sell
something. Some promotions are intended to drive demand and increase sales
by getting customers and prospects to try the product. Free samples, free
demonstrations and free trial periods are the type of promotions that
stimulate demand.
- Establish
loyalty. A repeat customer is one who has product or brand loyalty.
Promotions based on establishing loyalty are useful after a customer has
made one purchase, to start the process of building a strong relationship.
Target
audience
Effective promotion begins with determining what
audience you are trying to reach, since both the message and the promotional
method may change depending on whether you are targeting current customers,
past customers or prospects. Most small and medium-sized businesses are
equipped and staffed to offer a specific and well defined complement of
products or services. A successful promotion matches these products and
services to the audience most likely to be interested in them.
Purchase motivators – the things that cause
someone within the target audience to become a buyer – are different for
individuals and businesses. In general, individuals purchase products or
services to satisfy a basic need, to solve a problem or to feel good while businesses
purchase to increase revenue, maintain the status quo or decrease expenses.
If your target market is individuals, learn to
describe them with measurable characteristics such as age, gender, level of
education, income, marital status, ethnicity, and family status. The
corresponding characteristics for businesses are number of employees, annual
sales volume, location and years in business.
Selecting
the promotion method
For a promotion method to succeed, it must first
reach the target audience. This sounds simplistic, but is often overlooked by
businesses that haven’t adequately profiled the target audience. It is
important to change your perspective from the business owner or sales manager
to the target audience – simply put, to sit in their chair or walk in their
shoes.
Begin by asking yourself how your target audience
accesses information. Are your customers and prospects more likely to seek
information using traditional media like reading newspapers and magazines,
watching television, reading newsletters or responding to a direct mail
campaign? Or do they seek information by reading e-mail, searching the Internet
or reading blogs? You’ll need to set aside your personal biases – though you
may be intrigued by social media such as Twitter and Facebook, if your target
audience isn’t, then a promotion using these methods will not be effective.
Keep in mind that no single promotional method
works all the time for every target audience, so rotate several methods and
vary your approach. In addition, use promotions regularly. Over time,
consistency and frequency will influence the buying decision more than the
specific type of promotion.
Promoting
on a budget
No matter the size of your business or organization, it needs to have a
budget for promotions. Pick a time period – we recommend quarterly,
semi-annually or yearly – and commit both a sum of money and some time for a
designated person to manage the promotional effort. It takes both a budget and
someone to manage the budget to ensure a successful promotion.
Promotions don’t have to cost a lot of money or take a lot of time. A
simple way to start is by targeting your best customers and introducing them to
products or services you offer that they may not be using. Here are seven ideas
for promoting on a budget.
- Send a monthly informational newsletter. That’s what we do! In fact, we send both a printed and digital version that gives us a chance to demonstrate our expertise, introduce you to new technologies like QR codes, and remind you of the full scope of services we offer.
- Highlight
the specific products and services that represent what you do best. Develop a series of post cards, flyers or mini-brochures that
showcase the things that provide the majority of your sales. These are the
things that, because of equipment or skills or experience, you can offer a
true competitive advantage to buyers. The series can be distributed
individually or as part of another communication.
- Follow up a
purchase with an additional offer. A customer
who has just made a purchase is an excellent candidate to make another one
right away. This is especially true if the customer receives an offer with
additional value attached – a discount coupon or a buy one/get one
promotion. To create urgency, include an expiration date for the offer.
- Target past
customers. Revive an old relationship by
contacting past customers. There may be a negative reason (such as a bad
customer service experience) that explains why a customer became inactive,
but don’t worry about it. Something may have changed within the past
customer’s company that again makes them a good candidate for your
promotion.
- Put a
sticker with teaser copy on an outbound envelope. Teaser copy – a few words that creates interest – is often printed
near the address on the outside of an envelope or a self-mailer. Teaser
copy is just what its name implies: something that teases the reader to
open an envelope or keep reading. If the teaser copy is printed on a
sticker and affixed to the envelope, it becomes dimensional and attracts
even more attention.
- Offer a
guarantee. Changing suppliers presents some
prospects with a risk factor they may be reluctant to deal with. This is
true even if the current supplier is not performing well. Alleviate the
anxiety and eliminate the risk by offering a guarantee to your prospect.
- Self-promote.
Get the
word out about your company’s accomplishments. When you win an award, land
an important new customer, expand your capability or capacity by adding
equipment or staff, let everyone know. People like to do business with
successful people. Use a press release directed to the business editor of
your local newspaper to announce something you are proud of. Add a line to
your e-mail signature and announce your accomplishment on your web site.
Promotion builds business
Regardless of the size of your budget,
it is important to continuously promote your business. At PaperGraphics Printing we've been helping businesses, organizations and individuals with promotions to
customers and prospects for 42 years. To
brainstorm promotional ideas to help your business or to get started with your
promotion, contact Dennis Smith at 254-773-7391 . We’re ready to
help.
Friday, September 19, 2014
PGP Tip: How to Develop a Great Logo
How to Develop a Great Logo
An organization or business logo, whether a graphic symbol or a distinctive typeface, is a visual way to instantly identify the entity. When used on signs, in advertising and on marketing materials, it is a shorthand way for its customers and prospects to recognize the business or organization.
Logos come in four forms:
An organization or business logo, whether a graphic symbol or a distinctive typeface, is a visual way to instantly identify the entity. When used on signs, in advertising and on marketing materials, it is a shorthand way for its customers and prospects to recognize the business or organization.
Logos come in four forms:
- font-based: composed of type only. Examples are Coca-Cola, Google, Louis Vuitton.
- symbol-based: an icon commonly associated with the type of business, such as scissors for a beauty shop or a tree for a gardening service.
- abstract graphics: a symbol created for the purpose like the Nike swoosh, Twitter bird, and Olympic rings.
- combination: a mixture of type and either a symbol or abstract graphic. Examples are the Lacoste alligator+ font and Chanel double C + font.
We cite these examples because they are well know, made so by their advertising budgets that use the logo in global ad campaigns. But it is good design that makes these logos memorable and identifiable.
Logo design principles
In 2009, Smashing Magazine, a website and blog resource for web developers and designers, offered five principles for effective logo design:
Besides great design, a successful logo follows technical principles to achieve distinction. Understanding and honoring these technical aspects improves the chances of creating a great logo that is easy to work with in all situations.
Logo design principles
In 2009, Smashing Magazine, a website and blog resource for web developers and designers, offered five principles for effective logo design:
- Simple. Milton Glaser, the designer who created the I Love New York logo, touts simplicity as a guiding design principle. A simple design is quickly and easily recognized. Ideally, the viewer see the logo and immediately understands what it represents.
- Memorable. Paul Rand, the designer of the IBM, UPS, Westinghouse and ABC logos, observed that logo design must be distinctive, memorable and clear but does not have to illustrate what the business or organization does. (For example, the ABC television network logo does not include a television set or broadcast tower.)
- Enduring and timeless. To be enduring, a logo needs to remain current-looking for several decades, a quality called forward looking. Using colors and fonts that are the latest trend is the opposite of forward looking. Milton Glaser's I Love New York was created in 1975; its clean lines, simplicity and neutrality have given it staying power.
- Versatile. The logo must work in a variety of sizes (ranging from business card to outdoor signs); in color and black and white; in print and on the web; and on signs, vehicles, clothing and advertising specialty items.
- Appropriate. The typeface, symbol and colors used for the logo must be appropriate for the type of business or organization. A law firm or technology company needs a more formal-looking logo than a children's clothing shop.
Besides great design, a successful logo follows technical principles to achieve distinction. Understanding and honoring these technical aspects improves the chances of creating a great logo that is easy to work with in all situations.
Simple
A simple logo does not try to do too much. The logo does not have to represent the company's products or services ( the Nike logo is a swoosh, not a shoe) or reflect its company history. It also does not have to be a visual representation of the company's tagline.
A good practice aimed at keeping a logo simple is to begin designing in black and white. Color can be added later, after the basic design is established. Another tip is to turn the logo upside down so its shape becomes more apparent and reveals possible flaws.
Over time, most logos are redesigned and made simpler. To keep an initial design as simple as possible, subtract anything that isn't essential. And if in doubt, leave it out.
Memorable
A memorable logo is one that is original and doesn't borrow from others, either by imitating or copying. Although it is possible to use clip art as a starting point, this is not recommended. Besides the possibility that others may be using the image, the conditions of sale of some clip art companies forbid using their images in a logo.
A memorable logo is devoid of cliches (a globe to represent international or a light bulb for ideas) and may use only type without a symbol or graphic.
Enduring and Timeless
To create a logo that will last for 20 years without appearing dated or stale, choose a typeface that is simple and legible. This is especially important if the business name is unusual or unfamiliar. Use no more that two fonts in the logo design and avoid gimmicky, currently-fashionable or trendy fonts.
If the logo features both an image and a tagline, construct each of these elements as a separate piece of art- in other words, don't overlap on entwine them. This will enable using the elements separately as well as together.
Extend the life of the logo by creating some elements that are enduring and others that can be subtly refreshed, modernized or adapted for future visual formats. When the logo design is complete, consider protecting it by applying for a trademark or service mark from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Versatile
For today's multi-media marketing requirements, a logo must be versatile so it will work in print, on the web, and on other items like apparel and advertising specialty items. This means it must reproduce accurately in all three color spaces: PMS Pantone Matching System for one and two color printing. CMYK cyan, magenta, yellow and black, the four-color process colors for full color printing; and RGB red, green, blue for the web. The logo may also need a version to use on a dark background, over photographs and in gray scale or black and white.
The aspect ratio (the relationship between the height and width) determines the shape and orientation of the logo-square, horizontal or vertical. A logo that is too tall and thin or too short and wide will present layout problems on artwork. Square and circle shapes are pleasing and adaptable to many design layouts.
Logos need to prepared in two file formats: vector and bitmap. The image in a vector file consists of a set of points, lines, curves and shapes based on mathematical expressions to represent images, making it very easy to alter the size. In addition, vector file formats can be output at the resolution required for the output device (such as 300 dots per inch or dpi), ensuring the best quality reproduction in print. Two vector file formats are EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) and AI (Adobe Illustrator).
For websites, blog layouts and social media, a bitmap file format is required. This format creates images using pixels. Low resolution bitmap files (such as 72 pixels per inch or ppi) are much faster to load on the web. JPEG, TIFF, GIF, PNG and PS (Photoshop) are bitmap file formats.
An EPS file can be converted to a bitmap file with relative ease. However, a bitmap file must be redrawn to convert to EPS. Because of this, it is generally better to create the logo as a EPS file first.
Appropriate
Type, symbols and graphics have distinctive characteristics and should be matched to the brand image. For example, us big, powerful slab fonts to signify strength; serifs or scrip fonts to imply class, style and elegance; italics or slanted fonts to suggest movement and forward thinking.
Negative space- the space around and between an image, such as the arrow hidden in the FedEx logo- can also be used to define a brand characteristic.
Evaluate your logo
If you have never evaluated your log using the design principles discussed in this issue of PGP Tips, we suggest you do so now. If you find a few areas that need attention, give us a call. We can help with refreshing the logo or redesign. Contact us at 254-773-7391.
Sunday, September 7, 2014
PGP Tip: Using New Media To Communicate
Using New Media To
Communicate
The term old
media and its companion legacy media refer
to traditional ways of communicating with customers. Printers are generally
considered to be part of old media, along with other paper-based industries
like newspapers, magazines, and books as well as radio, television and movies.
In contrast, new media is digital and
includes the Internet, websites, and most computer-based forms of
communication.
New media is exciting because it brings new tools
to the process of communicating with customers, tools like full-color digital
printing, with highly personalized sales messages and interactive outreach. New
media also empowers prospects and customers to quickly and easily find reliable
information about products, services and vendors.
At PaperGraphics we present our customers many ways to help you take advantage of new media to
communicate with your customers and prospects. We recommend that you add these
to your sales and marketing activities rather than replacing what you are
already doing. This is because we firmly believe that new media is not
replacing old, but adding to available communication possibilities.
QR
Codes
One of the more exciting examples of new
technology is the QR code. QR stands for Quick Response, aptly named because
the contents of the code can be decoded at high speed by devices including
mobile phones equipped with a camera, net books and laptop computers, desktop
computers, cameras and televisions.
QR codes are the new way for customers and
prospects to reach a web page, a location (using geocodes) or obtain
information about products and services. Add a QR code containing contact
information to your business card and someone can add you to their contact list
by reading the QR code with their cell phone or computer. Add a QR code to
individual products on your web site and enable customers or prospects to
download product details and a phone number for ordering, or link to a YouTube video.
QR codes were developed in 1994 by the Japanese
company Denso-Wave as a way to track parts in vehicle manufacturing. The code
is a 2-D symbology because it stores information both horizontally and
vertically and thus is able to hold much more data than a one-dimensional bar
code.
The typical barcode holds a maximum of 20 digits,
while a QR code can hold up to 7,089 characters. In addition, QR codes take up
about one-tenth the space of a bar code. This ability to hold a great deal of information in a small space is
what makes QR codes so valuable for sales and marketing.
QR codes are
quite common in Japan and their use is growing in Europe. In the United States,
QR codes are just beginning to appear but are expected to spread rapidly. A QR
code may be applied to many substrates – paper, plastic, even cloth – and on
many surfaces, including curved ones – walls, floors, billboards, t-shirts.
About the only limitation is ensuring that the QR code is of sufficient
resolution to be read by the mobile phone or other device.
An example of how
QR codes are being used is the Google program Google Places, a way for businesses to manage their presence on
Google. Any business that is selected by Google as a Favorite Place receives a window decal that includes a QR code that
takes the viewer to the Google Place Page for the business. Google has already
distributed 100,000 Favorite Places decals and is planning a second round of
50,000 more.
With Google
promoting QR codes, they are likely to become very important in search
marketing. Google suggests that if your web site contains a QR code, search
engines will see a new image and index it, and might in the future index the
content in them.
Many mobile
phones, including iPhone, Blackberry, Motorola Droid and any phone that runs on
the Android operating system, have application software available for scanning
QR codes. Some phones may have the app already installed on the phone; if not,
it can be easily downloaded and installed. One feature is necessary, though –
the mobile phone must have a camera. After reading the QR code, a phone with a
web browser can connect to a URL, download an MP3 file, dial a phone number or
send an e-mail.
QR codes have
other uses besides marketing material. An educational organization can direct
people to reference or training materials. An online product catalog can use a
QR code to provide complete product specifications. Retail locations can use QR
codes to provide additional information – such as a restaurant providing
nutritional information for items on the menu. A QR code on a direct mail piece
can take the recipient directly to the web site of the business offering the
product or service.
Variable
data printing
High speed copying in both black and white and
color has been a standard service offering of PaperGraphic Printing since the early 1980's. Once digital printers began to replace analog
copiers, the possibility of variable data
printing (VDP) was realized.
VDP enables various elements of a document –
text, graphics and images – to change from one page to the next with no
degradation of print speed or quality. From a production standpoint, VDP is a
continuum from the simplest mail merge (changing the name and salutation of a
letter) to versioning (customizing the document for a defined group rather than
for a specific individual) to 1-to-1 printing where each document is completely
unique. An example of simple VDP is a post card that is printed with the name
and address of the intended recipient. If the photograph on the post card and
part of the sales message changes depending on the demographic characteristics
of the recipient, that’s versioning. If the post card contains a photograph of
the recipient as well as text with personal information, that’s 1-to-1
marketing.
VDP requires three things: a document template
containing all the information that stays the same from page to page (the
static data), a mailing list containing addressing information and recipient
characteristics, and a database containing all the information that changes
from page to page (the variable data). The static template also indicates the
location of variable data elements within the document.
VDP has many applications: 1-to-1 direct
marketing, customer relationship management, explanation
of Benefits forms and other insurance documents, catalogs, promotional material
and lots more. Its popularity is based on two advantages: for advertising and
marketing material – particularly direct mail marketing campaigns – response
rates generally rise as the level of personalization goes up. And for
informational documents such as insurance benefit booklets, VDP allows a
booklet to be created that contains only the information pertinent to the
insured person – no more and no less.
Call
us for QR codes and digital printing
We invite you to call us to discuss how QR codes
and variable data printing can benefit your business or organization. We’ll
help you generate a QR code that is appropriate for your intended application
and add it to business cards and marketing materials – either now, or at the
next printing.
At PaperGraphics we can teach you how to
make more money through our ManagedMarketing™ program where we can handle all
of your printing needs but also teach your staff how to prepare, invite and
close the sale with your prospects. In fact, we are the only printer in this market
that is certified to do so.
If your
organization or business needs to increase sales we can help. Call us at 254-773-7391 to set up a no obligation consultation where we assess
your current situation and offer a plan of attack that works for your budget.
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