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  • Know Good Design

    The visual elements of your business, including your logo, associated graphics, web site and printed collateral materials send very strong messages about your brand. While you can overestimate and overcome this impact you can and should understand it and take steps to align it with your core marketing message and ideal client.

    Professional designers can be a great aid in this process, but only if you can help guide them. A professional designer may have a firm grasp on the creative elements of strong design, but it’s up to you help them understand how to use these elements to reflect the image you have for your business. It’s a paticipation sport.

    Like so many aspects of your business you don’t have to know how to create good design for your business, but you do need to know how to spot it and how to buy it. Depending upon the business you are in, a decision to call you up or engage your services may be made solely on the on the consumption of some componant of your marketing materials – I’d say that makes them important.

    One of the ways to become a better consumer of good design is to actually study it a bit. It’s very helpful to expose yourself to good design, used in various ways, in order to bring good design into your business. There are many ways to do this, but my simple solution is to pick up the design annual editions of HOW and create magazines. These publications mostly cater to the professional design community and won’t be found at every corner magazine rack but seek them out and get a very rich introduction to great design for about $25. They also have fairly vibrant online communities.

    OK creatives lurking out there reading this blog, got any other good resources for design?

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    Posted by: John Jantsch on Mar 17, 07 | 3:03 pm
    Category: Graphic Design | Tags:

    Comments
    • John: Flickr photo sharing inspires me all the time. You can search by keyword or look at the most interesting pics from the last week. It's great and reminds us of the power of visuals in telling a story.

      http://www.flickr.com/explore/interesting/7days/
    • You nailed it Kevin, design is an important ingredient to any busines marketing plan, especially the branding aspect. Great branding with the use of great design can change a company from a nobody to a somebody overnight.

      The design field mostly hangs out online at Newstoday (http://www.newstoday.com/). This great community has an influx of links daily, as well as, an online forum (to the right) for any questions you might have about design/branding/etc.

      Some other portals to check out:
      http://www.k10k.net/
      http://www.pixelsurgeon.com/
      http://www.surfstation.lu/

      Some blogs to read:
      http://www.designobserver.com/
      http://noisydecentgraphics.typepad.com/design/
      http://typeforyou.blogspot.com/index.html
      http://blog.pentagram.com/
      http://darmano.typepad.com/logic_emotion/

      Hope that helps!
    • I recommend two books: 1) Looking Good in Print by Roger C. Parker; and 2) The Non-Designer's Design Book by Robin Williams. Both are easy-to-follow, full of useful advice for both print and online designing, and are readily available on Amazon and elsewhere.
    • I think that Before and After magazine is a great resource for business people who wish to understand design a little better, they have tons of great articles that will give you practical ideas about how to improve your marketing materials.

      http://www.bamagazine.com/
    • John Jantsch
      Great list all - keep sharing!

      John
    • Thanks for the great blogging, keep up the good work!
    • Design is important. I recently visited a Ducati/BMW motorcycle shop. I was impressed by how on the Ducati bikes, it was so apparent that the elements of design played a huge part in the construction and planning of the bikes. Every bolt and nut seemed to matter. Everything Ducati in the store reflected that mindset, even the clothes. This is not to say that BMW's aren't fine machines. They just didn't hold the slickness of the Ducati line. Design definitely communicates a lot about your company and product.


      By the way, as a designer, Communication Arts is a great magazine that covers a wide variety of commercial design. It is a great source to see what the big agencies are doing. If you don't want a regular subscription you can subscribe to the annuals which are the standouts in categories for the year.
    • I think to assert that a designer needs guidance sounds a bit like we're unruly if completely untethered. If he's truly a quality designer, he will ask the right questions to understand the company he's working with. If a company is not familiar with creative aspects, it shouldn't necessarily be up to the company to decide how to use the creative elements. The designer, being the educated consultant, should be the one instructing the company how the design elements will work for the company. Do we need to know things about the company first? Of course, but I get paid to have the answers, not to be a lap dog to a corporate honcho who's idea of creativity is "make the logo bigger."

      I agree with Chris. Communication Arts is the most relevant design magazine out there. I also enjoy PRINT and STEP. HOW is also decent, but truly more geared toward designers specifically rather than people connected with designers.

      Sites I recommend:
      www.underconsideration.com/speakup/
      www.underconsideration.com/quipsologies/
      www.mediabistro.com/unbeige/
      www.alistapart.com
      www.gigposters.com
      www.thelittlechimpsociety.com
    • John Jantsch
      Dave,

      Great point and thanks for the recommendations - you'll note that one of the primary points I intended to make was that the buyer needed to know good design - I'm hopeful that will help them start to get over the make the logo bigger syndrome. Clearly, working with a designer who can ask the right questions and balance that knowledge with the essential knowledge the owner of the firm has about their ideal client is the best of both worlds.
    • A great site for all things design is:

      www.creativepro.com

      It contains Before & After articles (mentioned above) and covers all issues 'creative'.
    • hi, John, how are you?

      What a great topic - one I think about a lot!

      I have to say, I think the absolute biggest blunder business owners make regarding web design is to forget that it is not just about the 'look' of pages: websites are meant to be 'used'. Aesthetic is great, but don't forget the other half of the equation.

      I wrote a little entry about that here: http://www.omstrategy.com/41/heres-the-key-diff...

      I hope that's of some use,

      daniel
    • I was recently in the market for some design work and had a frustrating time looking at a lot of really poorly designed websites put up by the designers themselves. Pretty funny how bad some of them are at promoting their own product.

      http://www.badslacks.com/web-design-firms-with-...

      Didn't use them but found an interesting service here: http://www.designoutpost.com/
    • Another resource I forgot to mention:

      http://www.smashingmagazine.com

      All kinds of great design related lists and links.
    • Nice blog, maybe the book 'Lovemarks' is a great adict. It's written by the CEO of Saatchi&Saatchi;
    • Today I wrote about this very subject and even tracked back to Duct Tape, because I like your insight on the issue, being a small business owner.

      The link is www.FreshPeel.com
    • For logo design, any book by Paul Rand will get you on the right foot. "Design Form and Chaos" is my favorite. He did some of the most recognizable logos in the world (IBM, abc, UPS, and on and on). If you own a business and dream of one day seeing your logo on billboards, trucks, clothes, in every household or office desk, read this book.
    • I turned on CNN International last night and someone was plugging his new feature film "Helvetica: the movie" (about typography and design). No, really!

      http://www.helveticafilm.com
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