Archive for the ‘a2b’ Category

Go Social or get left behind

Monday, January 31st, 2011

Well it’s Jan 2011 and we start a new era of Social marketing and B2B networking of a different kind. Over the coming months I will share some insights how to get the very best from Social Media and how to increase your sales and maximise your work load.

Stay positive and make 2011 a fresh start for your company

websites : The Bad, the Good and the Ugly

Friday, September 24th, 2010

Is your website working for you?

The Bad, the Good and the Ugly
Part 1 : The Bad

It’s always good to share, always be open to learning and grow. In this harsh climate we have to make sure we, you and our companies offer the very best in creative business solutions.

uDEZIGNit is always looking at ways it can help clients new and old to achieve their goals in business and today we talk about web designs, are you a designer? Do you need help? Or simply some short hard facts that might help you along the way. It’s so easy to make a web page. It’s also easy to make a very nice, clean, professional-looking web page even if you don’t have much design experience. Most of the time the difference, even for people just starting is simply a matter of eliminating certain features that are guaranteed to make a page look amateurish.

Go through the list of things that people–designers and non-designers–from around the country have commented as the things that make the difference between a well-designed and a poorly designed web site

Keep point here is to remember : Keep in mind that the point of eliminating bad features is not just to make the page prettier, but to communicate more effectively.

Below are features that can make a web design look unprofessional. Now this comes from our combined experience in the field and many others that have shared their views on web design, for example :

Backgrounds
Default grey colour
Colour combinations of text and background that make the text hard to read
Harsh background Colour that make it difficult to look at
Busy, distracting backgrounds that make the text hard to read

Text
Text that is too small to read
Text crowding against the left edge
Text that stretches all the way across the page
Text in different colours, including coloured letters  
Centred type over flush left body copy
Paragraphs of type in all caps
Paragraphs of type in bold
Paragraphs of type in italic
Paragraphs of type in all caps, bold, and italic all at once
Underlined text that is not a link

Links
Default blue links
Blue link borders around graphics
Links that are not clear about where they will take you
Links in body copy that distract readers and lead them off to remote, useless pages
Text links that are not underlined so you don’t know they are links
(If you’re not going to underline your links, please make sure that each link is clearly visible as a link! Don’t make me wander around with my mouse checking to see if randomly coloured text is a link!)
Dead links (links that don’t work anymore) – check and check again

Graphics
Large graphic files that take forever to load
Meaningless or useless graphics
Thumbnail images that are nearly as large as the full-sized images they link to
Graphics with no alt labels
Missing graphics, especially missing graphics with no alt labels
Graphics that don’t fit on the screen (assuming a screen of 800 x 600 pixels)

Tables
Borders turned on in tables
Tables used as design elements, especially with extra large (dorky) borders

Blinking and animations
Anything that blinks, especially text
Multiple things that blink
Rainbow rules (lines)
Rainbow rules that blink or animate
“Under construction” signs, especially of little men working
Animated “under construction” signs
Animated pictures for email
Animations that never stop
Multiple animations that never stop

Junk
Counters on pages — who cares
pointless advertising buttons or adverts – Does it make money for you? If not then why is it there
Having to scroll sideways (800 x 600 pixels)
Too many little pictures of meaningless awards on the first page
Frame scroll bars in the middle of a page
Multiple frame scroll bars in the middle of a page

Navigation
Unclear navigation; over complex navigation
Complicated frames, too many frames, unnecessary scroll bars in frames
Orphan pages (no links back to where they came from, no identification)
Useless page titles that don’t explain what the page is about

General Design
Entry page or home page that does not fit within standard browser window (800 x 600 pixels)
Frames that make you scroll sideways
No focal point on the page
Too many focal points on the page
Navigation buttons as the only visual interest, especially when they’re large (and dorky)
Cluttered, not enough alignment of elements
Lack of contrast (in colour, text, to create hierarchy of information, etc.)
Pages that look okay in one browser but not in another

We hope you had fun reading the above and it offered a little insight to website design then it’s a good start

If you want to know if your website is working for you why not try out our “Web Fitness” Program. For only £50 we will compile a report that will present you with a range of information, stats, figures and comments that will guide you to better business online and for your brand.   Email us on fit@udezignit.com

Google Voice: Your Gran Can Use It

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Google Voice explains video chat in a (what else) video that aims to demystify the service by creating a grandmother’s guide to using it. Think it succeeds?

Not sure where Google is going with this, new concept no? so why do it. Maybe its just a way for Google to catch up with the market leaders in this field

Check it out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CDvgjV54wIg&feature=player_embedded

YouTube: Cause Celeb

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

Gino : you know, Social Media is all about sharing – the more we share the more we learn

I found this and thought it may be of use to everyone reading my blog

Cause marketing has come of age thanks to YouTube. It’s hard to argue with two billion hits on a daily basis. That’s more than all Americans watching network television.

YouTube’s ten most subscribed channels according to Website-Monitoring.com are all individuals, except for Universal Music group at #6. But aside from the “Broadcast Yourself” ethos, an apogee of narcissism, YouTube has provided a viral lightning rod for cause-wired social awareness and marketing for a generation of digital natives.

Read the full article posted by Sheila Shayon http://www.brandchannel.com/home/post/2010/06/01/YouTube-Social-Marketing.aspx

The year that brands begin to realise it’s about lighting lots of fires in different places

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Agencies have known that the days of a monolithic creative idea are dead, spending 99% of the pot on one idea, was ironically, how the clients were used to working….all your eggs in one basket, anyone? It’s taken a while, and a lot of work from digital agencies and industry folk such as Mark Earls, for clients to catch up.

The fact is, digital work is far harder to pre-test than more traditional work because it often involves a new set of behaviours and a deeper, more active experience that the effect of which is much harder to gauge if it’s on a smaller scale. How do you test if a viral is viral on a small sample? How would Whopper Sacrifice work if you disabled its ‘pass-on’ mechanic?

Brands who are doing digital best such as Burger King, Penguin Books and  Diesel are au fait with creating many cheap, scalable ideas and launching them all, conscious that not all of them will stick. At £50,000 a pop, you could launch 4 ideas for the cost of a TV ad production budget or 4 full page inserts in the nationals.

You light 4 fires, you pour petrol on the ones that take, and then you remember what works for next year

This is the year you must undersand the impact of Social Media, Dominos did one of the best campaigns I have seen in awhile and man did it change their brand, customer relationship and increase sales – you can check it all out on You Tube, but remember these days “hurry up” step back and re-evaluate your companies brand perception and get digital asap before it leaves you and your company behind, stay focussed and if you ever need help drop me a line – Gino

Google a Brand’s Best Friend, or Frenemy?

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Last month we pondered how Google search results can harm brands. Now Google’s aiming to help top brands surface at the top of its rankings.

One catch: before Google can be a brand’s best friend, the brand must first cozy up to DoubleClick.

When Google purchased DoubleClick for a little over $3 billion in 2007, it was seen as a strategic move to give the search giant new capabilities and influence in online advertising. It didn’t hurt that it was also a competitively smart salvo against rival Microsoft.

Ever since the acquisition, Google has honed DoubleClick and made it a more integrated service. Now Google is offering top brand advertisers the ability to cherrypick the top 1,000 largest sites on the web for their ads to run.

By using DoubleClick Ad Planner, a free media planning tool, advertisers can identify the top-ranked sites and, in effect, targets ads to the largest number of users at any given time.

Ironically, however, this doesn’t guarantee that a brand advertiser is reaching the sites best-suited for its particular product or service, since the Ad Planner does not take performance statistics into account. In fact, a brand advertiser may be filtering out sites that are relevant.

But the “shock and awe” strategy could be suitable for large brand advertisers who want to make a big splash fast, to as many online consumers as possible.

The DoubleClick Ad Planner also offers advertisers the opportunity to define an audience with multiple criteria, including keywords, use ranking methods to find targeted sites, set filters to parse sites by various criteria, such as specific categories, and add sites to a media plan for comparison.

Gino Meriano asks “Have you experienced this? Tell me about it”

iDemocracy

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

the role Social Media can play in politics – instant democracy

You know, I have been glued to the elections and while i was listening to some selected media people who have been clearly in the game far too long, crass Social Media and have poor understanding behind the power of the likes of Twitter and Face book it made me come up with the concept “ iDemocracy”

Great Britain’s election in May 2010 resulted in a hung Parliament. So what, some of you may be saying but wait here’s an opportunity to make profound and positive change to how democracy could operate in the near future.

With no clear majority, the Government has to form as a coalition which by definition means political parties and elected politicians have to cooperate and agree on substantive issues in order to govern and make law.

Ok, so currently we have elections that effectively mean we (the people) typically have to compromise on some or many of the policies of any political party.

If during a Prime Minister’s term, there’s something that the Government of the day feels it needs to check with its people, it can call for a Referendum. Elections and Referendums take a lot of planning, a lot of public resources and a lot of time!

What’s my point – well it starts with the definition of democracy:

democracy [Gr.,=rule of the people], term originating in ancient Greece to designate a government where the people share in directing the activities of the state 

What if…

… the public could ‘direct’ its Government more easily, less expensively and much much faster that currently?

Actually, this is exactly what brand managers and marketers have realized are the benefits of Social Media. Getting messages out there and more importantly having people participate are facilitated by platforms like Facebook, Twitter and social networks.

Introducing iDemocracy

Let’s use Social Media directly to voice opinion and guide the political policymakers.

Politicians ask the people and the people instantly respond – voila! Instant democracy.

So the iDemocracy has the three ‘i’s of SMA – SocialMedia Marketing Approach:

  • i = involvement – using Social Media is the way to engage and empower people
  • i = instant – using Social Media can connect you instantly to people how they want to be connected
  • i = intelligent – using Social Media is effective and efficient use of resources

Now for governing a country, there are admittedly a few wrinkles to sort out but that’s what technology geniuses are for:

Not everyone can participate – well the previous Government had plans to introduce a tax to fund the reach of the internet to every household in the UK.

Multiple voting – ok digital security is robust already and I’m guessing there will be a solution moments away if there’s not one already.

Join me in making this a reality!

Share your opinion, let’s start iDemocracy right here, right now

a2b = Abbreviation to Buzzword

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

a2b = Abbreviation to Buzzword - where has the grammar gone in Social Media?

Another new generation is discovering the importance of words.

This time though it’s not coming from books but hand-held devices including mobile phones, blackberrys and Apple’s next storming product success, the iPad.

We constantly seek new ways to communicate and millions of us are now using these compact and convenient communication tools to chat, express opinions, and share information on an unprecedented level.

The online tools people use today—social networks, search engines, blogs and even wiki services—are essentially driven by words. These tools are evolving a new language into our world and as it spreads and grows look out for abbreviations and even new ways of spelling proliferate. SMS-ese such as “c u l8ter” and poor grammar have become commonplace.

Is this really a new language or simply people being lazy?

Let’s take a moment out to reflect on the implications to a company’s brand.

We all understand the importance of words and how it plays a major part of marketing, promotion and brand awareness. However, now brands have the added fun of embracing these ways of expressing themselves on platforms like Facebook, Twitter and the like.

A brand’s tone-of-voice used to be about expressing its message to its audience. Typically one-sided and static campaigns with no “real” call to action. Wakey – wakey all brand managers… a shift has happened and it’s now about genuine interaction and dialogue. Brand managers must now engage not just inform your market, don’t be afraid to push the boundaries.

Here’s an example that helps illustrate the point.

Marmite
The concept is easy you either love it or hate it, simple but effective marketing.

Election 2010 – support the love party
Unilever Bestfoods have been running their “love it or hate it, Marmite is here to stay” successful campaigns. The beauty behind their “Spread the love” election campaign so with UK elections hitting the news, you can now vote to love or hate it.

How effective is this brand awareness I hear you ask, well if I said to you that over 355,112 people joined to the “Spread the Love Party” alone –  I would say it’s very effective.

What’s really interesting is that they have taken the initiative to use the right words in the right way for each platform. On the web, the campaign is very visual and links off to the Facebook and Twitter campaigns. These are all united on a blog where people participate – check it out – MNN (Marmite News Network) http://www.marmitenewsnetwork.com

I highly recommend you take time out to view just how beautifully crafted and executed this brand campaign is. Have a think about the actual marketing costs incurred by the brand team to make this message so powerful in the world of Social Media.

If you need to justify your time to your bosses (or those IT-people) look at the figures so far  - it’s outstanding

Spread the Love Party- 355,112 People
Marmite Hate Party – 148,078 People

Like Marmite and many others in the market place today, communicating well in social media also requires balancing the tone and message with the expectations and conventions of the communication channel itself.

Each social media channel has its own specific language, for example a tweet is 140 characters; the style of Facebook differs from Linkedin. The key point is to understand what you’re doing before you jump in and create a blog, Twitter or Facebook page.

Don’t just throw brochure, press release or advertorial words at them.  

In order for a brand to adapt effectively to each channel, brands really need to understand what they stand for. Strong brands (Marmite, Smirnoff, Coke, Starbucks) are like people; they have to be treated with respect. Remember they have personalities, ideas and distinctive voices. If you have a clear, confident brand message, adapting to each platform should come naturally. But it also has to be consistent thread across all channels to have a lasting impact on brand value.

2010 is the year where the word “Marketing” fades and is replaced with “Sharing” – understand your Social Media brand and change the way you use words to obtain maximum visibility. Make words work for you.

On or offline campaigns, old or new traditions have to be evaluated and it’s time to understand how best to communicate through the power of words to make your brand stand out in the new digital space.