Archive for the ‘Design’ Category

You won a TRENDS award. Now what?

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012 by user

By Brian Clark, marketing and membership director, Asphalt Institute, Lexington, Ky.

(This is an excerpt from an article that appears in the March 2012 TRENDS.)

Each year, our association enters the annual Association TRENDS All-Media Contest. This year, I’m proud to say we won gold for our 2011 membership directory.

Over the years, we have learned that aside from the tremendous “feel good” that winning provides, there are definite advantages for our association that we try to maximize. Here are a few tips on how to make the most of your award.
1. Tell your members. This may seem obvious, but some winners overlook the opportunity to promote the news about winning their award to their members.
2. Leverage the credibility. Quite fortuitously, we learned about winning our gold award just as we were preparing the advertising opportunity announcement for our 2012 membership directory. The timing couldn’t have been better. We included an “advertise in our award-winning directory” tag in the appeal. The result: our advertising quite literally doubled this year!
3. Motivate your staff. Karen Embs, our member services manager, is the principal editor of the directory but she has never been to the TRENDS Salute to Association Excellence program, where the All Media Contest winners are honored. This year, Karen made the trip to DC to receive our award. Here is what she said about the experience:
“The reception was a real pleasure because it was in a large room where there was space to walk around and see all the winning pieces,”  she said. “I also was impressed with the award presentations for Association Partner of the Year and Association Executive of the Year. Mr. Harris and Mr. LaBranche were both very appreciative and shared great words of advice and inspiration for us all.” Details: www.asphalt.org.

Clark is a TRENDS 2008 Young & Aspiring Association Professional.

Making Sure The Creative You Want Is Creative That Works

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011 by user

by Mike Gallagher

‘Oh, that’s not what I meant.’
‘Bob from sales didn’t think it was hard-hitting enough.’
‘The ad was supposed to target attendees and exhibitors.’
‘Our CEO hates yellow.’
‘This isn’t it, but I’ll know it when I see it.’

They’re responses to creative work we’ve all probably heard at one time or another (or even delivered ourselves). Responses intended to be constructive, but when born out of subjectivity instead of strategy, they rarely help make the work perform better.

They’re all part of a syndrome commonly known as ‘Ready, Fire, Aim.’

We all know that every show, every event is a huge undertaking. Mobilizing the people, places, materials, budgets and logistics–efficiently and effectively–takes careful planning. Your communications and creative should be approached in the same fashion. Whether it’s an attendee ad, an exhibitor prospectus, a floor plan, a website, a logo, an e-blast a booth design or an entire campaign, the clearer the upfront direction and the more focused the goals, the better (and more affordable) the results.

So where does this direction come from? This strategy for the creative work? It comes from you and your team of stakeholders, usually in conjunction with your marketing or communications firm. And it’s important that everyone with a say in the creative work has a say in the direction. So if you’re going to be sharing the creative with your sales team, get them involved with the strategy upfront. If your CFO’s opinion of the work is important, do the best you can to make your CFO aware of the strategy beforehand. Discussions about direction and goals are best had before any creative work is started.

Below is an example of a document that can help crystalize the direction and goals for the creative. Documents like this can be called a strategy, a creative brief, a creative plan or any number of things. And while it may take some thought and wrestling of ideas and opinions, having agreement on the information in this kind of document prior to any creative work being started is the most efficient way to ensure effective creative.

When the creative is complete, be sure to have this document on hand when reviewing the work. Use it as your scorecard. Does the creative achieve the goals set out in the brief? Does it connect with the audiences established in the brief, utilizing the right rational and emotional motivators? Is it the right tone? Use this as the filter for judging the work – and as a filter for any other comments that may come. After all, even the most adamant CEO can be convinced to like yellow if it’s shown to be stragetically supportive of achieving communications goals.

Creative Assignment & Support Brief

Assignment: Here you articulate the big picture perspective on the project. If it’s for a new campaign that all show materials for the next 18 months will fall out of, state that. List the elements, the time frame, and goals for the campaign. If it’s for an element of a campaign that’s already been created, like a direct mail piece, state that. And include some refresher on the campaign itself.

Product/Subject: Your show, event or initiative – then perspective on it. Dates, location. What’s new this year? What’s better than last year? Who sponsors the show? Why do they sponsor it? How does the industry feel about this event/initiative?

Convince: This is where you describe your target audience(s). But not just by job function or demographic. Ideally, there is some insight into what makes your show compelling to your audience(s) – a common need that motivates behavior within the competitive set. (For example: Our target says they come to the show to learn about new products, but for them it’s really about the industry camaraderie.)

That: Here is where you state the action you want your target to take – whether it’s to believe one show is better than another, go online to look for exhibit space or sign up for sponsorships.

Because: This is the most important aspect for all stakeholders to agree upon. Here you state the rational and emotional reasons why our target(s) will take the action stated above. It helps if it is linked to the insight articulated in the Convince section. In the trade show business, our customers tend to be more rational – they need past attendance/past leads/etc. numbers to justify their actions to their superiors. However, linking the why to the target insight brings a more compelling, emotional reason for taking the desired action. (For example: XXXX highly qualified attendees, so you are sure to reconnect with friends, mentors and respected associates).

Support: This is where all of the important statistics come in. The facts. The figures. And anything else you think is important to support your Because rationale.

Must-Know: This is where your logo & graphic standard requirements come in, your website url, phone #, etc. This is also where any pet peeves (eg: the CEO hates pink), industry requirements (eg: the show is sponsored by 2 associations – both must be treated with equal weight in layouts) and historical landmines (eg: trying to get quotes from past attendees is impossible) need to be spelled out so your creative team knows what to maneuver around while developing the work.

Mike is Creative Director at Fixation Marketing, the largest full-service agency specializing in creative strategy, design and interactive solutions for association events and trade shows.

Mike can be reached at Mike@Fixation.com

www.fixation.com

Design Case Study: The IMARK Group

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011 by Autumn Jones

The IMARK Group‘s magazine underwent a cover-to-cover overhaul between 2009 and 2010.

With new content sections, page layouts, and a new name (From Marketfocus to IMARK NOW), there were huge improvements over last year.  Contemporary graphics gave order and flow to the technical content enclosed.

The publication won bronze honors in the Association TRENDS All Media Contest‘s Most Improved publication category, and could have easily won gold, if the category were based on design.

Before and After shots of the IMARK publication show tremendous improvements in the cover alone.

Before and After shots of the IMARK publication show tremendous improvements in the cover alone.

Less is more: tips on clean, precise publication layouts.

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011 by user

By Debra Woodfork

Finding balance on a daily basis can be a task in itself. For most, finding that perfect work/life balance is key when trying to manage all the “to do” lists we seem to compile. Design is no different; you are trying to arrange text and graphics in an aesthetically pleasing way, while also managing to effectively communicate.

I am often reminded in my own work today that making good design decisions involve a conscious use of the basic principles and elements of design. As a designer, you have to be aware of knowing when you’ve done too much in enhancing the visual impact of a layout. There will be times when you are given a lot of text to incorporate and times when you are given very little. Being aware of how to approach a layout using the principles and elements of design are one way to balance the “to do” list of any design problem.

The Elements of Design include:
- Size, Line, Shape, Texture, Space, Value and Color

The Principles of Design include:
- Balance, Emphasis, Rhythm and Unity

Next time you are designing (or working with a designer) for a print piece, consider the above and ask yourself if the page layout demonstrates an effective use of these concepts.

One exercise you might want to try is to look back at a recently designed layout and ask yourself the following questions:
- Does this layout demonstrate a balanced use of space and shape in terms of text and graphics?
- Does this layout have good emphasis in communicating an intentional hierarchy of information for the viewer?
- Does this layout have a rhythmic approach to how elements are arranged on the page?
- Does this layout help to unify all elements into one cohesive unit?

Debra Woodfork, is the production and design manager at the Association of Corporate Counsel and a Board member of the DC Chapter of AIGA.