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Sparkly Brand Bad Product - Lapland New Forest misadventure

by dbdc 12/2/2008 2:43:00 PM

 

No matter how good your branding may be, it cannot overcome a bad product. Design a great website, fill it with all kinds of promises, and charge people £25 each in order to take the kids out.  If you cannot deliver all the promises your marketing may suggest, people will quickly turn away from your business. Even worse, people may start clamouring around for refunds and your business could get shut down for not meeting the necessary trading standards.

 

Though a good image can help cover a product's shortcomings, discerning customers can quickly tell when they are being sold short.

 

Especially when they expect something akin to an Icelandic adventure, "where dreams really do come true" (according to their advertising strapline)

and instead get this -

 

Creative Uses of Graphic Design Services - Part 6

by dbdc 11/26/2008 12:24:00 PM

A bit of smart thinking in innovative graphic design services - business cards which look like sports trading cards  - Kudos goes out to show off cards for coming up with these. Though I doubt they would find any room in more conservative business markets such as we have in the UK and Europe, but I imagine in their market (pre-recession) America (where a fair proportion of adults absolutely love sports trading cards) it could take off.

 

 

Creative uses of Graphic Design Services - Part 5

by dbdc 11/26/2008 11:09:00 AM

Continuing our series demonstrating innovate uses of graphic design services - this is the first in a series of logo designs which catch the eye. Inspirational, creative and definately not clip art - a good logo design can connect a name with a visual image to help create and support a brand and its values.

 

The different ways this can be done reflects the nature of the business and the intended target audience. 

 

Hopefully the three examples of logo design for 3 separate businesses shown below should help highlight this differentiation

 








How not to build back links to your website

by R.P. 11/18/2008 11:27:00 AM

One of the general goals of any website is to get up the search rankings for relevant search phrases, particularly in popular search engines such as Google or Yahoo.

 

There are a number of factors which contribute to a pages position on the results, including keyword positioning and content, but one of the most imnportant issues are back links - links from other sites which link back to the page. However, not all links are equal. What are the kind of things that should be avoided in anyones link building strategy? I found the following useful, taken from here.

 

"The Web is woven out of links and inbound and outbound links are most natural. Generally, the more inbound links (i.e. other sites link to you) you have, the better. On the contrary, if you have many outbound links, this is not very good. And what is worse – it can be disastrous, if you link to improper places – i.e. bad neighbors. The concept is hardly difficult to comprehend – it is so similar to real life: if you choose outlaws or bad guys for friends, you are considered to be one of them.

 

It might look unfair to be penalized for things that you have not done but linking to sites with bad reputation is equal to a crime for search engines and by linking to such a site, you can expect to be penalized as well. And yes, it is fair because search engines do penalize sites that use different tricks to manipulate search results. In a way, in order to guarantee the integrity of search results, search engines cannot afford to tolerate unethical practices.

 

However, search engines tend to be fair and do not punish you for things that are out of your control. If you have many inbound links from suspicious sites, this will not be regarded as a malpractice on your side because generally it is their Web master, not you, who has put all these links. So, inbound links, no matter where they come from, cannot harm you. But if in addition to inbound links, you have a considerable amount of outbound links to such sites, in a sense you vote for them. Search engines consider this as malpractice and you will get punished."

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Category: SEO

Rebranding the old? Pepsi goes Pacman

by dbdc 11/12/2008 1:20:00 PM

What would you expect for around $1 million investment on a rebranding excercise? And how risky is it tampering with a classic, well known logo in an attempt to engage the general public?

 

The questions which have to be asked in a project like this - is exactly who is being targetted? Will the rebranding affect the current Pepsi lovers? Or - does anyone really care? After all, tampering with a globally recognised brand is a risky business. By putting it up for public scrutiny, end trying to engage the market through various social media sites using sites such as You Tube and Flikr to reach out and, try to generate some buzz around the new loo, they have to be commended for moving into new ways of interacting with customer base.

 

A quick look at the redesign quickly brings to mind a multi-colored Pac-man. Some of the comments from the last few weeks on their flikr site give an insight into some possible perceptions, including "Wate of money!", "Miliions over Millions goin to the trash" to "I love it, it is totally minimilistic".

 

Whataver your opinion might be, the lack of sustained excitement or interaction around the released pictures is not surprising given that the US was going through the throes of a presidential election and in the opening stages of a severe economic downturn. The Pepsi strategy of trying to engage through social media using the proposed new design as a focal point for discussions, is pretty innovative for such a large corporation, and though the timing may not have been perfect it was a brave move. We'll have to wait and see whether any of the criticisms, advice and comments are taken on board, and what there plans are for moving this forward.