Planning Ahead With Your Designer: Tips For Design Consistency With Your Logo And Brand Elements

Filed under: Brands — admin at 8:54 am on Thursday, June 17, 2010

While we recommend that you contract with the same designer or design team while creating your brand identity materials as possible, we know that this scenario is not always possible.

Whenever you work with a designer other than the original who created your logo, stationery and marketing materials, we suggest a few practices that will prove invaluable for ensuring a consistent look and feel across all of your marketing communications.

At a minimum, make sure that you have information on:

• The Pantone Matching System (PMS) colors used in the designs. These will come in the form of a number. For example, PMS #280 is a deep blue color.

• Fonts. Ask your designer what font is used in your logo, and what secondary and tertiary fonts are used in your stationery and other marketing materials. Having this information will save a future designer many font matching headaches.

• The type of paper on which your materials are printed. In order to duplicate and keep consistent with the look and feel of your materials in future print runs, you’ll always want to have your items printed on the same type of paper.

• The printer who printed your materials. Knowing whether your materials were printed by a digital printer or a press printer can help to ensure that they are reproduced at the same quality in the future. In the case of press printing, this can save you money on additional films as well.

To make for an even smoother transition, negotiate for the original files for your designs. This can be a delicate matter, as some graphic designers do not sell the rights in the original files to their clients. If you cannot get the entire assembled files, we recommend that you negotiate for a minimum of the following pieces:

• An original file of your logo. This is typically known as a vector graphic version, which means that, if the appropriate software is available (Adobe Illustrator or Macromedia Freehand are the most common), you can scale the image up and down without losing image quality. If your logo was not created as a vector graphic (i.e., if it was created in Photoshop), then you need the largest, highest resolution file available. See our article on Logo File Formats for more information on which type of formats of your logo you should have on-hand.

• A file containing any specialized secondary graphic brand elements. Some designers will give you files containing special headers, backgrounds, illustrations, etc., so they are available for any future projects. Loss or lack of these elements keeps a new designer from knowing what original effects were used to create the design.

This information will ensure that your materials have graphics that are consistent across the board, and will save time on future projects.

EzineArticles Expert Author Erin Ferree

About the Author

Erin Ferree, Founder and Lead Designer of elf design, is a brand identity and graphic
design expert. She has been helping small businesses grow with bold, clean and
effective logo and marketing material designs for over a decade. elf design offers
the comprehensive graphic and web design services of a large agency, with the one-
on-one, personalized attention of an independent design specialist. Erin works
closely in partnership with her clients to create designs that are visible, credible and
memorable - and that tell their unique business stories in a clear and consistent
way. For more information about elf design, please visit:

Logo design at http://www.elf-design.com

Who’s behind the Voice over?

Filed under: Brands, Commercial Stuff, Podcast Page — admin at 8:01 am on Sunday, January 17, 2010

voice over is a word that identifies an occasion when you can hear someone talking but you can’t see them talking. So, you may class all radio work as a huge voice over - or an amalgamation of voiceovers. Normally, they are used to talk about work done for radio and TV advertising, documentary work and internet work too. Voiceovers are a recording performed by a voice talent that gives life to characters, tells a story, guides you on a tour, or directs your telephone calls. Usually, professional voice talents are enthusiastic, funny, charming, are flexible, and interact well with other people. They have the ability to take direction or criticism from others and can interpret copy to sell a product, concept, or a message.

A professional voice-over artist will be a real promote to your marketing campaign. Once you have decided on who your market is and have crafted a marketing message that will match your market, you would be silly to leave the deliverance of that message to chance. Strive for a quality delivery by hiring a high quality voice-over artist to your campaign. The undertaking of finding a high end voice talent involves executing a few fundamental principle. Ensure that you understand what a voice over artist is and the language that they use to describe themselves. Then learn what sort of work decent voice talents take on and use that work to judge who you should bring in to your task. Hopefully, this article has helped you in that endeavour.