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Posts Tagged ‘typography’

What’s Your Content Doing?

Monday, May 31st, 2010

You’ve got a huge trade show coming up. You’ve got all your materials ready to go. You’ve got great display cases in a variety of shapes, sizes colors, heights, widths and are generally prepared for whatever this trade show might throw at you whether you’ve got a large or small booth or don’t even know what you’re walking into until you get there. You are pumped!

But people aren’t coming to your table.

They aren’t altogether that interested in what you’ve got.

They look quizzically at your product and walk away.

What could you possibly have done wrong?

Well, odds are it was your content. If you are selling a product, you want to entice and engage people to come to you and ask questions. It is up to you to get them to ask more about you and your business.

First – lets look at your graphics. Can they be seen from a distance? Are they using complementary colors to make the words pop? Are the fonts appropriate for your business AND easy enough to read?

Next – lets look at your sign placement. Are you standing in front of it so people can’t see? Is it low in front of your table where people walking won’t see it in their line of vision? Is it small and on the side of your table/booth? Maybe you’ve placed it too high up and no one sees it? The art of Feng Shui is not lost here – know where to place things for optimal vision.

Lastly – lets look at the wording of your signs. Questions are a great way to get people interested in what you’re selling because they want the answers. They want to know how you can help change their lives. Your customers have to sift through so much material at a trade show (and elsewhere) that if they can read through your signs and get the general idea, then why would they bother stopping? Do not place too many words at the same time you shouldn’t place too few words. It is very much a balancing act. Offering free items and letting them know about this kind of giveaway is also a way to draw in people. Contests are a great idea too. One of the best things you can have is some kind of spinning prize wheel that allows your customer to engage and have fun.

So while having the greatest materials may be a giant step in the right direction, you want to make sure your content on signs and displays makes you and your product go the extra mile. Know how to interest people, draw them in, and make them interested. Good Luck!

What Catches Your Eye?

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

When you have a display – it can be any size, shape, color, height, or width and it can be a tall standing board, or hang from the ceiling or over a wall at a trade show. The possibilities are endless.

But what do you put on the specific display? *That* is the most important thing. The words, the colors, the sizes, the fonts – they all matter. There’s a lot of psychology that even goes into it. Recently, the re-branding of certain companies has seen many logos go from capital letters to lowercase letters. Why? For example, AT&T. A few years ago they consumed Cingular – which was a very popular cell phone company amongst young adults. It was all orange, and had a fun logo that was a paint splat that looked like a person. When AT&T merged, they assumed the orange and mixed it in with their blue, and lower cased the letters at&t. Lower casing has helped them to stay “fresh” because that’s what the younger generation likes. It seems relaxed, fun, and not overly controlled. Hard to believe all of that comes from just a different font, right?

This website came out yesterday – that is a really fun and interactive ebook on fonts from A-Z. Take a look and see what you could throw onto a display to make it “POP” more than it already does.

Just this week, Google even opened up 18 fonts that can be used on line. If you have any digital displays you can now incorporate these fonts into things that people are already accustomed to.

Typography is important be it on line, in paperwork, and displays. Catch someone’s eye. Be creative. Use fun fonts!

An Eye for Type

Friday, January 1st, 2010

In my previous post, I write about the functionality of color theory on your custom POP display. Now, it’s time to move on to the subject of typography. Typography is another important design tool that will make or break the message of your custom POP display. What font, or type, you choose says as much about your overall message as the color schemes of your piece, but first, some typography basics.

Sans-Serif vs. Serif fonts

Serif fonts, like Times New Roman or Georgia have “ornaments” at the end of each letter to help legibility. Because of this, serif fonts have been the standard newspaper typography choice for many decades. Sans-serif fonts, on the other hand, are the opposite. Fonts like Arial, Helvetica and Verdana are all examples of san serif fonts with sharp, crisp edges.

So, what does this have to do with custom POP displays?

Choosing the look and feel for your POP display, products and overall branding is important and conveying the right font type is paramount to grabbing your audience’s attention. Not only does color have to pop, but so does your type. Having an eye for type means you need to be able to translate having an eye for what the customer wants to see. Brainstorm which typography best fits the brand or product and narrow it down to serif or sans-serif, or possibly a combination of both. Make your custom POP display stand out by using a distinct typography style that is sure to be unique.