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Archive for the ‘Musings’ Category

Website content – mind your Peas and Queues

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

Writing website copy: it’s an essential part of the process of creating a website, but in some cases it’s a bit of an after-thought. Sometimes we – as a web design agency – even end up supplying suggested copy for sections of the site which have been overlooked, copy which ends up going into the production site because no-one seems concerned enough to review it.

But the copy on your website is important. It should be laboured over, drafted and re-drafted, and honed into a thing of perfection. But then I would say that, because I love words. But there’s evidence that not paying sufficient attention to the basics can end up hitting your bottom line, something that every business should take seriously. The BBC news website today carries a story about ‘online entreprenuer’ (what is he when he’s offline?) Charles Duncombe, who contends that a single error in the spelling or grammar used on a website can halve its revenue.

check-your-spelling

Photo credit: CookieDuster, Flickr

Mr Duncombe, who runs a number of e-commerce websites selling everything from mobile phones to clothes and travel, measured the performance of one of his sites before and after a simple spelling error was corrected. The results, he claims, are shocking – the revenue per customer doubled once the error was corrected. Mr Duncombe doesn’t share with us his methodology nor his exact figures, but the implications are obvious.

While older generations bemoaning the quality of written English in school and university leavers is seriously old news, the figures speak for themselves – and it makes perfect sense. Whether you’re selling online or communicating your core business competencies and values, how can you expect anyone to want to do business with you if you haven’t taken the time and trouble to write well structured, interesting and above all grammatically correct copy?

Note to the eagle-eyed and the pedantic - any spelling or grammatical errors in this post are entirely intentional, and were included for the sake of irony. Any errors in the remainder of the website can be notified here.

If Microsoft want to get rid of IE6, they’ve got to go local

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011

A software developer actively discouraging people from using their software is a rare thing, but this is exactly what Microsoft are doing with their new “Moving the world off Internet Explorer 6” campaign.

ie6

Well… in fairness it isn’t like they’ve just decided to get all culpable on us… rather this is part of a neatly viral campaign to get people switched on to IE9 by targeting web designers and developers. Presumably they thought having four variants of their browser kicking about in the wild could lead to confusion. Nevertheless the tone of the campaign is endearingly disarming, with the company even going as far as issuing tongue-in-cheek apologies at developer conferences.

The Internet Explorer 6 Countdown site claims it is “dedicated to watching Internet Explorer 6 usage drop to less than 1% worldwide”. So is that something a campaign like this can realistically achieve? Or is it just an attempt to win back some goodwill in the web community?

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The HTML5 logo from a designer’s perspective

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

html5Discussions about logo design are no longer contained to design agency walls. A case in point is the Olympic logo, with a reach that affects a wide range of people, and which has been criticised from the outset. Witness also the recent brand review by GAP, and the u-turn following overwhelmingly negative public response. So when a new logo is launched into a community — especially a community with very vocal opinions on design and a limitless set of platforms from which to voice them — the designers had better be 100% certain the logo is up to the job!

The W3C have recently launched a wide-reaching branding identity for HTML5, the newest kid on the web standards block. At the heart of this is a striking new logo, the intention being to extend awareness of the HTML standard to as broad a reach of people as possible. How then should we be reacting to the new logo? Is it up to the job?

From a design point of view, the HTML5 logo is a bold statement of solidarity, using shield, badge and keystone imagery. The colour orange has been used historically to symbolise organisation and mobility. Psychologically it is considered to stimulate activity and socialisation, and used on things like traffic cones and construction signs in many countries to denote “safety”. This all helps to reinforce the message that the HTML5 standard is there to help us, not restrict us. The design has a limited colour pallet, and a refreshing lack of gimmicky features (glossy sheens, inner shadows) that could age the logo quickly. Indeed, the logo already has a slightly retro-Soviet feel to it. We’re quite sure any similarity with a certain toy range of transforming robots is purely coincidental though!

The logo is also licensed under Creative Commons, which means the design can be re-appropriated and modified. This is a brave step for any brand, and it is encouraging that the W3C recognise the importance of creating a flexible brand, particularly given the industry it is targeted towards. Google did similar with their Android logo, the net effect being that the users of the brand rapidly adopted the quirky logo as their own, and managed to create a far wider-reaching identity and brand family than Google would ever have managed on their own.

Developers need confidence in any new standard before they will embrace it fully, and HTML5 is one worth embracing. It helps alleviate some of the issues surrounding browser inconsistencies, multi-platform deployment and media integration (with the much talked-about video and canvas tags). And whilst HTML5 isn’t going to totally replace the role of plug-ins such as Flash in the web, it will help give more choice to developers, particularly when it comes to Apple’s webkit-based platforms. Branding HTML5 so distinctively will help to build that confidence. And if the eye-catching logo extends beyond the design community’s attention and captures the public imagination that can only be a good thing.

Logo design is certainly evolving, and the broader more community-minded approach take by the W3C in developing HTML5 logo is a welcome part of the change.