Introductions can be awkward!
You say hello; you introduce yourself; you struggle to find a commonality with your newfound patron. If done poorly, you may find yourself at the crossroads of "Help! Somebody give me a way out of this conversation!" and "Blah Blah Blah, insert foot in mouth." Cue awkward silence.
Navigating conversations as a business owner can be a tricky business, but completely necessary. You rely on conversations with your clientele to convey ideas, goals, converting them into loyal customers. What if you could begin that conversation without saying a word? How would you do that?
I have worked with many small businesses who have struggled to develop their conversational skills, not in the verbal sense, but rather through design and marketing strategies. Think of design as a customer’s introduction to your brand. It is one of the first features people notice about your business. Are the colors earthy or corporate? Is the logo sleek or organic? What does this tell your customers about your company? Marketing is how you have that conversation. Is it awkward, or fluent and natural?
Help! Somebody give me a way out of this conversation!
But More Importantly Do You C.A.R.E. About Your Brand
C.A.R.E. is the goal for every piece of marketing material I create for clients. It stands for Consistency, Awareness, Recognition, and Engagement. It's the road map that I follow in delivering the best work possible - a road map, while although simple, utilizes your materials to their greatest potential.
C: Consistency
We've all heard the phrase, "Consistency is Key," but how much of your brand is consistent? Consistency builds trust and establishes that your brand is a credible source of knowledge or provider of services or goods. Consistency means delivering the expected product at the expected time with the expected quality. It is the beginning point of your brand's conversation with the world. With design, establishing consistency is as simple as defining how you use fonts, images, colors, and logos.
There are many great tools out there for non-designers that include GoogleFonts, which offers a load of mostly-free fonts that are also commonly available for web use with font pairing options. Adobe Color helps you choose color palettes, while blogs like Color Matters explain how color psychology and implementation affect your brand. There are even free mobile apps by Adobe which help you edit, design and animate images for social media, but these have limitations.
Consistency means delivering the expected product at the expected time with the expected quality.