14 Mar 2008 02:21:23 | Roger C. Parker
Guerrilla Marketing Design is more an attitude than a system of
do’s and don’ts. It’s an attitude that emphasizes the efficient
and memorable delivery of information.
-First Commandment: Purposeful
Guerrilla Marketers view design not as a matter of subjective
likes and dislikes but as a strategic tool intended to achieve
specific goals. Guerrillas avoid unnecessary decoration. Every
mark on the page must serve a purpose. Guerrillas make design
decisions based on how efficiently their designs communicate a
desired message to a specific audience.
Guerrilla Marketing design begins with a plan, based on careful
analysis of message, audience and competition.
-Second Commandment: Recognition
Guerrilla Marketers refuse to get lost in a crowd. They know is
it better to stand out and be recognized rather than confused
with their competition.
Guerrillas recognize that their customers and prospects are
bombarded with thousands of competing messages each day.
Accordingly, Guerrillas choose colors, typefaces and layouts
that project a distinct, easily recognized image that sets their
message apart and accurately reflects their values.
Their designs project a consistent image throughout all of their
marketing. Consistency is achieved by using a unique combination
of colors, type and layout throughout their print and online
communications. This consistency multiplies the impact of their
marketing dollars.
-Third Commandment: Readable
Guerrilla Marketing Design is reader-friendly design.
Guerrillas recognize that readers are in a hurry and that
anything that interferes with easy reading sabotages the
delivery of their message.
Guerrillas make reading easy by paying close attention to
typeface, type size and line spacing choices. They take
painstaking care with spacing, hyphenation and punctuation. They
carefully avoid design traps like setting entire words in upper
case or overusing white text placed against gray or black
backgrounds.
Color is never allowed to interfere with easy reading.
-Fourth Commandment: Emphasis
Guerrillas know when to whisper, when to shout.
They use design to help readers separate the important ideas
from the supportive facts. They use the tools of emphasis to
make their message’s information hierarchy instantly
recognizable.
-Fifth Commandment: Simplicity
Guerrillas design to Simplify.
Guerrilla Marketing Designers recognize that readers quickly can
lose interest when reading extended text, like articles, memos,
newsletters or proposals. Accordingly, Guerrillas maintain
reader interest by breaking information into manageable,
bite-sized chunks using techniques like segues, subheads, lists
and sidebars.
Simplicity also involves restraint. Guerrilla Marketers
recognize that “less is more” when it comes to emphasis. They
exercise extreme discretion before making typeface, type size,
type style or color choices.
Guerrillas recognize that one outstanding photograph
communicates more than three average photographs.
-Sixth Commandment: Instant Communication
Guerrilla Marketing Design is visual.
Guerrillas strive to replace words and sentences with
story-telling visuals. These include charts, graphs, lists,
organization charts, tables and timelines that communicate at a
glance.
Guerrillas use visuals to quickly communicate comparisons,
relationships and sequence.
Guerrilla Marketers understand that words alone are not enough
to ensure marketing success. The presentation of the words has
to be as finely-executed as the words themselves.
Guerrillas understand that design is not a mystery, nor is it a
cure-all.
Rather, design is a fundamental business competency that can be
mastered when the right resources are chosen and properly
utilized.
About Author :
Roger C. Parker is the $32 million dollar author with over 1.6
million copies in print. Download the remaining four of the 10
Commandments of Guerrilla Marketing Design here:
www.GMarketing-Design.com