Showing posts with label Copywriting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Copywriting. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

What is "good" website content?

… well, the proof is in the Panda...

Pudding Creative could most definitely be accused of repetition when it comes to the words “we have a publishing background, don’t you know?” But we hold a high regard for the old disciplines of print publishing where one mistake could have a detrimental effect on a very large, not to mention expensive, print-run.



There was a time when every page of a magazine was first sent to bromide proof, then produced as 4-colour film and only printed to page once the colour cromalin proof had been fully approved. But then just 3 letters – PDF – replaced this long-winded process. And now, time has moved on so much that the “mag” has been largely replaced by 1 sole letter – “e”.

Of course, the concept of magazines and publications of all types has further progressed with the evolution of the Internet and, most notably, the blog. The blog, which was crowned as a noun in its own right in 1999, provided individuals with a voice. The writer no longer needed to await invitation from the supreme Editor. By 2004 the “blog” was even being used on a worldwide scale by businesses and politicians. And, of course, it was not overlooked that this rather convenient new tool was also helping companies to make their way up the search engine listings.

There are many different options for the business or the individual to use when publishing their updates. Forbes has created a list of their top 11 with Wordpress being number one www.forbes.com

As you will guess, with so many formats, there is obviously a lot of demand. And rapidly the power of the blog rolled into overall website content with more and more website templates being made available for minimal cost to the users. But whereas all traditional print publishing was proofed, proofed and then… well, proofed a little more, there is little to zero proofing involved in what is published within the World Wide Web.

Well, until now…

It seems that Google (the undisputed force of law and online order) has had enough of their cyberspace being littered with substandard content. And so they have introduced “Google Panda”. googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/
Google Panda is a new algorithm that has been designed by the rather clever ‘bots to help people find more high quality sites when searching the web. And one of the first points that they like to make is that it is the client who is the reader, not the search engine.



As Rand Fishkin, CEO of SEOmoz and Will Critchlow, founder of Distilled, discuss in their “Whiteboard Friday”, these new Panda algorithms are based on real human responses to website content.
www.seomoz.org
“…people don't think this is high enough quality. This isn't going to get past the Panda filter. You're in jeopardy", says Rand.
They continue by explaining that the oh-so clever Google can actually evaluate a website content in terms of reliability, trust and authority. And so, perhaps, the days of churnalism are over.

1. churnalism
Term coined by author Nick Davies to describe poor practices of modern day journalists who "churn" or recycle news stories off the wire or Internet without appropriate critical investigation.


But that begs the question, what is good website content?
SEO mastermind Paul Lopez of Solar Internet and owner of celebritiesinmarbella.com says that it comes down to just 2 basic rules…

“Rule 1 for good website copy is to write good quality content without thinking keywords or search engines. Research your subject and write as if it were a normal article. You don't want to bombard your visitors with keywords and the chances are that if you are trying to write for the search engines it will be bad quality and not a good user experience.
Rule 2 is never just copy content. There are a few reasons for this but the main point is that the search engines don't like duplicate content and the latest panda update is very much focused on quality content. If you want to figure in the search engines then write your own copy. Show the search engines, and your visitors that YOU are the authority on your subject.”

Lisa Richards, Editor of www.resource-magazine.com also agrees that “content farming” is detrimental to the standards of the World Wide Web. This focus on producing words that satisfy the algorithms set by search engines (rather than the subject matter itself) often produces confusing articles with little factual relevance. She notes, “the appeal of high visitor numbers is proving more alluring than high quality. I’ve seen journalists and PRs garnering editorial support from bloggers by rewarding responses or offering freebies rather than actually looking to the quality of their own work”.

Content Farming can be a thankless task


Of course, the actual words contained within a website are only part of the battle when considering an “authentic” website. Rand reminds us that appearance is equally important.
“A lot of this comes down to design, and authority is really branding familiarity. Have I heard of this site? Does it seem legitimate? So I might get to a great blog like StuntDouble.com, and I might think to myself, I'm not very familiar with the world of web marketing. I haven't heard of StuntDouble, so I don't recognize him as an authority, but yeah, I would probably trust SEO information from this site. It looks good, seems authentic, the provider's decent.”

Companies have been known to work very hard to create a reputable brand name in the real world, only to throw all that hard effort away with a substandard appearance online. It is important to remember that your brand is the sum of your staff, your services and all of your marketing initiatives – and that includes your website. So, make sure that it receives equal time and effort.

Pudding Creative can help you to achieve a high quality website presence with solid content and an irresistible style. 
Contact us for a free consultation on how we can improve your business.
Tel: +34 667714346 

Email: hello@puddingcreative.com 
Web: www.puddingcreative.com
“Like” us at www.facebook.com/puddingcreative

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Q: How important are fonts for brand identity?

Answer: The correct font is VERY important 
for the success of your branding strategy!

Typography is a science that is often overlooked in today’s fast-paced world of branding and marketing.

We spend a lot of time strategising an effective PR campaign or discussing the pros and cons of Facebook over Twitter
or searching image galleries for the right light and shade effect.

Yet, sat bang in the middle of every marketing campaign for the rest of eternity there could be some god-awful spider squat of a font and the designer will shy away from changing this fundamental element.
We at Pudding Creative understand this reticence. The art of THE FONT is a talent that should be revered. Its effect on a presentation is quite insightful – potentially transforming a brochure from being approachable and friendly to conventional or distant. And whilst the immediate visual affect may be overt, the lingering impression that the font leaves with potential clients can be totally subconscious.

Some typical emotional connections which a selection of the most commonly used fonts will evoke about you and your company:

Times :                       classical, trustworthy, reliable
Courier:                  artistic, retro, contemporary 
ARIAL :               modern traditional, reaction-less
Tahoma:              fresh, modern alternative to Arial
VERDANA (bold) :        confident and cosmopolitan

Any cynics of the power of the font should recall Ikea’s foray when they chose to adapt their company identity to bring it in-line with the fonts available in HTML. As Ikea’s website used the web-safe font Verdana, the executive boffins thought it best to adapt all print materials to match. This apparently small act of corporate standardisation caused a “fontroversy” that spread through the newspapers, radios and social media networks with such heart-felt horror that urged the New York Times to write “perhaps the biggest controversy to ever come out of Sweden”.

There was a time when small children learnt calligraphy at school. I was awarded a special italic fountain pen when I’d reached the heady heights of neat handwriting. But today, we are an IT-led generation and typing accuracy is more useful than arty letters. However, whilst most of our font choices from the toolbar of Microsoft Office is purely functional, we do still find ourselves becoming quite opinionated about whether it is too small (nobody likes to squint) or in CAPITALS (nobody likes to be shouted at) or just a very odd colour (there is a time and place for individuality and the office minutes is not one of them).

One of the most overwhelming examples of the effect that fonts have on corporate branding was when the London Underground rolled out their network of signs in “Johnston”. When Gerard Meynell was asked the meagre task of producing a few posters for the transport service in 1915 he had some rather ambitious plans to brand the whole of London. His choice of a “straightforward and manly” font was originally quashed by the powers that be but has since triumphed and it is now immediately recognisable worldwide.

And just in case anyone still thinks that the study of fonts gets you nowhere, let’s take a little inspiration from someone who has done quite well from humble beginnings in a calligraphy class;

“I learned about serif and san serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. It was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can’t capture, and I found it fascinating”
 

Steve Jobs, Business magnate, designer of the first Macintosh computer, CEO of Apple, Co-founder of Pixar animation


Source: Just My Type, Simon Garfield