Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Brand Obama

A Newsweek blog has an interesting post describing how Obama's branding efforts are more thorough and complete than any campaign thus far, and certainly more so than his rival. It explores something I've been thinking about as well. Obama's "brand" looks way more Apple or Target than Hillary's or McCain's (Dell and Wal-Mart/Army circa 2003).

Also, his "O" logo scales much better online than Hillary's.

From a copy perspective, Obama definitely has a tagline, whereas Hillary doesn't that I can find. "Ready from day one" just doesn't cut the mustard. While "Change I can believe in" isn't great (is that a preposition I see at the end of that sentence?), at least it's an attempt.

What does this mean. Not a heck of a lot, but I still think it's interesting. Could something like this influence those of us that work in such matters? Perhaps, but we were probably pre-disposed to support him anyway.

Of course these brief thoughts prompt me to start a content comparison of the major candidates websites. I'll try to get to that perhaps this weekend.

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Monday, February 25, 2008

What I am Going on about Here Anyways?

After many, many years of writing for the web and dealing with content strategy for various and sundry clients, I've found that I repeat myself a lot from engagement to engagement. So much so, I thought I'd start writing about writing for the web and about content strategy in general since I've seen so few resources of this type to point these things out. I don't expect that I'll be repeating myself any less, but at least I'll be able to document a lot of things, spark a few discussions, and generally get things off my chest (the pessimistic view) or provide some insight into how best to deal with the written word and such on the web (the optimistic view).

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Don't Click Here

One of the things that it seems that I always have to tell my clients is avoiding using "Click Here" as a link. Surf around the web a few times, and you'll see this phrase countless times in countless environments in countless treatments. Other than being imperative, what does this tell the person reading the page? Nothing. It's merely an exhortation, an instruction without inducement. If you wrote "Jump off a bridge," would you expect anyone to follow the instruction without further information? That's really all "click here" is.

Think about the most frequent use of this phrase is. Banner ads, pop-up windows. Do you really want to equate your links with an exhortation to shoot a duck on a banner ad?

Instead of taking this easy way out, your links and calls to action should give the end user some indication of what they will find once they select a particular link. I'm not saying it should always match the title of the page it leads to. I'd never be so dogmatic. In any event though, it should give a bit of a preview as to what a user will find on the other side.

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Monday, February 18, 2008

This Is My Career on Drugs...

Here is the full text of a legitimate business e-mail I just sent in response to a request for helping out with a couple of hours of content work for a project I'm not assigned to:
I'm pretty busy helping out with Don't Ask, or I Don't Know (I can't keep them straight), but I may have some time at the end of the week. I'll try and catch up with you on IM tomorrow to try and figure something out.
Any questions?

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