Building Credibility of Your Brand Online...and Stay There

Written by Johann Sebastian S.


In online commerce, credibility is as important to a brand as it is offline. But unlike its offline big brother,repparttar Internet is an entirely different environment made up of bits and bytes, as opposed to physical substances. It imposes a set of constraints and imperatives for effective brand-building initiatives that evolves around leveraging and tweakingrepparttar 121070 building blocks of a website -- design and content.

For starters,repparttar 121071 nonattendance of physical element onrepparttar 121072 Internet disturbsrepparttar 121073 very nature of commerce. Consumers are deprived of their ability to feel and touchrepparttar 121074 products, interact with salespeople, and of course, get an instant idea whetherrepparttar 121075 store is credible.

Let's start with a real-life example. Say, Dave walked into a jewelry store along one of Manhattan's chic district to purchase a diamond ring. As he enteredrepparttar 121076 store, he surveyed its physical attributes - decoration, salesperson, products, certifications granted - to see ifrepparttar 121077 store hadrepparttar 121078 credibility and capability to fulfill his desire.

While it is relatively straightforward forrepparttar 121079 jeweler (and any other brick-and-mortar business, for that matter) to instantly conjure uprepparttar 121080 sense of credibility, trustworthiness, and professionalism by tweaking its physical attributes, online retailers are left to figure out how pixels beamed from an 800x600-pixel screen can be merged harmonically to reach that objective.

Design matters

What then, should be on a marketer's priority list to position his site along its branding objectives? Design. Yes, design. The first thing a visitor encounters upon logging on to a site isrepparttar 121081 façade, not what's in it (read: content). Out of a number of stores, how did Dave pick which one to enter inrepparttar 121082 first place? He zeroed in on one looks convincing and professional. For a moment,repparttar 121083 long-term principle that content is king has to give way for design.

As a site's design varies to a great extent as its nature of business does, there are no sets of standards for a proper design. While a conservative nuance fitsrepparttar 121084 image of a management consulting company, it might look dull and boring for a teen-apparel site. Colors, fonts, and graphics can be mixed together in variety of ways to come up with variety of combinations.

Yet web development has spawned a set of patterns shared by sites across diverse orientations, that addressrepparttar 121085 nitty-gritty of a site anatomy: design, consisting of colors, background, and images; content, which covers writing style, fonts, and company information; and usability, related to screen size and pop-up ads.

Design

Colors

Just because there are hundreds of possible color blends in your image-editing software, doesn't mean you have to use them all. In general, a site's color composition is a blend between one or two base colors and their shade variations. The golden rule here is stick to colors already dominant inrepparttar 121086 industry, adding variations to convey your brand personality. Deflecting too far fromrepparttar 121087 convention alters your image and spawns uncertainty about your business.

Background

Duringrepparttar 121088 early years ofrepparttar 121089 Web, websites were adorned with background images. Overtime, realizing it was a distraction for users, websites ditched background image and opted for solid color instead. Nowadays, background image appears rudimentary, unprofessional, and is confined to personal websites or those of unsavory businesses.

Obviously, your background color should stem from your site's central color. To maintain readability however, go with shades that are bright yet easy onrepparttar 121090 eye, supposedly cream or white.

Images

Basically, images serve as an illustration and aesthetics to add more 'life' to an otherwise monotonous page. That said, unless you run an online art gallery you should use graphics sparingly, as too much of them could hamper users' browsing process and alterrepparttar 121091 personality of your brand.

Can Bad Press Boost Your Brand?

Written by Johann Sebastian S.


There is an inspiring lesson marketers can learn fromrepparttar various episodes of crisis throughoutrepparttar 121069 history of business: negative publicity can actually boost your credibility and thus, corporate image and brand; elegantly admit mistakes and claim full responsibilities forrepparttar 121070 consequences.

This notion might be contrary torepparttar 121071 basic role of PR and marketing - to tweak public perception to spawn a constructive image of howrepparttar 121072 company is doing. Still,repparttar 121073 virtue of honesty and sincerity is one ofrepparttar 121074 core moral values of our society, and - believe it or not -- elegantly admitting our own mistakes actually wins us others sympathy and respect.

In a similar vein, such ploy commands a greater deal of respect thanrepparttar 121075 typical corporate image-building tactics like community development or finding cure for a deadly disease. Companies already enjoying first-rate reputation reinforce their positive image, while those stuck with poor public perception actually confirm that sincerity is one of their overlooked, yet desirable qualities.

For starters, remember that too much of a good thing can actually do us more harm than good. Overtime, anyone sane enough to understandrepparttar 121076 nitty-gritty of corporate world is going to wonder how your company manages to go throughrepparttar 121077 tribulations virtually unscathed. After all, such ups and downs as mismanagement, employee misconduct, and labor unrest to name a few, have always been an integral part of corporate America forrepparttar 121078 past two decades. Persistently glowing reviews only generate suspicion onrepparttar 121079 part of consumers, press, and investors, especially now when public trust is at its lowest, thanks torepparttar 121080 series of accounting scandals that threw corporate credibility intorepparttar 121081 gutter.

When tripping over serious consequences of misrepresenting company data, improper conduct, or simple typographical errors in business documentations for example, it is imperative for companies to promptly deliverrepparttar 121082 news and clarify any surrounding ambiguities to every interested party - consumers, media, investors, analysts.

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