Si bien hay uno que otro usuario que no esté muy contento con su iPhone, también es cierto que habemos millones que estamos encantados con nuestros iPhones y el vídeo de arriba es prueba de ello. El vídeo es una respuesta a uno que lanzará hace unas semanas Verizon, en el que promocionaban el Droid, atacando las debilidades del iPhone. Pues bien I Don’t Care (No me importa) que tan bueno sea el Droid.
Category Archives: Branding
El BBVA Open Talent como oportunidad para proyectos web de Latinoamérica
Quiero empezar aclarando que estoy colaborando en el Open Talent este año para vincular a proyectos de la región latinoamericana a su iniciativa y dejo el disclaimer de frente. Antes de contarles un poco mi interés en la iniciativa, paso a explicar un poco de que trata.
El Open Talent organizado por el BBVA está celebrando su segunda edición con una proyección más internacional. Quieren apoyar con 3 inversiones de hasta 100mil euros (unos 147mil dólares) a proyectos de innovación y tecnología que ya estén funcionando. No se trata de ideas o de planes de negocio puestos en un excel, sino de cosas más avanzadas en su desarrollo.
En la edición del 2008, participaron 375 proyectos, siendo el ganador el proyecto de PideCita. Lo interesante de la iniciativa, es que fue generada en el iWeekend Valencia, un evento que reune a entusiastas de proyectos web para emprender en un fin de semana. PideCita fue la creación de aquel grupo y luego, en búsqueda de apoyo para seguir avanzando llego el fondo de Open Talent.
Adicionalmente a las inversiones, hay una plataforma para que los interesados en apoyar a proyectos participantes envíen sus votos. Y estos votos a su vez le otorgarán al emprendedor de la iniciativa más votada un viaje a algún evento relevante en Estados Unidos. Me imagino a alguien en algún Web Submit, AdTech o Startup School vinculándose con el mundo.
De mi parte, estoy difundiendo la iniciativa apoyando a Javier Martin, quien ya ha estado a bordo desde la primera edición, encontrándome interesado en invitar abiertamente a muchos proyectos que he venido conociendo en la región. Empiezo a imaginar también las sinergías que pueden plantearse en iniciativas como son los Valleys de la región donde hay siempre proyectos ya activos circulando y promoviéndose.
Estoy seguro que existen muchos candidatos que deben aplicar en cada país de Latinoamérica y además es un buen ejercicio para retarse junto a similares en España de donde siempre vemos más iniciativas de emprendimiento vinculadas a la web. Y además, nos permitirá tomar el pulso más acertadamente a muchos proyectos que se han estado iniciando en este año y que buscan un empuje para finalizar el semestre.
El registro para proyectos y toda la normativa estará publicada en breve. Lo que ya existe, es la definición de las temáticas en donde se están buscando proyectos. Si tienen alguna duda pueden enviarla a través del sitio del Open Talent o en los comentarios.
Christian Van Der Henst S. para Maestros del Web.
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OS Faceoff: Windows 7 vs. Snow Leopard
Last Thursday, Microsoft attempted to erase all of the bad memories left by Windows Vista wit the launch of perhaps the most anticipated operating system software yet: Windows 7. The new OS promises to be faster, sleeker, and more intuitive than its predecessor.
Microsoft’s computing and OS rival didn’t take the Windows 7 hype sitting down, though. Apple launched a new wave of Get a Mac Ads painting Microsoft’s Windows flagship as an evolution of problems not worth enduring. Now with both sides at war once again, we thought it was appropriate to dedicate this week’s Web Faceoff to the long-standing Microsoft vs. Apple battle.
This week’s competitors are none other than Microsoft Windows 7 and Mac OS X Snow Leopard 10.6. One is the newest edition of the PC OS, while the other is the standard bearer OS for all Apple computers. Which one emerges the victor…well, we’ll let you decide the outcome in the poll below.
Remember: you have until 12:00 PM PT on Friday to cast your ballot. After that, we’ll tally up the votes and declare a victor. And as always, don’t forget to justify your vote in the comments.
Who would win in a fight: Microsoft Windows 7 or Mac OS X Snow Leopard?(survey)
Web Faceoff: Overall Results
Week 1:
- Mozilla Firefox vs. Google Chrome
- WINNER: Firefox, 4600 votes (Chrome: 3310 votes, Tie: 911 votes)
Week 2:
- Tumblr vs. Posterous
- WINNER: Tumblr, 1809 votes (Posterous: 1496 votes, Tie: 256 votes)
Week 3:
- Pandora vs. Last.fm
- WINNER: Last.fm, 1187 votes (Pandora: 1156 votes, Tie: 122 votes)
Week 4:
- Twitter vs. Facebook
- WINNER: Facebook, 2484 votes (Twitter: 2061 votes, Tie: 588 votes)
Week 5:
- WordPress vs. Typepad
- WINNER: WordPress, 2714 (Typepad: 267 votes, Tie: 121 votes)
Reviews: Chrome, Facebook, Firefox, Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Pandora, Posterous, Tumblr, Twitter, TypePad, WordPress
Tags: apple, microsoft, Snow Leopard, web faceoff, Windows 7
Apple Fires Back at Windows 7 in New Ads
Apple’s “I’m a PC” and “I’m a Mac” dynamic ad duo are at it again in three new “Get a Mac” commercials that take direct aim at today’s Windows 7 launch.
In “Broken Promises,” PC Guy flashes back to Windows editions over the years (with fashion or lack thereof to match), each promising not to have “any of the problems my last operating system had.” The ad ends with the line “this time it’s gonna be different. Trust me.” Ouch, Apple!
Check out the aforementioned ad embedded below, and the other two ads over at Apple. The latter pair both feature Windows users eagerly getting ready to make the switch — not to Windows 7, but to a Mac.
What do you think, are the ads effective, or has Apple gone too far with this one?
[Thanks, Erictric]
Un e-mail dice más que mil palabras
Medios, corporaciones y nosotros explicamos todo el fenómeno de las comunidades virtuales y el proceso de socialización en la Web bajo un sólo termino: Redes Sociales. El problema ocurre cuando este se ubica en contextos erróneos o se pretende que todas las personas lo entiendan de igual manera; como resultado el concepto está sobredimensionado y muchas veces mal empleado.
La verdad, cuestiono ese uso universal y casi endiosado que muchos le están dando, porque no reconocen que más allá del éxito de Facebook, Youtube o Twitter hay un proceso de años en donde gente apasionada de las comunicaciones y las computadoras, entendía que detrás de cada ordenador esperaba alguien capaz de expresarse y aprender. Construir comunidad en la Web no es nuevo, a medida que una herramienta se convierte en una extensión del cuerpo terminamos ignorando su presencia e incluso olvidamos como era la vida antes de obtenerla.
Comunidad virtual
Cuando por allá en 1985 crearon la WELL (Whole Earth Lectronic Link), un sistema de conferencias, en donde las personas conversaban e intercambiaban información por correo electrónico, tuvieron que esperar ocho años para reunir ocho mil usuarios; tiempo después una comunidad llamada Facebook en sólo cinco años alcanzó los 300 millones.
Algunos somos hijos de la era digital, pero no nacimos con el Kindle ni el Iphone debajo del brazo. Hemos vivido el proceso, yo todavía recuerdo el TV de mi abuelo, aquel monstruo gigantesco que cuando encendía sólo dejaba ver un punto brillante en su pantalla, hasta que minutos después y por arte de magia, la imagen se apoderaba totalmente del cristal.
No entiendo porque dejamos de lado plataformas virtuales de comunicación tan simples y utilizadas como el e-mail, los chats, las listas de noticias, los foros, etc. para comprender el origen y forma de las famosas Redes Sociales, que no podrían funcionar sin ellas.
Problemas de definición
Jeremiah Owyang en el post “Interlaced: Email and Social Networks”, cuestiona la atribución que recibe Facebook de ser la Red Social más grande, ignorando la enorme cantidad de usuarios del correo electrónico, el cual también posee perfiles para que las personas expresen su identidad, interactúen y se conecten con otras, e incluso que estos puedan ser privados. Características, que según Owyang debe tener toda Red Social.
El primer “directorio” que consulté para contactar a mis amigos en la Web fue el de Hotmail, después apareció el Space enlazado al servicio del Messenger; para entonces podía modificar su tema, subir fotos y armar grupos. Hoy, Yahoo y Microsoft a través de su plataforma de correo y mensajería instantánea, ofrecen la posibilidad de conexión con algunas de las comunidades virtuales más conocidas (Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, Last.fm,etc.).
Cuestión de rutina
Qué tan exitosa resulte la propuesta de ambos, no lo sabremos hasta que pase algún tiempo, sólo me queda claro su afán por seguir vigentes. Además, la realidad es que plataformas como la de Facebook ofrecen una interactividad completa, que hace del correo, simplemente un requisito más; si es o no una Red Social, esa discusión se las dejo a ustedes.
“Es nuestra misión –nuestra misión esencial, central, crucial- transformarnos de meros seres sociales en criaturas comunitarias. Es el único modo en que la evolución humana podrá seguir su curso.” M. Scott Peck
Dany Correa para Maestros del Web.
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Web Faceoff: Twitter vs. FacebookMashable!
If you’ve been surfing Mashable the last few weeks, you probably have already have already seen a few Web Faceoffs, our new weekly series where we let two popular web apps duke it out via reader vote. Two enter, only one can claim the title.
We have some great faceoffs already. Nearly 9000 of you voted in our web browser brawl, while only 31 votes separated Last.fm from Pandora. But now, in our fourth installment of Web Faceoff, we decided to up it by a notch.
In the entire web and social media industry, two platforms have captured nearly all the attention: Facebook and Twitter. Facebook is the world’s largest social network, while Twitter is considered by most the hottest.
We’ve compared the two, discussed when most people use Twitter versus Facebook, and even analyzed who will win in real-time search. But we’ve never actually put them head-to-head. We’ve never asked you which of these two powerhouses you prefer.
That’s exactly what we’re going to do today – right here, right now. Facebook or Twitter: which one do you prefer? Cast your vote in the poll below. You have until noon EST on Friday October 16th before the polls close. Let the great battle begin.
Who would win in a fight: Facebook or Twitter?(poll)
Web Faceoff: Overall Results
Week 1:
- Mozilla Firefox vs. Google Chrome
- WINNER: Firefox, 4600 votes (Chrome: 3310 votes, Tie: 911 votes)
Week 2:
- Tumblr vs. Posterous
- WINNER: Tumblr, 1809 votes (Posterous: 1496 votes, Tie: 256 votes)
Week 3:
- Pandora vs. Last.fm
- WINNER: Last.fm, 1187 votes (Pandora: 1156 votes, Tie: 122 votes)
Reviews: Chrome, Facebook, Firefox, Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Pandora, Posterous, Tumblr, Twitter
Tags: facebook, social media, twitter, web faceoff
The Art of Branding Yourself and Your Freelancing Business
Just as it is for big corporations, successful branding is essential to the success of a freelancing business and to just one self-employed web worker.
It is often times overlooked, most likely because many don’t realize the large benefits that can come from it.
The first thing we think of when we think “brand identity” is a good logo.
A good logo can do wonders for a self-employed freelancer, but branding identity goes far beyond that, into entire website development, content, business cards, and even into offline scenarios.
In this article, we’ll take a closer look at ways to define a brand for something as unique as a freelancing business, and what one needs to do to get started on the right track to a successful brand.Before we get into the specifics, let’s take a look at how a brand can help any sort of business.
A good brand will lead to success now and in the future, and that is essential for a self-employed person that doesn’t ever want to be forced back into a 9-5 job. If created correctly, a good brand will:
- Create a memorable business
This will make the clients want to come back to, creating user loyalty. - Create a basis for the business to expand in new ways
When launching a new project, a brand can be used to jump-start it successfully. - A good brand confirms credibility
This is top concern among many potential clients. - A properly implemented brand will target the right clients
This will help finding the right clients looking for exactly your style.
1. Define Your Business Goals
Before one even gets started in the design process of branding, one must define what they want the brand to communicate.
In order to do that, we must define a few specific things in general, the first being the freelancing business’s goals.
Beyond helping to develop a brand, defining business goals will help in a number of other ways.
For one, it will help visualize the ultimate goals of the business, helping smaller goals become more proactive in reaching the long-term accomplishments.
It will also keep you, as the leader of the business, on track, from personal self-management, to anyone you may be managing in the future.
Getting off track is why many businesses fail, and why many freelancers eventually go back to a day job they hate. Goals and a business plan will help you to stay on track.

Take some time aside to set goals properly. Write them down, detail them, and think about them critically. Goals can help plan the future of a freelancing career for years to come. Below are ten items to keep in mind when setting goals:
- Be specific
Losing sight of where you’re going is an issue that comes from having no goals, but having unspecific goals will also create this problem. - Create a business plan
This should be a separate article in itself, but it is a great way to outline goals as well as include finances and tools into accomplishing those goals. - Set short-term goals along with your long-term goals
It’s easy to turn ultimate dreams into business goals, as we should, but shorter, more technical goals can track success better. - Keep committed
This is an obvious point, but think of lifestyle changes that will help you commit to the goals that are made. For example, if you would like to expand your skill set, set aside a time each day in your schedule to study. - It may help to make goals public
Make your freelancing business and goals associated with it as public as possible. If this means sharing with only friends and family, then so be it. It will help to motivate you to complete goals — keeping your business on track. - Be realistic
It’s ok to dream high, but don’t set unachievable goals for a time given. - Have relevant goals
If a goal ends up providing little or nothing to the growth of the business, then it is pointless. For example, don’t set a goal to take on another client each week that you can’t handle — this will likely only limit the time you have to grow and market the business in other ways. A relevant goal would be, for example, to expand to more than a 1-man (or 1-woman) operation. - Create an action plan for each goal
“I’d like to someday own my own design firm”, is just not good enough. Have a goal-by-goal plan to complete broader goals like this. In other words, make the goal actionable. - Keep everything in line when working on a new goal.
Reaching goals means business and lifestyle changes, so make sure your finances and other forms of security are still tightly in place throughout the process. - Take a step back to analyze the progress
Take what you’ve learned onto the next goal. As an example, if you’re trying to market your portfolio better, what marketing strategies worked? Which strategies didn’t work?
2. Define Your Target Audience
After defining business and career goals, you need to define who you’ll need to attract to keep the business alive.
These people are, of course, the clients. Who is your ideal client? Beyond clients, are you willing to work with others on group projects (i.e. developer and designer)? Who would that ideal partner be?
Target audiences are often more related to one that sells products, or to a blog or other form of website that relies heavily on its visitor count. However, selling services is no different. One must recognize this and take the necessary steps to define their target audience.
Both how a brand is designed visually and how it is presented professionally will lean towards a certain type of person.
This person should be someone you’d like to work with, as well as the type of person that will help your brand grow.

When seemingly ready to open up Illustrator and start on a logo design, wait one more second and get prepared for the visual aspect of the brand-to-be.
Below are some questions to ask about the target audience before jumping into the design phase of your brand.
What is your design style?
If it is more creative, you may want to appeal to groups that would need a creative website.
If it is more Web 2.0 and sleek, you’re going to want to appeal to business owners or vendors of “high-technology fields.”
Consulting agencies, app websites, and other sites of the like would be great targets.
To What Level Are you Willing to Help and Communicate?
It’s true; all clients have varying levels of understanding web technologies, and well, technology in general.
Do you want to attract a client that knows nothing of the web world, in which you will be responsible for providing an easy to maintain website? Or, would you rather communicate with a group of web professionals, sending out the final project to one client?
This can dig deeper into clients as well. Attracting a client, for example that is maintaining a site dedicated to some sort of technology may be easier to communicate with about technology if you prefer that.
Any other type of website that coincides with the “offline world” though may hold a client that would need a simpler website.
What work would you like to be responsible for?
Many of us don’t like all the work that comes from freelancing. Especially in the world of website creation, many clients want us to do it all — design, develop, market, and more.
If you specialize in one area though, it may be beneficial to have part of your target audience be those looking for partnership projects.
For example, if you are a designer, you may want to include web developers in your target audience so that they could contact you to partner up on a bigger project.
This way, whether you know how to or not, you wouldn’t be stuck with the coding and you can stick with what you love.
Define it on Paper
After asking these questions and researching a bit more, write out your target audience in a list.
Each item should not be a single-line type of person, like “Clients with a lot of web experience”, but rather a small very descriptive paragraph.
The more detailed the description, the more success you’ll have once it’s time to start the design process of the brand.

Further Resources
- Web Design, Ad Copy and Targeting your Target Audience
- Website Design – Identify Your Target Audience
- How to Market Your Small Business: Meet Customers Where They Are
3. The Business Name
Is it your own name, or a more formal and creative name?
This is often times a step overlooked, but it is incredibly relevant to the final goals of the website. If you plan to be the owner of a firm someday, or develop a team of web professionals in any other way, your given name as a brand may not be appropriate.
However, many freelancers chose to grow their business by always freelancing solo, while still outsourcing some of their work. There is a difference in each situation, and a personal name would thrive on this type of business.
Also, bigger names may attract bigger projects, while a personal name would attract many smaller clients. Depending on what you’d like to do in terms of work greatly depends on the brand’s name.
So, in the plainest sense: an alternative name would be more versatile, but your own name as a brand would be more personable and each would lead to a different type of client.

Image credit: Mark McGall, 72 Thinking
4. The Logo
The logo is the first step into the design process of the brand. It is the one graphic that your business will survive upon.
Your website, content, and all other design elements must compliment a brand’s logo, as well as work with it towards the ultimate goal of making the sale to the client.
Whether designing it yourself or hiring someone else to do it for you — you’ll need to be the one that decides how it will look.
Many times I get clients that let me have too much creative control when it comes to their brand design. While creative control is always appreciated, when it comes to a brand — that’s a bad choice.
Be sure to research and create a plan for the brand of your freelancing business so you can take control.

Everything mentioned so far in this article will come into play for the initial design phase of the brand.
The name is an obvious factor, but the target audience and business’s goals will also come into play. Keep a few questions in mind concerning all of this when beginning the logo design phase:
- What does the overall style of the logo need to be to attract the right audience?
- What type of colors should be used? As different types of colors provoke different emotions, this ties in greatly to the target audience.
- How versatile does it need to be? How will it grow with your freelancing as a business?
- Does it need to be formatted well with print material as well as web material?
- What shape does it need to be, generally (more rounded/square, or rectangular)? This has a lot to do with what materials you’ll be using it on and the format it will need to take when combined with content.
Some Examples
The above logo says “professional, fun, and personable”. Notice how the varying colors in the web design turn into a more playful approach, which in turn makes it more personable.
The smooth curves in both the font and the image portion of the logo also take the strict factor away, making him as a business person approachable.
This freelancer runs as a single freelancer, branding his business as him — most likely returning to him one-on-one clients with great communication and many smaller, more creative projects.
This brand is a group of designers working together under one website. The brand has a more generalized name, and even a more professional, company-like feel.
Furthermore, looking more into their portfolio, one can see that the image compliment on the logo highlights their design style: clean and sleek with a hint of outside-the-box creativity.
The abstraction of this logo tells the viewer right away about the style of this designer. Also, a bright color also plays into it. It is simple, effective, and portrays the designer’s intentions well.
Playful, light and super creative is what this brand is all about. The logo complimenting this brand is incredibly creative, and lacks a more formal look. That’s not to say it isn’t effective though. Its overall look is still professional while being quirky and original.
This is a single freelancer with a portfolio full of Web 2.0 material. The logo quickly reflects that, and the nature theme provides a calm, cool, and collected tone. The brand says professional and high-tech, but not rigid or boring.
This brand is the most classical of all the logos above. Along with it comes a business that is more traditional and formal. This likely creates more credibility for them as a team, rather than a single freelancer, allowing them to take on bigger clients.
5. Your Website Design, Business Card Design, and Everything Else
Now that you have a logo, you’ve gone through much of the design process for nearly everything else that will require design. It only takes a bit more planning to complete the design process.
If your brand is very personal, a hand-drawn website design may work well to compliment the logo and brand as a whole. If the brand is Web 2.0, you’ll want a sleek web design, sleek business card design, and sleek, high-end stationary and other printed material.
Because the rest of your design needs can be based primarily off of the logo design, most of the target audience and business goals implementation will come into place naturally.
Still, keep them in mind as you develop the brand further. Don’t lose sight of the goals, and always pertain to the original message you’ve planned for.
Examples Continued
This group keeps to their image with the rest of their design as professional yet creative.
The colors, wireframe, and work featured on this portfolio are all abstract, just as the logo is. It is also very clean, to the point, and has a lot of whitespace — again mimicking the logo and brand design.
The web design of this brand is the primary focus, and it is playful, personable, and approachable. It mixes very well with the logo and highlights the brand very well.
The web design is super clean and web 2.0, just as the logo is. Furthermore the design is laid out in a way that is systematized, letting visitors in on all the information necessary, which is a very professional, company-like approach.
This web design is very traditional, attracting clients that would like a straight approach to their web services. Like the logo and appeal to the brand, it is “gimmick-free” and professional. A high level of credibility is present in the web design as it is in the entire brand.
6. Write an Elevator Pitch
An elevator pitch is traditionally used offline when trying to sell your services in about 30 seconds or less.
Pre-planning a small speech to sell your stuff can help to include everything you need to, while still having a crafted pitch that is likely to sell.
However, as the technologies of web work expand each year, elevator pitches are becoming increasingly important for online freelancers as well.
An elevator pitch is very much a part of a brand. What is said in the pitch shares what you do, what your business does, and what you and your business can do for the person reading or hearing your pitch.
When a prospect asks what you do, you should not respond with, “I’m a freelance web designer” or “I’m a freelance writer”. Instead, this is a chance to say, in about 15-30 seconds, what you do in detail.
Nobody is interested in a “freelance web designer”, “freelance web developer” or a “freelance writer”.
What potential clients are interested in is “a web designer that focuses primarily on user-centric web designs that are both creative and professional” or “a web developer that creates website apps focused around users needs — apps that are designed to sell”.

Realistically, elevator pitches should be even better than the above. Furthermore, they can be used as an introduction to a portfolio, or used on the about page to help make sales there, too. To find out more about elevator pitches and how to write the perfect pitch, check out the resources below.
Further Resources
- Is Your Elevator Pitch a Home Run?
- The Writer’s Elevator Pitch
- Not Getting a Rise out of your Elevator Speech?
- Write an Elevator Pitch for Your Blog
- Elevator Pitch 101 – Intro To Writing a 30 Second Elevator Pitch
7. Write an About Page
Your about page is where clients and others who may want to work with you can get to know you, before having to make any sort of contact. It should reflect yourself, and the way you do business.
Is your brand fun, professional or to-the-point? Most likely, your brand so far has reflected your personality in its own sense already. It’s now up to you to write an about page that can “make the sale“.
If a person has become interested enough to check out the about page, you have somehow convinced them to become at least half-way interested in your services.
Hopefully, you’ve attracted the right person based from your declared target audience. If so, how would you talk to this person?
Content-wise, you’re going to want to keep to your original style. For example, if you want a more company-like approach, write more formally. For a more creative approach, be personable and fun.
Your career choice as a freelancer and the work you do probably already reflects your personality a great deal, so just being yourself is the best option when trying to find a writing style for the about page.
It is of utmost importance to not try to sound like anyone else — your own voice is what makes you different from every other freelancer on the planet.
After figuring in the writing style and how to approach the page, one must outline what to include. Below is a minimum:
- Your history in the field and what you do.
- Your professional experience, and possibly school experience if present.
(A written résumé) - Perhaps a link to a more formal resume.
- Contact information, or a link to the contact page.
- A relevant note to their problem, and how you can help them.
(They need a website, you can make one for them.)
One may want to include other sections that further define their personality and business.
The more a potential client feels they know you, the more likely they’ll be to make contact because you and your business will seem more approachable. (Keep in mind though that it need not be a 10 page autobiography!)
Further Resources
- Your About Page Is a Robot
- How to Write Your “About Me” Page
- The 4 Essential Elements of an About Me Page
- Best Practices For Effective Design Of “About me”-Pages
- Five Tips (and a Bonus!) on How to Write a Fantastic About Page
- The Importance Of An “About Me” Page
8. Get Clients to Reach You
Now that you have a brand, it’s all about marketing and having clients find you.
You’ve created a target audience, identified business goals (both present and future goals), built the brand in a design sense around those two definition, and created content that helps sell your material.
This is all great, but at this point your brand is unknown and inactive. Don’t worry though — your brand is supposed to do the work for you, and given the time, it will.
Let people know about your brand by getting listed on job websites, doing guest posts, or leaving messages in forums. Generally, marketing is the same — but now you must market your brand as opposed to yourself.
Keeping Consistent
In my own experiences with branding, I’ve found myself re-branding and trying out new things.
It all came down to the fact that I had never taken the time to correctly brand my business, and specifically, that I had never taken the time to find my true target audience.
That forced me to revamp my brand to meet my needs as time went on. I could have avoided the whole mess if I would have taken the time in the beginning.
In the end, that has hurt my business because clients, readers, and other people that keep my business alive didn’t recognize me and my business after each revamp, and it also hurt my credibility.
It is essential to keep a brand consistent, for the reasons mentioned above, and for a number of other reasons. Once you lose the brand, you lose all of the benefits that come along with it. If you change a brand, even if it is being changes to better match goals today, it will have to start marketing from base zero once again.
Here are a few articles and tips on how to keep a brand consistent.
- Keeping Your Brand Consistent
- Is your online brand consistent?
- Keep Things Consistent – Basic Brand Management
Updating a Brand
As we change as professionals and as people, there is no doubt that we will want to change our brand too. We may grow into a design firm rather than a freelance web designer, or a web developer more so than a designer.
Much of the time a person will be focusing on one area of web work, only to find over time that their skill set and interests have expanded into something completely different.
- That’s fine; that’s life — we live, we grow, we change.
- The trick now is to not change your brand, but to upgrade it, and develop it further.
This is where our initial goals step into place. With the correct planning of our goals in the first place, we were able to plan ahead for moving forward. Perhaps you were a single, lonely freelancer back in the day you created your brand, but now you’ve finally got a team together as a firm, just as one of your goals stated. If you planned the brand around that goal successfully, you may only need to make a few tweaks, while still making your brand recognizable and overall, the same. - To upgrade a brand, keep a few things consistent: the name, the style, and the main color combination.
The name is the most recognizable part of a brand, so that is something you will never want to change. The overall style is very tightly knit into your target audience, and in order to keep your current client base, you’ll want to keep that. Lastly, color is one of the most memorable aspects visually, and most likely is the driving force visual for your brand. Keep this, and you keep the tone and memorable factor of your brand.
Further Resources
- How to Get Clients to Come to You
- 8 Brilliant Freelance Job Boards to Help You Get More Clients
- Getting the Freelance Gigs to Come to You — Your Resume and Portfolio
Wrapping Up
Brand creation is definitely an art in itself, and takes a lot of time to plan.
Don’t rush through this essential step of a freelancing career — having a brand can not only benefit you as a web professional, but also avoid fallbacks and can aid as a form of security.
No matter how big your business is — how big your client base, your team, or your popularity is — develop a plan, a brand around it if you haven’t already.
Then, stick to it, be consistent. It may also be helpful to take a step back if you already have a brand to analyze it. Can it be upgraded or further developed? Are you missing anything essential to your brand thus far?
There are, of course, many more tips and suggestion that could be mentioned, and much of it is a matter of personal experiences.
Written by Kayla Knight.
Brahma es Buena Onda 2.0
A la vanguardia en comunicación digital, la marca desarrollo una de las primeras plataformas digitales 2.0 de la Argentina.
Brahma presenta su página 2.0, con contenidos exclusivos, para mayores de 18 años, actualizados diariamente y espacios donde el usuario es el protagonista, pudiendo interactuar y relacionarse con otros visitantes. El sitio, desarrollado por SG2, destaca las “Comunidades Buena Onda”, sección que permite un acceso ágil y sencillo a los canales de la marca dentro de las redes sociales preferidas.
Los usuarios pueden subir sus propios videos, fotos y notas, comentar y calificar la información de las distintas secciones, y acceder a promociones y premios. Además, en el site se presentan las últimas novedades sobre recitales, discos y la movida en los principales bares del país.
En la página de “descargas”, se accede a wallpapers, e-cards y emoticones, exclusivos de la marca. Y en la sección de “juegos”, se ubican los juegos propios de la marca como así también otras opciones sugeridas. Y para saber dónde está la “Buena Onda”, la página incluye un mapa on-line con los destinos que la marca y los usuarios recomiendan: centros turísticos, circuitos de bares, pubs y boliches; ilustrados con imágenes, videos y características de los lugares.
“Este nuevo site cuenta con un alto valor agregado, crea una plataforma de comunicación permanente con la marca y entre los consumidores. Además, permite una fuerte interacción con las redes sociales utilizadas a diario por los consumidores”, explicó Fernando Mur, gerente de la marca Brahma.
Para mayor información ingresa a www.Brahma.com.ar
The Most Controversial Magazine Covers of All Time
We’ve put together a collection of magazine covers that have stirred up controversy through the years.
These covers can serve as object lessons for what to do and what not to do both with design and editorial.
While some controversial covers have worked and sold more magazines, or won awards for the editors who made the decision to go to press with them, others were embarrassments that the publication had to either apologize for, or fire an editor over.
Here are some of the most controversial magazine covers of all time. Feel free to suggest other covers that you think should be part of this collection.
Time Magazine, January 2, 1939: Hitler as Man of the Year
This cover featured an elaborate illustration of Hitler playing “his hymn of hate in a desecrated cathedral while victims dangle on a St. Catherine’s wheel while the Nazi hierarchy looks on.” Baron Rudolph Charles von Ripper was a Catholic that fled Hitler’s Germany, and the artist of this disturbing piece. By 1938, Hitler had firmly seized power in Germany, taken over Austria and Czechoslovakia, and had been given a free hand in Eastern Europe by the English prime minister of the time, Neville Chamberlain. Time has had to defend this choice throughout history, and at the time defended it by stating that the “Man of the Year” was a title bestowed on the person who had most influenced events of the previous year.

Time Magazine, April 8, 1966: Is God Dead?
This cover has been called the most controversial of all time. The related article concerned the “death of god movement” that had sprung up in the 1960’s. The cover and article enraged readers.

Life, November 26, 1965: War In Vietnam
Paul Schutzers captured this arresting image of a VietCong prisoner being taken prisoner by American forces during the Vietnam War. Photography and news coverage like this helped to turn the American public against the Vietnam war. While Schutzers was one of LIFE’s best photographers, he was killed on assignment during the Six-Day War of 1967 between Israel and its neighbouring states of Egypt, Jordan, and Syria.

Esquire, April 1968: The Passion of Ali
This smart rendition of Muhammad Ali was created to illustrate his martyrdom to his cause after he refused to join the US military due to his religious beliefs and was subsequently stripped of his heavyweight boxing title. The piece was done after the same manner as “The Martyrdom of St. Sebastian”, a popular theme through medieval art but most recognizable in the painting by Andrea Mantegna.

Esquire, May 1969: The Drowning of Andy Warhol
Another triumph of Esquire’s former visionary Art Director, George Lois, this picture combined two separate shots of a soup can and Warhol. In the first ten years of his employment at Esquire, circulation was boosted from 500,000 to 2 million, a figure for which his covers were partially responsible. This shot references Warhol’s famous “soup can” exhibits that symbolized the American avant-garde art movement.

Playboy, October 1971: First Playboy African-American Woman
This cover was the first Playboy cover to feature an African-American woman. The model is Darine Stern and the photographer was Richard Fegley.

National Lampoon, January 1973: If You Don’t Buy This Magazine…
While this cover didn’t do much more than make people laugh when it came out despite its violent overtones, Ronald G. Harris’ famous cover shot definitely raised a few eyebrows in pre-Photoshop days.

The New Yorker, March 29, 1976: Steinberg Map of New York
This portrayal of a New Yorker’s idea of what the rest of the United States looks like was drawn by Saul Steinberg. The artist sued Columbia Pictures over their movie poster for “Moscow on the Hudson”, which does seem to be derived from Steinberg’s cover down to the placement of the title. Steinberg won the case.

Rolling Stone, January 22, 1981: John Lennon and Yoko Ono
Annie Leibovitz took this shot just hours before John Lennon was shot outside of his apartment building, the Dakota, in New York City on December 8, 1980. Leibovitz originally wanted to take the shot of Lennon alone but he insisted that his wife be in the pictures. This cover was named the most popular magazine cover of the past 40 years by the American Society of Magazine Publishers.

Vanity Fair, August 1991: Demi Moore, Pregnant and Nude
This cover was shot by celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz and was decried as shameful and disgusting when it was released. Some stores sent back the issue, or only sold it with a brown paper covering the “offensive” image. It has spawned countless celebrity nude pregnancy shots done in the same fashion, and helped to launch Demi Moore’s career into the stratosphere.

Vanity Fair, August 1993: K.D. Lang and Cindy Crawford
The cover was meant to be as controversial as the country star’s career. According to the cover story, Lang got more grief from the country music industry over her decision to join PETA than her decision to come out as a lesbian.
Time Magazine, June 27, 1994: OJ Mug Shot Controversy
In 1994, OJ Simpson was accused of murdering his wife, Nicole. In 1995, he was acquitted after a long and highly publicized trial. The photo used on the cover of Time Magazine was manipulated to make OJ look darker in skin tone and more menacing. For comparison, see the Newsweek cover which uses the original shot without any alteration.


The Economist, September 10, 1994: The Camel-Humping Issue
Obvious Black Eyed Peas references aside, this cover drew some fire for the UK-based magazine. The cover was printed for the North American market only.

Time, April 14 1997: Ellen’s Coming-Out Issue
Time’s cover and exclusive story left no doubt in the minds of all Americans that Ellen was, in fact, gay. Even in 1997, coming out could be perilous for a star’s career. While it may now seem like a mere bump in the road due to Ellen’s stunning success, at the time TV outlets in rural America pulled her show.

Wired, June 1997: 101 Ways to Save Apple
When this magazine went to press, Steve Jobs had just rejoined Apple through Apple’s acquisition of his NeXT Software Inc. While the cover was a bit more pessimistic than the story it was meant to illustrate, it remains one of the top magazine covers of all time. We don’t think anyone would try to give Jobs advice today, but back then Mac fans would have done anything they could to help the ailing corporation.

Time, Dec 21, 1998: Devil Horns on Clinton
This was one of several magazine covers that featured Bill Clinton during the Monica Lewinsky scandal. In 1995, Lewinsky was an intern at the White House during Clinton’s presidency, and they had an intimate affair. The scandal broke when Lewinsky confided in a colleague in January of 1998. The scandal eventually resulted in Clinton’s impeachment. The top of the letter “M” in the Time masthead appear to be resting on the top of Clinton’s head as horns. The devil horns were written off by Time as an accident of masthead placement rather than a deliberate act.

Esquire Magazine, December 2000: The Crotch Shot
This shot of Clinton was said to be inspired by the Lincoln Memorial, but was interpreted as an obvious reference to the Monica Lewinsky scandal. Like the Obama couple satire in the New Yorker seen further down, this cover drew fire from both sides of the political fence.

The New Yorker, Sept. 24, 2001: Twin Towers in Silhouette
This cover was a graphical as well as an editorial success. The magazine succeeded in creating a fitting and classic memorial to the victims of the tragedy and the buildings themselves in true upscale New Yorker fashion. Covers editor Franoise Mouly created a testament to the Twin Towers that drew on the inspiration of Ad Reinhardt’s black-on-black paintings.

Entertainment Weekly, May 2 2003: Dixie Chicks
The Dixie Chicks set off a firestorm when they criticized then-president George W. Bush for invading Iraq on the grounds that Iraq was manufacturing weapons of mass destruction. The Dixie Chicks used their weapons of mass distraction on this provocative cover.

Seventeen, May 2003: Sarah Michelle Gellar’s Zombie Arm
This horrendously manipulated stock photo of Sarah Michelle Gellar made the mag send an expensive purse by way of apology. Gellar returned the purse since she didn’t wear leather. While the practice of using stock photos for covers is common, flagrant abuse of Photoshop is something that the art department and editor usually catch before print time.

Rolling Stone, January 2006: The Passion of Kanye West
Rolling Stone tipped a thorny hat to Esquire’s portrayal of Ali with this 2006 cover. It isn’t known if the cover was meant to be a joke about the singer’s ego, but most people found it very funny. Religious fans of the magazine didn’t find it as hilarious, and the odd cover story that went with it in which the singer admits to a porn addiction just made the whole thing awkward. The tone of the cover feels current in light of the singer’s recent mike-grabbing moment at the 2009 VMA’s.

Baby Talk, August 2006
While this image seems benign to most people who have been involved with a baby in one fashion or another, the cover was decried as obscene. Even though moms made up the target demographic, a survey of 4000 of them turned up the fact that 25% had a negative response. One mother actually shredded the magazine so that her 13-year old son couldn’t see it. Not that he likely noticed; he was probably on the computer downloading porn watching tips from Kanye.

Texas Monthly, January 2007: Dick Cheney Cover Issue
Building on the famous 1973 Lampoon cover, Texas Monthly took a jab at the Vice-President’s hunting accident where he shot a colleague in the face. This cover won the 2007 Best Cover Line of the Year Award from the Magazine Publishers of America. 
Time, August 29, 2007: Devil Horns on Billy Graham
The blogosphere was rife with rumours about this cover. This was probably not intentional. Time Magazine has claimed that all of its “Devil Horn” covers through the ages are mere coincidences. For a defense of the Time Magazine position, this blog post has a list of Time Magazine covers that have devil horns but no potential hidden meaning. Accident of their masthead design, or subtle editorial statement? You decide…

Golfweek, January 19, 2008: The Noose that Hung an Editor
This cover was born out of the comments of a golf anchorman, Kelly Tlighman, that fellow players should “lynch (Tiger Woods) in a back alley” and the subsequent feature story that was published in that edition of Golfweek. PGA Tour director Tim Finchem had this to say about it: “Clearly, what Kelly said was inappropriate and unfortunate, and she obviously regrets her choice of words, but we consider Golfweek’s imagery of a swinging noose on its cover to be outrageous and irresponsible”. A day after the cover was published, the editor was let go.

People Magazine, March 2008: Brangelina Twins
This cover and photo shoot sacrificed People’s editorial soul for a first shot at the Brangelina twins. Instead of their usual journalistic even-handed approach, they seemingly acquiesced to the couple’s need for nothing but positive coverage in order to get a scoop on the rest of the world with the first baby pictures. While People magazine denied these charges as “categorically false”, the coverage was nevertheless very rosy-cheeked in tone.

Vogue, April 2008: King Kong Cover
This cover of model Gisele Bundchen and sports star Lebron James was considered to be a racist portrayal of “King Kong”. Images that portray black males as threatening “reinforce the criminalization of black men,” said Damion Thomas, assistant professor in the Department of Kinesiology at University of Maryland. The cover was supposed to showcase two stars with excellent bodies, in keeping with the “Shape” theme of the issue.

The New Yorker, July 21, 2008: The Obama Couple Satire
This cover by famous New Yorker cartoonist Barry Blitt was heavily criticized by both the McCain and Obama camps during the 2008 US election. While the piece was meant to be a satire of allegations lobbed at the couple by their detractors, its inopportune appearance during a campaign didn’t have Obama’s supporters laughing as hard as the magazine intended.

OK Magazine, June 2009: Michael Jackson Death Photo
Fans were upset over the magazine’s decision to publish this photo. Sarah Ivens, editorial director, said that the cover decision was made since they wanted to stand out from all of the tribute covers that were dominating the stands that week. Jackson died on June 25, 2009 after being given a cocktail of drugs by his physician.

Compiled and written by Angela West.
Top 5 Business Blogging Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
This post originally appeared on the American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.
Business blogging can be exceptionally rewarding. When done correctly, a successful blog can bring attention to your business, can attract new customers, and can turn your current customer base into the type of fans that companies like Apple, Netflix, and Ben and Jerry’s have: people who will not only buy your product or service, but evangelize it to their peers. Of course, like anything, there is a right way to go about starting a business blog and a wrong way.
Creating a blog for your small business isn’t easy; it requires hard work and the ability to think creatively about your work. But if you avoid the five big mistakes laid out in this post, your chances of building a successful business blog will be much better.
Mistake #1: Treating Your Blog Like a Press Center
The number one mistake that business bloggers make is to treat their blog as an extension of their current press center. Repeat after me: Your blog is not the place for press releases. Blogging is a conversation and it offers a way for your customers to connect with your business on a completely new level. Press releases, on the other hand, are the exact opposite. They’re impersonal, they’re self promotional, and most readers don’t trust them. If you use your blog to republish press releases your customers will have no reason to keep reading and they’ll also likely not trust your content.
How to Avoid: First, don’t ever put out a press release on your blog. You can use your blog to make product or other business announcements, but do so with original writing and in a more casual voice. Second, do use your blog to write about things other than your core business. Share your thoughts on your industry, share insights into the day-to-day work life and processes at your company, and provide tips and tricks you have learned during your time in business.
Mistake #2: Not Blogging Regularly
Think about the blogs you read on a regular basis — how many of them publish only sporadically? Most successful blogs put out new content at least a couple of times per week and try to stick to a regular schedule. Consistently putting out quality content will keep readers returning and over time it will help you build a community and turn your customers into fans.
How to Avoid: Blogging regularly isn’t easy, so to avoid burning out, brainstorm editorial ideas ahead of time. If you plan to put out new posts every Tuesday and Friday, for example, try not to start writing Tuesday’s post on Tuesday morning. Get other people at your company involved so that one person isn’t shouldering the entire blogging load, and even consider sourcing content from your customers. Remember that anything can provide fodder for a good blog post, so pay attention to the things you read or see on other blogs, newspapers, magazines, or television.
Mistake #3: Not Enabling Conversation
As I already said, blogging is a conversation, and not allowing it to occur on your blog is a mistake. It’s true that blog comments can open you up to criticism, but blogging is an unparalleled opportunity to connect with your customers. You’ll get a lot more out of blogging if you enable — and even encourage — your customers to respond to what you write.
How to Avoid: Obviously the first thing you need to do is enable commenting on your business blog. But beyond that, you need to remember that the conversation is two-way. Get in there and respond to the comments readers leave on your blog and you’ll be more likely to develop a community around your writing that can help turn your customers into fans who will evangelize your products and services and provide you with quality feedback. You should also participate in the conversation on other blogs in your industry by leaving comments on posts elsewhere around the blogosphere. That will help you to establish your “blogging brand” and bring new readers your way.
Mistake #4: Making New Content Hard to Discover
Your blog won’t be very helpful to readers if they aren’t able to easily find new content. You need to make your blog discoverable and you need to make sure that when you add new content, your regular readers will be able to find it.
How to Avoid: There are a few ways to make sure your blog content is more easily discovered.
- Make your blog easy to find by linking to it prominently from your company’s web site and including your blog’s URL in your email signature, on your business cards, and in sales and marketing collateral.
- Use a full RSS feed (because the goal with most business blogs should be to get read, not boost page views) and make it easy for your readers to find and subscribe to.
- Embrace social media technologies like Twitter and Facebook as a way to notify your fans and followers of new blog content, and make it easy for your readers to share content with each other through social media channels and via email.
- Optimize for search engines by putting relevant keywords in post titles and URL slugs and write about the things that your customers are most likely to be searching for — but avoid sounding artificial simply so you can stuff some more keywords into a post.
Mistake #5: Expecting Too Much, Too Soon
Blogging isn’t a sprint, it’s a marathon. Your blog won’t be an overnight success, and for the first few months it might feel like you’re writing for no one. It can take time to build up your readership and have a regular community of people who participate on your blog. Don’t expect immediate returns from your blog and do expect to put in a lot of hard work.
How to Avoid: Set attainable goals and realize that you’re in it for the long haul. Don’t cancel your blogging efforts after three months — give it at least a year of regularly putting out quality, original content. And make sure that your blog is easy to find, and that your readers are able to easily comment and share posts with others.
More blogging resources from Mashable:
- 6 Tips for Customizing Your Small Business Blog
- 5 Rules for Better Web Writing
- Top 20 Ways to Share a Great Blog Post
- 26 Places to Find Free Multimedia for Your Blog
- HOW TO: Support Social Good on Your Blog
Image courtesy of iStockphoto, Franck-Boston, blackred, marekuliasz
Tags: blog, blogging, business, small business

























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