In the previous blog we discussed the importance of offline marketing activity to drive traffic to the company web site, where visitors can discover all the information they require. It raises an important question of how that information is presented, in what format and how convenient is that to the user. In the days when all information was printed and mailed out or distributed by company representatives, it was relatively straightforward. There was a hierarchy of literature from the glossy brochures introducing the company its products and services through data sheets to instruction and operating manuals and ranging from colour to black and white. For consultants these would be presented in impressive ring binders and regularly updated. Print runs were generally large, although a significant quantity of any print run could be found stacked on literature room shelves or in the back of rep's cars. The distribution from receipt of request to sending out literature was often leisurely until the users became more urgent in their request, demanding information be faxed immediately. Often the most convenient style of literature for faxing was the data sheet and this was most legible if designed in black and white rather than using subtle colours lost in the faxing process. Today I suspect that a great deal of literature designed for print does not progress beyond the PDF stage and where printed it is as a short digital print run. Certainly clients indicate a reduced demand for printed literature, once a major part of any marketing programme, in some cases it is now delegated to the margins.
The emphasis has shifted to the user to now do the work of locating the right PDF, downloading and if required printing a copy for reference. With this development, control over presentation has been surrendered too. An ink jet printed copy on standard printer paper lacks the impact of quality print but this may now have become how your offering is judged. It means the PDF has to do a lot of work to impress, the question now is, 'do your PDFs do your product justice?'
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