Design the Planet

Plantetary Thoughts

Sesame Street Has Some Fun

This is too funny. Instead of SNL doing a parody of the Old Spice Guy, Groover on Sesame Street does the parody. If you haven’t seen it yet, watch the Old Spice commercial first. It’s awesome how Sesame Street made it their own and how it is funny for both adults and kids.

Show UPS Some Love

Whether you think it’s good or bad, you can’t help but stop and watch. I can easily see something like this in New Orleans near Jackson Square to go with the array of street performers already there. Well done UPS. Show your brand some love!

Creatives: Get Up and Get Out

First, let’s face the facts.

“There are now more people playing the Facebook game “FarmVille” than there are members of [the micro-blogging network] Twitter,” stated a turn-of-the-new year article published by SLATE. This summer, Facebook announced its 150 millionth member. (and we congratulate them!) Today, alone, 370,000 more will sign up to join. With a new movie released this week – about young mastermind Mark Zuckerburg, who began a movement of revolutionary social networking – I believe its safe to confirm…to confess…that our characteristically “Westernized” society becomes more technologically functional and dependent, everyday.

We are spending more and more time on the internet. Does this mean, then, that we are becoming more independent and isolated from the masses we tweet to?

Online networking keeps us attuned to the whereabouts and happenings of thousands; and yet we are intently unfocused on the outside world, only our computer monitor.  Smashing Magazine contributor, Paul Boag, wrote in the article, “Web Designers, Don’t Do It Alone,” “The downfall of the digital revolution is isolation.(Read the full article)

For me, it’s at least two, white, apple-stamped cords that plug me into my 13″ completely mobile workplace, with all of  “255 friends,” and my thoughts. Therefore, fellow media socialites, as we progress further into this era (and rear up a technologically-saturated generation) remember to remain balanced. Your days of leaving the pen and paper on the catch-all table at home are behind. Work with your hands, use your mind and memory to draw something from nothing. Exercise your talent in other activities to broaden your borders a little. Try something new. Remember: all creative genius within your daily workspace must at some point generate from the “outside perspective” you receive from engaging in all other facets of daily life.

For designers, working in isolation may be a downfall, but let’s always look on the brighter side. Use your electronic real estate wisely. Entertain great ideas! Discuss trend and trade. Share tips and tricks. Think about it. At your fingertips, you have the opportunity and power to enlighten “500 million.” Take time to explore the expanse of creative freedom you have, wherever you are.

Politics of Design

It’s that time of year. Autumn leaves blanket street corners that begin to display the haphazard decor of red, white, blue, yellow, and dark green regional elections yard signs. We see it too often, in too much quantity. Eventually, the corrugated plastic flags on wire syndicates become white noise in front of our eyes. Eventually, the emboldened names are dismissed, one after the next, after the next…

Nothing exciting.

Driving around Jefferson Parish this month, I have, however, stumbled upon a different kind of sign, which does capture and maintain my intrigue, visually.

Alas, a mere three elements send a direct message about this piece: “Pay Attention.” This advertisement, like many, puts a face to the name on the ballot, but it also brings a personality to life: suited up, pacing through the frame of his political advertisement in classic black and white. “Take this one more seriously than the others.” Maybe it is because the  imagery displays its candidate in a way that demands attention and respect…or else. Maybe it is because of the intriguing use of antique black and white contrasted against a forest green backdrop. Maybe it’s because the sign is taller, more vertical…unlike those around it. For whatever reason I am psychologically or visually drawn to this artwork, as a designer, I pin my vote of admiration on this creative decision.

To better develop my opinions on the matter, I began researching the design of politics to hone in on what the public is murmuring about it. LocalVictory.com gives astonishingly insightful know-how (to the less-than-inclined politician/artist-on-the-side…) to attain campaigning design success. Articles include “How to Design Great Political Signs,” “The Top 3 Principles of Political Design,” and “Designing a Phenomenal Candidate Walk Piece,” to name a few. Who knew, right? Contributing journalists say, “Think Outside the Box, but don’t go nuts,” “Be Consistent,” and “Be outstanding,” for your color scheme, logo, and font, matter. Identity will make or break you.

Might I mention a congratulations to John Young, Parish President, who has been working with Design the Planet throughout his campaigning via web.

New & Old Technology

I was perusing USA Today on my iPhone last night and I read two headlines and subsequent articles that peaked my interest –
Google Street View available on all continents and Serialized novel delivered by an app. These two titles got me thinking about how technology has brought some things back and how it sometimes brings something we never dreamed of before.

Photo from telegraph.co.uk

Let’s start with bringing the old back to new, or at least now. Some may think releasing a chapter of a book a week at a time is new, but according to the USA Today article, Charles Dickens and Leo Tolstoy used to do this regularly. The author actually states the model of a serialized novel is over 175 years old. Although this model is old hat, the next is something I do not think the Jetsons ever dreamed about in their wildest dreams.

The past couple of years, Google has added Street View to their online map database. If you haven’t seen it yet – because you live under a rock – you can now see the building on the street you are looking at – including your rock. While looking on the street view, you can move up & down the street and turn around. (Google “street view fun” to see the more humorous pictures Google’s cameras have captured.) Google recently announced they have now captured “streets” on all 7 continents. They admit to not having everything done. Brazil is their only country complete for South America and a small island in Antarctica is the lone representative there. Actually, my street in the suburbs of New Orleans is not listed. (Weird, I know.)

Google captured images of narrow roadways and hard to reach areas using tricycles, snowmobiles, and other small vehicles.

I do not think I could have ever imagined a company driving up & down every street in the world taking pictures. This was a mind boggling thought just 5 years ago and only a company like Google would dream up something so far fetched and then foot the bill for it.

Now, how does this work in the world of design, websites, & brand marketing? I know these articles may seem off-topic for our blog, but technology does go hand and hand with our professional and personal worlds nowadays. Also, there is a sense of marketing in here. The serialized novel builds a community of followers all waiting in anticipation for the next piece of the story. This is a much stronger community than the more traditional book release where after the initial rush, every reader is on their own pace. For the Google street view, this shows you how if you build a tool that people need or want, you can sell advertising to be profitable. Also, the past Olympics in Vancouver utilized this technology well. They worked with Google to survey the ski mountains and other event venues so fans could experience the slopes and other attractions like never before from their computers. Many times advertising and cost-effective marketing requires out of the box thinking and using technology for a different purpose.

How do you use technology to market your brand, build your brand community, or reach out to potential customers?

Branding Down to the Core

Last month my wife & I spent a long weekend in New York City for our anniversary. It was a nice break from life, but I could not help get caught up in the branding & advertising surrounding Times Square. I’ve seen it on TV and in movies hundreds of times, but you do not get the magnitude of it until you’re standing in the middle of it with millions of people walking by you.

One thing was obvious to me – some companies get branding and others do not. Case in point, the M&M Store is a 3-story behemoth of a store that sells clothing, jewelry, magnets, kitchen wear, custom M&M colors, more clothes, purses made of wrappers, coin banks, etc. (You get the point hopefully.) The entire store was colorful, entertaining, branded, and even smelled a bit like chocolate. One thing that particularly impressed me was how the store carried out the brand consistently throughout the store. Even the freight elevator was marked with a cute M&M character with a witty saying [look right] instead of just a sign. Very clever and it keeps you in the brand experience. The yellow M&M even holds the box upside personifying his dimwitted nature.

Across the street is the Hershey store with an elaborately designed exterior that is even more inviting than the M&Ms store. Walking into the store, my wife & I both had visions of Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory in our minds. We were sadly disappointed. The store is unique for a typical mall store, but for Times Square, the inside fell flat. We walked along the crowded aisles and found our favorite candy and bought a shirt for my brother-in-law (he loves Reeses) and stood in line to check out.

After leaving the Hershey store, something stood out to me. You can not buy a bag of M&Ms at the M&M store. They had M&Ms, but they were all in tins, mugs, creative packaging, and the like. Most of the items in the Hershey store, I could buy at any drugstore or grocery store. Also, I noticed the noise, lines, and chaos at the Hershey store even know the M&M store was much louder, had more people, and had more going on. This is because the Hershey store was an store that sold candy not a place to experience a brand.

This was an eye opening experience for me that showed my money does not make the brand experience. Although, the brand experience makes money. We spent 3 times as much at the M&Ms store and went back numerous times throughout our short vacation.

If you’re in NYC, check out these two stores and the new Pop Tart World. Pop Tart Word just opened the week before we visited Times Square and they’re doing a lot of great things. It is not quite M&Ms yet, but you can make your own Pop Tart t-shirt, create a custom box of the pastries, and enjoy their Pop Tart cuisine. I think was a little too old for Pop Tart World’s impact, but I’m glad we found it (new means not on maps.)

Closing Your Doors

A couple of years ago at the beginning of the Recession, I met with a young business owner that opened up a boutique kitchen store and high-end mattress store. The kitchen store sold everything from a $10 spatula to a $35,000+ wine vault. The mattress store had a different approach to selling mattress which I enjoyed and thought it might be a game changer in the industry.

Well, this prospective client did not sign and he used the Recession as his excuse. A few months later, the kitchen store was closed. The story picks up last week when my wife & I were out shopping for mattresses. (Yes, a glorious, fun-filled evening ensued – not really.) After checking out a store in the mall and a regional chain, we headed off to this high-end mattress store. I thought I was saving the best for last. I was wrong.

We pulled up to the store just after 8pm and the lights were dim. I was surprised to see this, but we ventured on. We got to the door and found that we missed them. We didn’t miss them by minutes because they closed at 8pm, but we missed them by 2 hours because they closed at 6pm! WHY WOULD A B-TO-C COMPANY THAT SELLS HOME FURNISHINGS BE OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY FROM 9AM-6PM.

I will never shop at this store because I work Monday thru Friday and my wife works Tuesday through Saturday, both during the day. I can not make it to the store without taking time off work which to be honest, is not worth it for a mattress. Also, I would assume most of their clientele, people that can afford their mattresses, have a job. I do not understand why a retail store would close at 6pm. This would be like me, a professional services company, working from 5pm to 11pm.

My prediction for the future – this mattress store will close much like their kitchen store not because of price, service, product, or differentiation, but because of their lack of accessibility (meaning their hours).

[By the way– there are 4 other mattress stores within .5 miles of this store, all of which are open to 9pm & Sundays. Location may have been another problem.]

New Orleans Logos – NOLA.com

We’re continuing our New Orleans logo posts where we talk about logos around town. This post will discuss our thoughts on NOLA.com’s logo and we ask for your input in the comments section below.

The NOLA.com logo is simple at first glance, but as we reviewed the logo design we noticed more significant features. The most obvious piece is the crescent shape reflecting the city’s “Crescent City” nickname. The font for the word “nola” actually reflects the website’s origins as the local newspaper’s website, The Times-Picayune. The font is an older font with the strong serifs (feet) on each character. The word being in all lowercase actually reflects more of the web’s character and is a very Web 2.0 style. What surprised me the most was nola.com’s age actually predates the Web 2.0 movement. The circular shape reverberates the crescent shape and the modern font for “.com” continues the web look.

What are your thoughts on the NOLA.com logo?

Please use our interactive map

Today I was cleaning up some code and making small updates to a website that was not developed by us.  The client has recently moved her business location, so I had to go through the website and update addresses.  I know, that’s about as fun as watching paint dry, but had I not been changing the driving directions to the new address I would have never come across this gem.  At first glance, it looks like a fully functional Map Quest map. One that gives you the ability to drag the map around and zoom in and out.  This functionality is so common, we see it on almost everyone’s website these days.

What makes this map different you ask?  Well, whomever developed this website either cut corners or was in-over-their-head and had to fake it.  This particular map is simply a screenshot of the businesses location made to look like an interactive map.  The developer even went as far as to recreate the zoom in and zoom out graphics.  But that’s all they are, graphics.  If you try clicking on zoom in, you get nothing.  Zooming out? Forget about it.  It amazes me that the developer actually took the time to make it look like a functional map.  Seriously, were they trying to fool the client into thinking they had added an interactive map to the site?  We run into this sort of thing all the time and only reinforces the reason to have a company with a solid track record with a team of professionals design your website and other design work.



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