Monday 26 November 2012

Why Your Company Needs a Style Guide


A few years ago when I was working as a salesman for a different company I sat across the desk from a customer while he was engrossed by a report.  I was immediately curious about what he was looking at and after he put the document down and we began chatting I tried to discreetly steal glances to find out what he had been reading.  After we chatted for a while we were interrupted by one of his colleagues and he stepped out of his office to discuss an issue that had just occurred.  Alone in his office, I finally got the chance to freely look at the report and I was surprised to find that it was a production report generated by the computer system that I had sold him a few months earlier.  I was shocked that it took me so long to identify something created by the company that I worked for.  Instead of using the logos, fonts and colours consistent with our sales materials our technical team had used the default attributes chosen by their programming tools.

It is so important to build your brand into your business and everything that is associated with it.  Every piece of sales & marketing material should have the same look and feel that is central to your company’s image.  This includes your website and blog, whitepapers and case studies and product specifications.  The same look and feel should extend through your training manuals, installation guides, specification documents and other technical documentation.  On a whole, every piece of written or visual material your customers will see should look and feel the same and a style guide plays a key role in delivering that.

A style guide is a document describing the fonts, colours, style, voice, tone, layout and other attributes of your brand—everything that the various people and departments will need to adhere to so your branding is consistent and uniform.  You want your prospects and customers to know that they are looking at something produced by your company without having to search for whom it was written by.  Written and visual communications that are not consistent can look unprofessional and leave your customers confused.

Below is an infographic covering the basics of what a style guide is, why it is important, who should use it and how to go about creating one if you don’t already have one:


Establishing a style guide can be difficult in the early going—especially if multiple people or departments are involved.  Start the process by appointing someone to champion the process and engage key individuals to invite their input and win their support.

You should also keep in mind how your style guide affects resources outside of your organization like bloggers and content curators—the standards described by the style guide will need to extend through their work, too.


Conclusion

A style guide is a document that defines the appearance, voice, formatting and other aspects of a company’s written and visual materials.  Having a well-defined and consistent look and feel will make your company look professional and customers will feel comfortable doing business with you.  If you need help creating or updating your style guide give us a call, we’d be more than happy to help!

Got something to say? Leave a comment below, we’d love to hear from you! Got a question that we can address in our blog? Contact us through our website or email me directly and we’ll put our crack team to work and let you know when we post a reply.


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Steve Hartley, Managing Partner
Fering Communications Inc.
Website: www.feringcommunications.com
Email: steve.hartley@feringcommunications.com

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