General Marketing Advice Tips

Marketing is a vast and complex subject. It needs careful consideration if it’s to be done right, and can be an expensive mistake if done wrongly. Here are some tips about marketing in general, and its aims.

1. What are your strengths and who will appreciate them?

Marketing isn’t a ‘one-size-fits-all’ exercise; carefully targeting your marketing to a specific group means that it’s likely to be more effective and that your efforts aren’t wasted by trying to appeal to people who won’t want/need your product or service.

2. Understand the wants and needs of your customers

What need or desire of your customer will you be fulfilling? Think about what you are offering and which needs you will be meeting.

3. Differentiate yourself from the competition

How will you be different from your competition? There’s a number of ways you can do this, will it be price? Level of service?

4. Be clear about what you and your business stands for

People love consistency and consistency will help you strengthen your brand. What is your message? Will people remember you for it?

5. Fail to plan…

…and plan to fail. Trite but true. Figure out your goals and a way to measure results.

6. Don’t assume people want what you’re selling

This is particularly true of new products. Although it’s great to find a niche and fill it, do your research first. What problem is your product resolving?

7. Marketing isn’t…

Just having a website, placing an ad in the paper, having a leaflet, or trying to sell the same thing to everybody.

The Pros & Cons Of Splash Pages

It may be 2013 but the discussions regarding splash pages / intro pages is still raging due to pockets of resistance. They were quite common in the 90’s and you will still see them around. So what’s all the fuss about and why do so many people loathe them?

What Are Splash Pages / Screens?

A splash page is a website page that sits in front of your main site. They often contain an introduction to the site, possibly in the medium of a flash animation though there’s always variations. Even though they’re considered to be pretty bad form for a number of reasons, they still crop up and I’ve had people request them, though I always advise against.

I’ve tried to be objective, but I’m definitely part of the anti-splash screen mob. I’ve really struggled to come up with many pros. You can see the lists below.

A Brief Summary

So do the benefits outweigh the disadvantages? I’d definitely say ‘no’ and that is the general consensus. The benefits should be created in the main site e.g. good design will lead the eyes of your visitors to the areas of the web page you want to draw attention to.

Ultimately, there’s nothing that a splash page can do, that can’t be achieved either to the same effect or better by inclusion into the main body the site.

The verdict: Dont’s Use Splash Pages

Splash Pages: Pros

  • They can be used to grab the users attention and getting them to focus on one thing, such as a video or other content
  • Options can be presented to your visitor e.g. picking their country or choosing a version of your site that is suitable for the technology that they’re using
  • Important news / updates etc. can be addressed before the user enters the site
  • Legal notices can be displayed, for example, age confirmations for sites which contain adult material

Splash Pages: Cons

  • Splash pages are very poor for usability and may use technologies that users either have turned-off or not have installed on their machines
  • They delay the speed at which users can access your site
  • Anecdotal evidence suggests that site owners can experience bounce* rates increase by 25%
  • Many users find them annoying. The vast majority that do continue past the splash screen use the ‘skip’ button to get past it
  • They deter repeat visitors as they won’t want to see it each time they visit your site
  • Search engines don’t like splash pages and this will damage your page rank

*Bounce rates refer to the number of visitors who arrive at the first page and then leave without visiting any other page.

Email Marketing Tips – Some Fundamentals

Email marketing can be useful if done correctly. Unfortunately, making them effective can be difficult as people can get inundated with emails clamouring for their attention and people are less forgiving when it comes to regarding emails as spam.

1. Greet Them Personally

Using the recipients first name makes the email seem more legitimate as it makes them think that the sender is known to them, therefore they’re more likely to read it.

2. One-Click Unsubscribe

Should a recipient wish to unsubscribe, you should honour the request graciously and promptly. If you categorise your various email communications, recipients can then have the option to stop receiving one type, whilst choosing to receive another type.

3. Consistency

As with all of your companies marketing materials, keeping a consistent look and feel means that you strengthen your brands image. Not to mention that it looks professional.

4. People Buy From People

Emails are typically a bit more informal than other means so don’t be afraid to inject some personality into your marketing emails.

5. Give People A Reason To Read The Email

Although you are passionate about your business you can’t expect your customers to be as enthusiastic. There should be a good reason for the recipient to read to email and to continue receiving them. Make it useful, make it informative, add discount coupons, exclusive deals or what ever else you can think of.

6. Test And Test Some More

Once you start sending email out you need to keep and eye on how well they’re performing. Commercial email marketing software will provide analytic results so that you can see various information, such as how many people open the email etc. Ideally you should test two slightly different emails at the same time, so half of your mailing list receive one version the rest receive the other version. This is called A/B SPLIT TESTING. Comparing one email against another means that you can see which is more effective and then keep altering and testing to make them as effective as they can be.

6.2 Test Your Subject Line

The subject line is one of the primary aspects of a marketing email that will dictate whether the recipient will open the email or trash it. A/B split test your subject lines.

7. Avoid Assassins

Spam assassins and other tools can silently take out your email without the proposed recipient ever seeing it. Here’s some common pitfalls just to get you started:

  • DON’T USE ALL CAPS
  • Avoiding using multiple exclamation marks
  • Words such as ‘Free’, ‘Sex’, ‘Discount’ and ‘Click Here!’ will give spam assassins itchy trigger-fingers
  • HTML emails must be properly coded
  • Avoid large image to text ratios. A common tactic of spammers is to use large images instead of text in order to disguise the content
  • Use only permission-based email lists

8. Tell Your Providers

If you’re campaign is likely to be quite substantial, let your email service provider know. Otherwise you may get blacklisted as a spammer.

9. Give The Option of HTML And Plain Text

You should also give people this choice. Personal freedom aside, HTML emails are displayed differently by the various email clients there are. An email viewed in Outlook may well look different to one viewed in Gmail for instance.

10. Keep The Best Content At The Top

Nearly all email clients have a preview pane, allowing recipients to view an email without actually opening it. Keep your best content at the top of the email to make sure they see it.

CSS3 Text Styling, Drop Shadows and Other Cool Effects

CSS3 is coming soon

In fact it’s already here in vary degrees with the majority of browsers already supporting a number of tags, though the final iteration of CSS3 hasn’t yet been decided upon.

Us geeks are very excited about it. Why all the hype? Traditionally, interesting graphic effects and typography on websites has been done with images, particularly where the designer has wanted to use a font which isn’t widely used (and so wouldn’t display on computers which didn’t have that font). CSS3 means that haven’t to resort to using images for everything will be a thing of the past.

So fancy graphics. Is that all?

The benefits and abilities of CSS3 are much more wide-reaching than just making things look nice, particularly as it will be accompanied by HTML5, but I’m not going to go into all that business here.

I just want to demonstrate some cool typography effects that can be achieved using CSS3 alone, of course, this depends on the capabilities of your web browser.

Test your browsers CSS3 support capabilities here

I’m not a designer, what is CSS3?

There are a number of programming and scripting languages that are used to create webistes. The main ones are HTML and CSS. To put it simply, HTML provides the content of the page while CSS tells the content what it should look like.

The examples below depend on the support of CSS3 that your web browser currently has. Internet Explorer users beware: most, if not all of the examples will not work. Internet Explorer has always obstinately interpreted HTML/CSS differently from the other browsers and generally has extremely limited support for CSS3.

Neon Glow

Letterpress

Print Finishing

Foil Blocking

Foil Blocking, sometimes called Hot Foil Blocking, or simply Foiling is a similar method to letter-pressing. The block of the image is heated and used to brand a metallic or coloured foil on the item. This usually gives an embossing effect.

Thermography Printing

Thermography gives a raised print finish. A special powdered polymer is deposited onto the paper and then heat is applied. The heat causes a reaction in the polymer, bonding it to the paper and making it expand slightly, making it raised.

Spot UV

Spot UV is a term giving to the process of layering a varnish onto a (usually) already printed product, sometimes it can be applied onto an item without other printing to give a nice, elegant finish.

The varnish is usually applied as a spot (small areas,) and gives a nice, glossy finish.

Metallic Inks

These special inks are best used sparingly and for simple additions to the work, it may struggle to keep to complex elements due to the viscosity of the ink. They can look very stylish and elegant if used well, or can look cheap and tacky if not. Less is most certainly more.

Trimming

Nice and simple, trimming / guillotining excess edges off printed work. Nearly all printed matter will have printer registration marks, unwanted whitespace and so on that will need to be trimmed off. Flyers and the like may be printed on large sheets which then need cutting up.

Folding

Nothing fancy here. It’s literally folding the paper. There are lots of very common folds to achieve various results for leaflets etc.

Stitching

Applied to the spine of a document to hold it together. There are different types of stitches suitable for different applications.

Stapling

Just as it says. The simplest way to join some pages together. Suitable for most small jobs.

Perfect Binding

Perfect binding is a book-like binding, using either thread to stitch the pages together or hot-glue. Accompanied by a full cover.

Wiro Binding

There are plastic and metal versions of this binding. A cheap and simple way of combining pages though not as rugged as perfect binding. Home / Office binding machines are affordable though may not give such a professional look.

Lamination

Professional lamination will be trimmed so you want end up with over-hang as you might be used to if you’ve ever laminated something yourself. Matt and gloss is available. you may not even be aware of a matt lamination but it does give a nice smooth, professional finish.

Embossing / Debossing

Embossing – towards you (out); Debossing – away from you (in).

The same technique but done from different sides of the paper. Very commonly used on book dust-covers, raising the authors name and book title.

Die-cutting

Using a pre-made template (tool) the paper is cut. Complex of simple shapes can be made, e.g. a flyer which can be folded into a box, or shapes can be cut out of a page.

Kiss-cutting

Normally used for sheets or rolls of stickers, where the die-cut tool cuts through the sticker but just ‘kisses’ the paper backing, keeping the sheets / rolls together.

Micro Perforations

Often used for items which can be pushed out of a larger piece of paper, or when something needs to be able to be torn off. Like stamps before Royal Mail made them self-adhesive.

Creasing

Add pre-creases to your item to make folding of it easier.

Mounting

Photographic prints and the like can be mounted, usually onto special mounting board, to give a lightweight, inflexible method of displaying.

Printing Methods, Techniques & Processes

There are a bewildering array of printing methods and processes available, more than you think. You may have even seen some nice design work, business cards or something and thought ‘That’s nice. So how have they done that?’

Well, I hope that by pointing out some of the common printing methods and finishes you’ll know what to ask for and a little about how it was done. I must stress that you’ll know ‘a little’ as there’s too much to go into here (those of you who really know your printing processes may shudder at my rather blunt descriptions.) This is more of a guide to uses and what end product you can expect.

Screen Printing

Screen printing uses a squeegee to push ink through a mesh screen on which there is a stencil. This can really give a nice end result, but don’t expect nice clean lines. Not suitable for work with lots of detail, this gives a nice bold finish and each colour is added separately. The colours seldom line up together, over-lapping or leaving slight gaps. A great retro finish.

Laser Printing

You will have used one of these at some point in your life, photocopiers work on the same principles. In simple terms, a laser is fired at a photoreceptor cylinder, creating a static electric image on it. This surface is exposed to toner (a mix of plastic powder and colour agent) which attracts the fine particles. This cylinder is then rolled over the paper, transferring the toner from the cylinder to the paper. Multiple passes are used when the print involves the use of colour. A pass for each of the toner cartridges, hence the longer time required to print colour images.

The paper is passed through a fuser assembly which heats up the paper and toner so that the plastic within the toner melts and bonds to the paper.

Inkjet Printing

Another printer type that you will have used, and possibly been frustrated with. As the paper is passed through the printer, the print-head holding the different ink cartridges (usually 4, CMYK) passes left to right, depositing tiny spots of ink from each colour cartridge in the relevant quantities required to generate the required colours.

Heat-Transfer Printing

A technique that you will have seen used on t-shirts. The image is either printed onto or made out of a material that when heated, will bond to the item. There’s lots of different types of materials that can be heat-transferred, such as embroidered patches, vinyl lettering and DIY heat-transfers where using an Inkjet printer you print the images on the substrate and then apply the image to a t-shirt using an iron.

Woodblock / Woodcut Printing

A precursor to the letter-press technique, woodblock printing is essentially the same idea. This method was used around the 18th Century in different parts of the world. A block of wood, often beechwood or cherry wood in Japan, would be engraved, removing the elements which were to remain white (unprinted) and leaving the areas to be printed untouched and level. Ink would be applied to the surface before the block was then stamped or pressed onto the material that was to receive the print.

Incredible detail is possible and this technique could quite feasibly be used as laser engraving means that blocks can be produced easily and quite cheaply.

Letterpress Printing

As woodblock printing, the method is quite similar though the ‘blocks’ are made up of individual type pieces or specially made decorative elements that are assembled and held together in a frame.

The frame and paper would be placed in the inked-up press and rollers transfer the ink onto the paper. Again, the use of more than one colour would usually require another frame unless you were going for some interesting effect.

Offset Printing

The image is first transferred (offset) onto a rubber sheet from an etched plate. This image is then offset onto the paper. The technique is used for newspapers, magazines etc. when high-speed, large runs and consistent quality is needed. Commonly used with Lithography Printing (See below)

Lithography Printing

Lithography uses simple chemical processes to create an image onto a plate. Lithography works because of the mutual repulsion of oil and water. A photographic negative of the desired image is placed in contact with emulsion and the plate is exposed to ultraviolet light. The image on the plate emulsion can also be created by direct laser imaging in a CTP.

The plate is affixed to a cylinder on a printing press. Dampening rollers apply water, which covers the blank portions of the plate but is repelled by the emulsion of the image area. Ink, which is hydrophobic, is then applied by the inking rollers, which is repelled by the water and only adheres to the emulsion of the image area. A rubber blanket squeezes away excess water.

Pad Printing

Pad printing is used to print onto objects, such as promotional gifts, where traditional printing methods would be unable to handle the item that is receiving the image.

The process uses a ‘pad’ that is shaped for it’s intended substrate. The pad is stamped on to a plate with the engraved image, depositing the ink on the pad. The pad then stamps the image on the object.

Thermographic Printing

Thermographic printing is achieved by using a thermographic/embossing powder, made from plastic resins. The areas selected for raised printing are printed with slow-drying inks that do not contain dryers or hardeners so that they remain wet during the application of thermographic powder.

Excess powder is then removed, usually by use of a vacuum system before a radiant oven is then used to heat the remaining powder (resin), causing it to melt and bond to the substrate.

This process leaves a glossy, unevenly-raised print on the substrate.

Thermal Printing

Not to be confused with the above, this technique does use heat, but to cause a reaction in the special paper, thus creating the image.

The paper is specially developed to react to heat, most commonly shop till receipts, fax machine rolls and labels. Ever put a hot cup of coffee down on a fax and seen it’s a left a black impression of the bottom of the cup?

Only produces black and white images.

Flexography Printing

This method uses a flexible, 3D relief plate on a cylinder, again the image is transferred onto a substrate that passes over the cylinder. Typically this technique is used for printing onto non-porous surfaces such as plastic, and can produce continuous images, think wallpaper or wrapping paper.

The Anilox Roller makes Flexography unique. The Anilox Roller meters the predetermined ink that is transferred for uniform thickness. It has engraved cells that carry a certain capacity of inks that can only be seen with a microscope.

Lenticular Printing

You probably won’t know the name, but you will have seen this used. Do you remember those ‘animated’ pictures that were usually found as a give-away in cereal boxes? Well it’s that.

A lenticular is an array of magnifying lenses, designed so that when viewed from slightly different angles, different segments of the image below are magnified. S the technology has improved, more and more ‘frames’ can be included, producing much smoother animations.

Big brands have gone back to this technology in very recent times, producing large (A0) posters using this method. The effect can be quite stunning and can avoid seeming cheap/cliché.

Rotogravure Printing

Rotogravure cylinders are made of copper plated steel or aluminium that is engraved or etched and then chromed. A cylinder is required for each colour, usually 4 (CMYK.)

Similar to other printing methods, the paper is passed over the cylinders, being dried between each, to build up the image. Rotogravure is an industrial print process, producing consistently high-quality images for a large number of impressions. Not suitable for short-runs.

Photochrom Printing

Think of this as half-photography, half-printing. It produces those very vivid, slightly unreal photos and was widely used before colour photography was available.

Coloured gels were used to project the image onto tablets of stone and the images etched, to produce a stone based printing tablet. Between 4 and 19 of these tablets were produced for a single picture and then used with up to 19 different coloured inks to print the image.

The tablet of lithographic limestone is coated with a light sensitive coating. A reversed half-tone negative is then pressed against the coating and exposed to daylight causing it to harden. The coating is then washed in turpentine solutions to remove the unhardened bitumen and retouched.

This effect would be easily faked. Certainly easier than trying to reproduce the technique.

Hexachrome©

Using 6 colours instead of the usual 4 means that the colour spectrum / gamut can be increased. It allows enhanced visual impact as well as allowing for special colours to be introduced to a print run.

Spot Colour

Spot colours are pre-mixed, true-colour inks used for printing. The CMYK method builds up the colour on the paper using various amounts of the corresponding inks.

The benefits of spot colours is the quality of the finish, and getting a specific result. Some colours(mainly shades of purple in my experience) struggle to print well in CMYK, particularly if used as block colour, leaving you with an uneven tone.

…and start using LinkedIn

Some of you may have been directed from Getting the most out of LinkedIn, if so, thanks for sticking with me.

For those who have just joined us, this section is a quick guide on how to use LinkedIn effectively once you’ve got you’re profile and everything else set up. Even if you have it may be worth having a quick glance just to see if you’ve already done everything. Don’t worry, it’s pretty much all in bullet-points.

LinkedIn. Now what?

There’s quite a bit going on in LinkedIn, more than it immediately appears as some of the really useful features are tucked away.

I’ll go through the majority of things for you but as is my style, I’ll only go into them briefly so the points I’m trying to make aren’t lost. Now see the menu bar at the top? We’re heading there. I’ll point out the navigation to certain areas from there. Onwards…

LinkedIn Answers

MORE > ANSWERS

This is probably my favourite part of LinkedIn. Be warned, it’s very easy to get addicted to it and spend far too much time here. You shouldn’t have any trouble finding your way around here. What you should be starting with is the ‘Ask a Question’ box, and the advanced answers search.

Asking Questions

1. Put a short question here, and then hit next
2. Clarify your question. make sure other people can make sense of it
3. Add relevant categories. It can be removed if it isn’t
4. Make sure it’s not recruiting, promoting or job seeking. Sometimes a grey area if you’re asking for advice about one of those things.
5. Ask your question
6. If you like, send it to your contacts. I prefer to just open it to everyone.

That’s it. With any luck you’ll start to receive useful responses and maybe a tiny bit of spam.

Your question will then be open for 7 days (you can extend this) at which point it is closed. You then have the option to choose a best answer, several good answers or just be done with it. Good etiquette to award people with good/best answers if you feel they’ve earned it.

Answering Questions

Right, haul yourself over to ‘Advanced Answers Search’, it’s to the right of ‘Answers Home’. Here you can perform searches for certain questions by keyword or category. If you’re a true Renaissance man you can just hit search and it will return everything. If you’re gunning for those expertise points try ticking the ‘Show only unanswered questions’.

Alternatively, subscribe to individual category RSS feeds and let them come to you. You can do this by going to the Answers home page and selecting a category on the right-hand side and you’ll spot it, again on the right-hand side.

Expertise Points?

Glad you asked. You can earn expertise by answering questions with helpful, considered answers. You’ll notice this when you start taking part yourself.

My Q&A

Here you can see which questions you’ve asked, and those you’ve answered. If stats are your thing there’s a mini display on the right-hand side.

Some answers to Q&A FAQs

– You can ask 10 questions per month
– Answer 50 questions per day
– Yes, the system is open to abuse but your professional reputation is at stake
– You can clarify a question you posted but not directly edit one
– You can’t delete it either, but you can close it.
– You can delete your answers and you can clarify them

Skills

MORE > SKILLS

Still in beta, this tool is to enable you to list all your skills. Admit it, we all have things we occasionally forget about and this is quite good at jogging your memory. As you search for skills it suggests new ones, lists related companies, jobs, groups and people. Neat.

Applications

MORE > GET MORE APPLICATIONS…

This feels as though it hasn’t really taken off all that well. There’s only a handful to choose from, but there again that is maybe a good thing. The Behance.net Creative Portfolio Display is quite good.

Companies

Here you can search for various companies and see a list of any you’re affiliated with. Find companies that interest you and follow them if you so wish.

Groups

Another great feature is the groups. Some have privacy settings enabled so you may have to submit a request to join. Useful to keep the riff-raff out.

Check for alumni groups and other professional groups, sign-up and get involved. it’s not simply enough just to have the badge on your profile, you should be really taking part. It’s quite fun. Share an interesting piece of news or ask for some feedback on a project.

You’ve Forgotten Something

Well I really just skipped a few things. There’s enough to keep you going for quite some time. I can suggest that you check out the jobs section, though currently the number of geographic areas where the jobs are based seem to be focussed around major and capital cities. I’m sure this will change in future.

Have a poke around and see what you can find.

Getting the most out of LinkedIn

With all the multiple different Social Media networks out there you may decide to skip some of them, particularly if you’re not sure about how they can help you. Well LinkedIn can help you. People have different thoughts about it, and many creatives and designers avoid it because they don’t see it as creative enough for them.

It’s all down to how you use it. I’m a designer and marketer myself and I’m addicted to it. It’s not stuffy and there’s plenty of ways it can help you at various stages of your career.

Getting Started

Right the, first things first you need an account:

  1. Sign-up, use your real full name
  2. You can add more than one email address to an account so why not add them all
  3. Complete your profile (something which puts people off) as fully as possible with relevant entries
  4. Add a professional picture. Creatives may be allowed some artistic license but it has to be representative of you
  5. Add a summary to really sell yourself
  6. Add your skills
  7. Import your contacts with whom you want to connect
  8. Search for other people you know
  9. Join the immediately relevant groups (e.g. Alumni, organisations etc. that you’re a member of in real life)

Self-employed? Freelancer? Company owner?

“I’m a freelancer, what should I put as ‘company’ in my LinkedIn profile?”
I hear you. At the time of writing LinkedIn doesn’t include a sensible way for you say that you’re either self-employed or a Freelancer. As a result you’ll see profiles with things like ‘SOMEONE working as a freelancer at self-employed.’

Not ideal. If you have a assumed name you work under you may want to include that. I just use my URL so I’m a ‘Designer & Marketer at www.jeffreydriver.co.uk’ A nice simple work-around and it gives a little extra promotion.

Also if you’re doing your own thing you have a little more work to do…

LinkedIn company pages

  1. Company pages, search for your company (you have to do it this way) when it doesn’t show up you have the option of creating a company page. Do it
  2. Complete all your fields. There’s a lot to do here I’m afraid, but it’s worth doing
  3. Add your product highlights. This is great and you’re allowed three of these. Add images with links to the rotating banner display
  4. Connect twitter account if you use one

Ok, I’m done. Now what?

At this point I’d suggest going through everything you’ve added and start editing and tweaking. Make sure that it all represents you in the best way possible, go through all your settings and make sure everything is how you want it. thought of someone you forgot about? Add them.

Now, before you read about how to get the most out of LinkedIn, go and put the kettle on, you’ve probably earned it. When you’ve finished your biscuit, go here…

Social Media for Creatives

As a freelancer myself I know how much you can miss having other creative minds around you to bounce ideas off when designing. This is where Social Media can help you out. It can be a pain to keep track of many Social Media channels, but there are some that are specifically geared towards professionals and creatives, and so it’s worth having a presence on the ones that are relevant to you.

DeviantArt

http://www.deviantart.com/

A very active site for creatives. All creative fields are accepted so pretty much anything goes, which is one of its downsides. Worth having a look, particularly for someone whose works covers lots of different fields.

PROS
– Large, friendly community
– People actively ‘like’ and comment of work
– All types of work are submitted
– You can sell you work

CONS
– There’s a lot of unprofessional work on there
– It feels as though the average age is quite a bit younger than your ideal audience
– There is also quite a lot of work which isn’t SFW (safe for work), and I’m not talking about artistic / tasteful nudes, but rather just pure exhibitionism. As a result I don’t use it anymore, and don’t recommend it for any serious creative.

iStock Photo

http://www.istockphoto.com

Despite the name they actually accept quite a few types of work, photography, illustration(vector), video, audio and Flash. This isn’t really a showcase for your work, it’s so you can make some money. You don’t make much per sale, a few cents, but they can add up.

PROS
– High quality work is only allowed, everything is vetted first
– They will accept submissions for different types of work
– They have affiliate programmes with other sites to promote your work further.

CONS
– Payments aren’t huge, especially after you convert it to sterling
– Submissions process is a bit longer than it should be
– Be prepared to have some good work rejected, great for quality control but annoying if you’ve spent ages submitting work.

Behance

http://www.behance.net

Another professional site, although this doesn’t seem to have such a big audience. In fact I only found it through LinkedIn as they have a useful app that allows me to show my design work on my profile.

PROS
– Lots of high-quality work which is great for inspiration
– All types of work is allowed
– Highly customisable

CONS
– Doesn’t seem to have a huge user base
– The upload system is quite a long process

LinkedIn

Ok, this isn’t one you would normally associate with design or other creative field, but it’s very useful none-the-less. At first it can be a little daunting, wondering what to do once you’re signed-up. Once you get really involved I can assure you it’s addictive.

This is meant for professionals, and it’s all about networking. Not really customisable in any meaningful way, you should get involved in the Answers and Groups sections.

PROS
– This is really a good way to promote yourself
– Just aimed at professionals
– Spam etc. is really at a minimum

CONS
– There’s a lot going on, this could be a full-time job in itself
– Some of the paid features are, in my opinion, slightly over-priced.

So what else is there?

Of course there’s other sites available, including some of the more common ones (Flickr, Tumblr, Youtube, Facebook, Twitter) but for now I’m going to assume that you’re familiar with those, and I’ll write about each of them in detail some other time.

And what about Google+? Well I thought about adding it but to be honest I’m not sure if it’s going to take off, but I’ll keep an eye on it.