Reading the book vs. hearing the speaker

Which book on web design or web standards or some related topic has been the most influential on your thinking? Or maybe it wasn’t a book at all, but a speaker at a tech conference?

I was thinking about reviewing Ekaterina Walter’s new book, Think Like Zuck: The Five Business Secrets of Facebook’s Improbably Brilliant CEO Mark Zuckerberg. It occurred to me that I was interested in what she had to say because I’ve seen her speak and thought she was a knowledgeable speaker. I’m predisposed to be interested in her book.

Back in the early days of web standards and efforts to achieve some sort of standardization in browser behavior, I attended talks at conferences by people like Jeffrey Zeldman, Eric Meyer, and Molly Holzschlag. They convinced me to be a believer in web standards before I’d ever read any of their books. Designing with Web Standards, Zeldman’s book, now in it’s 3rd edition, is the foundational volume on the topic. It’s a book I’ve purchased 3 times and recommended to hundreds of other people. Does that reflect my early buy-in to the idea of web standards while at a conference, or does it reflect the power and message of the words on the pages of the book?

Are you buying and using and recommending tech books by people that you don’t find on the tech conference circuit? Or do you stick with books by people you’ve seen in person at an event? In my case, I can say that I read and recommend more books by people I’ve heard speak in person. The takeaway to me is that you can sell more books if you get yourself on the speaker’s platform at a tech event.

Useful links: Adaptive content, troubleshoot WordPress, design principles

Notes from Karen McCrane’s talk about Adaptive Web Content at the latest An Event Apart. Luke Wroblewski took excellent notes.

Interesting tips for troubleshooting a WordPress site from Kristarella.

Design Principles for gov.uk. Unlike WCAG or some set of principles from the W3C, this document only contains 10 easily readable principles. They are,

  1. Start with needs*
  2. Do less
  3. Design with data
  4. Do the hard work to make it simple
  5. Iterate. Then iterate again.
  6. Build for inclusion
  7. Understand context
  8. Build digital services, not websites
  9. Be consistent, not uniform
  10. Make things open: it makes things better

10 Quotes All Graphic Designers Should Know By Heart

Inspiration fuels great design, and we most often seek design inspiration in visual cues. However, some of the best inspiration comes from poignant phrases uttered by some of design’s greatest thinkers.  Check out the following ten quotes all graphic designers should know by heart, and give them consideration when you plan your next design. Doing so might lend you the insight needed to turn a static design into a compelling and memorable work that defines your status as a master designer.

1. “Design is a plan for arranging elements in such a way as best to accomplish a particular purpose.” – Charles Eames

Before you set out to create a design, ask yourself what the end goal is. Then create a design that helps that goal be met.

Charles Eames

2. “Good design is obvious. Great design is transparent.” – Joe Sparano

Your design shouldn’t distract from your end goal.

Joe Sparano

3.  “Design is as much an act of spacing as an act of marking.” – Ellen Lupton

Great designs are made by excellent use of white space, and plenty of it.

Ellen Lupton

4. “Content precedes design. Design in the absence of content is not design, it’s decoration.” – Jeffrey Zeldman

Always keep in mind why the end viewer or customer is there in the first place.

Jeffrey Zeldman

5. “You can’t do better design with a computer, but you can speed up your work enormously.” – Wim Crouwel

Don’t be afraid to incorporate new technologies into your design business if you can work more efficiently without sacrificing quality.

Wim Crouwel

6. “Technology over technique produces emotionless design.” – Daniel Mall

New technologies should never hamper your ability to craft stellar artwork.

Daniel Mall

7.  “If design isn’t profitable, then it’s art.” – Henrik Fiskar

More people will pay you money to help them achieve a monetary goal than will pay you to give them something pretty to look at.

Henrik Fiskar

8. “Practice safe design: Use a concept.” – Petrula Vrontikis

This goes hand-in-hand with goal-setting.  Plan before you design; don’t skimp the design brief.

Petrula Vrontikis

9. “Create your own visual style… let it be unique for yourself and yet identifiable for others.” – Orson Welles

When your design speaks to you, those who share your ideals (customers, clients, and end viewers) can hear it too.

Orson Welles

10. “A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.” – Antoine de Saint Exupéry

Keep it simple, stupid!

Antoine de Saint Exupery

Guest author Brian Morris writes for the PsPrint Design & Printing Blog. PsPrint is an online commercial printing company. Follow PsPrint on Twitter @PsPrint and Facebook.

Useful links: 2 Readlists, WCAG=ISO, responsive menus

Two Readlists. 1. Adaptive Web Design was created by Aaron Gustafson. 2. Responsive Enhancement was created by Jeremy Keith.

WCAG 2 is now also ISO/IEC 40500 at the W3C.

10 Tips for How to Handle Responsive Menus Successfully is at usabilla. NIce blog, I’ve never seen it before but will keep going back.

Announcing Web Platform Docs

A great new resource for learning web design was announced at webplatform.org. It’s a wiki and participation by knowledgeable web designers and developers is needed. That said, it’s already a huge resource of the best information available.

Congratulations to everyone involved in this effort. The group calls itself the Web Platform Stewards, and includes

  • Adobe
  • Apple
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • HP
  • Microsoft
  • Mozilla
  • Nokia
  • Opera
  • W3C

Paul Irish has a lot of good ideas about how you can contribute to the site in Why I’m So Excited about Web Platform Docs.

5 Reasons Graphic Designers and Marketers Should Read the News

kid with sign
Image by mickey van der stap via Flickr

With so much sensationalism and tragedy, it can be easy to tire of reading the news.  But the news can be an excellent resource for graphic designers and marketers.  Here are five reasons why you should be reading the news.

1.  Capitalize on stories

When a major story breaks, you can profit by designing related materials or marketing your company along a parallel story line.

2.  Generate new ideas

Simply browsing headlines can be enough to inspire you to conceive a new design style or marketing strategy.

3.  Identify opportunities

Watch the business and classifieds sections for companies that need graphic design services.  Find undiscovered target customer bases in the lifestyle and features for your products and services.  Advertise and sell.

4.  Study the competition

Scour the news and photos for mentions of your main competitors to find out what they’re doing.  Then use the information to your advantage.

5.  Discover new tools

Read industry-related publications to learn about new tools that can increase your efficiency, return on investment, and your bottom line.

Try reading new publications from similar industries to find overlapping opportunities.  You should also skim news you’re normally not interested in; you’ll be surprised at how many opportunities you discover.  And if you’re used to reading your news digitally, try picking up a few newspapers and magazines.  The various interests represented in such publications can expose you to new ideas that might not cross your mind if you only read the same material.

Start thinking of reading the news as an investment in your own profits, and it can quickly become a go-to source for inspiration.

Guest Author Brian Morris writes for the PsPrint Design & Printing Blog. PsPrint is an online commercial printing company. Follow PsPrint on Twitter @PsPrint and Facebook.