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What is a Content Management Site?

A content management system (CMS) is a collection of procedures used to manage work flow in a collaborative environment. These procedures can be manual or computer-based. The procedures are designed to:

  • Allow for a large number of people to contribute to and share stored data
  • Control access to data, based on user roles. User roles define what information each user can view or edit
  • Aid in easy storage and retrieval of data
  • Reduce repetitive duplicate input
  • Improve the ease of report writing
  • Improve communication between users

In a CMS, data can be defined as almost anything - documents, movies, pictures, phone numbers, scientific data, etc. CMSs are frequently used for storing, controlling, revising, semantically enriching, and publishing documentation. Content that is controlled is industry-specific. For example, entertainment content differs from the design documents for a fighter jet. There are various terms for systems (related processes) that do this. Examples are web content management, digital asset management, digital records management and electronic content management. Synchronization of intermediate steps, and collation into a final product are common goals of each.

 

Graphics:

Read: Most of our services does not include print work. We can get you the best print price. Standard 3-5 day turnaround on all prints at a extra rate. All graphic are charge at an 60 min rate of $40 per hour for personal consultations.

 

  • What is a Logo?

 

A logotype, commonly known as a logo, is the graphic element of a trademark or brand, which is set in a special typeface/font, or arranged in a particular, but legible way. The shape, color, typeface, etc. should be distinctly different from others in a similar market. * The logo of a business should be a symbol or have a special meaning that defines a business. For example if your business is in the computer industry such as a web designer, graphic artist, web developer, or data entry clerk your logo might be a computer, keyboard or mouse. When picking a logo for your business make sure the logo has a theme that matches your business and it is different from other business logos. You are looking for a unique logo that will identify your business.

 

  • The Essentials of a Business Card

 

The corporate world in which we communicate and trade requires us to have some means through which we can be recognized. This is the reason why every representative in an organization has a business card.

Without recognition, it is not possible to get any business. Our businesses are only promoted through recognition, which means that we need to be aware of the tools to gain recognition.

You have probably heard of companies having basic things like letterheads, business cards, email addresses, and even logos. These are all considered to be vital tools for recognition. This is because when people see or have these before them, they can recall us easily; they will have our logos or our fonts in their minds as well. This means that when they see our symbols anywhere, they would also be able to recognize them immediately.

In addition to recognizing our trademarks anywhere, people and business contacts are able to get in touch with us through vital communicating tools such as business cards. Business cards have our contact information on them and provide recall far greater than we can imagine.

Business cards are extremely important to most organizations and individuals as well. A business card can help an individual be recognized and promote the services one provides. Whether a business card is used to promote a one-man business operation or is used to represent a particular member of a large company, it has a few basic features. Some of these features include:

* a name

* a logo

* contacts

* telephone number

* fax number

* email address

* key colors

* key words or captions

Each of these features on a business card is of great importance because with out these vital and basic features, a business card would fail to serve the purpose it should.

Designing a business card and wanting it to have the impact you want may cause you to do too much with it. You should never do too much. By this, we mean that it is pointless cluttering too many things or packing in designs and colors that confuse even the most interested eye. You need clarity, and keeping your card as simple as possible yet attractive is what you need.

If your business card is simple and attractive, those who see it will immediately get your message. You also do not want to create something that is too plain and uninteresting, as this would not represent your creativity.

Keeping in mind that you want to include the above basic features in your business card, you need to use appropriate fonts that present your business. For instance, if you are from an advertising company or a fashion design house, you would need to use fonts that are more stylish in order to present your niche market and capture the attention of the client.

Coming back to the main features being presented on your business card, you need to have your name (the representative of the company) mentioned. Beneath your name will be your designation.

Your company logo could be printed anywhere on the card. You could have it printed at one of the top corners, as most business cards do. Alternatively, to save space on the card and yet have a greater impact, you could have the logo enlarged and used as a background. The logo should be in its original colors whether it is placed at a corner of the card or is used a background. Using it as a background would require you to dim its colors too, as the image as a whole would be seen as a watermark.

Speaking of colors, you would need to use the colors of your company on your card. This may be done with your logo or with your captions. You captions need to speak for what your company does. Precisely, your business card needs to represent your services, which happens to be one of the main purposes of it being created.

 

  • Flash

 

Flash is a vector animation software, originally designed to create animations for display on web pages. Vector graphics are ideal for the web because they are so lightweight.

 

  • What is graphic design?

 

Suppose you want to announce or sell something, amuse or persuade someone, explain a complicated system or demonstrate a process. In other words, you have a message you want to communicate. How do you “send” it? You could tell people one by one or broadcast by radio or loudspeaker. That’s verbal communication. But if you use any visual medium at all—if you make a poster; type a letter; create a business logo, a magazine ad, or an album cover; even make a computer printout—you are using a form of visual communication called graphic design.

Graphic designers work with drawn, painted, photographed, or computer-generated images (pictures), but they also design the letter forms that make up various typefaces found in movie credits and TV ads; in books, magazines, and menus; and even on computer screens. Designers create, choose, and organize these elements—typography, images, and the so-called “white space” around them—to communicate a message. Graphic design is a part of your daily life. From humble things like gum wrappers to huge things like billboards to the T-shirt you’re wearing, graphic design informs, persuades, organizes, stimulates, locates, identifies, attracts attention and provides pleasure.

Graphic design is a creative process that combines art and technology to communicate ideas. The designer works with a variety of communication tools in order to convey a message from a client to a particular audience. The main tools are image and typography.

 

  • Type-based design

 

In some cases, designers rely on words to convey a message, but they use words differently from the ways writers do. To designers, what the words look like is as important as their meaning. The visual forms, whether typography (communication designed by means of the printed word) or handmade lettering, perform many communication functions. They can arrest your attention on a poster, identify the product name on a package or a truck, and present running text as the typography in a book does. Designers are experts at presenting information in a visual form in print or on film, packaging, or signs.

When you look at an “ordinary” printed page of running text, what is involved in designing such a seemingly simple page? Think about what you would do if you were asked to redesign the page. Would you change the typeface or type size? Would you divide the text into two narrower columns? What about the margins and the spacing between the paragraphs and lines? Would you indent the paragraphs or begin them with decorative lettering? What other kinds of treatment might you give the page number? Would you change the boldface terms, perhaps using italic or underlining? What other changes might you consider, and how would they affect the way the reader reacts to the content? Designers evaluate the message and the audience for type-based design in order to make these kinds of decisions.

 

  • Image and type

 

Designers often combine images and typography to communicate a client’s message to an audience. They explore the creative possibilities presented by words (typography) and images (photography, illustration, and fine art). It is up to the designer not only to find or create appropriate letter forms and images but also to establish the best balance between them.

Designers are the link between the client and the audience. On the one hand, a client is often too close to the message to understand various ways in which it can be presented. The audience, on the other hand, is often too broad to have any direct impact on how a communication is presented. What’s more, it is usually difficult to make the audience a part of the creative process. Unlike client and audience, graphic designers learn how to construct a message and how to present it successfully. They work with the client to understand the content and the purpose of the message. They often collaborate with market researchers and other specialists to understand the nature of the audience. Once a design concept is chosen, the designers work with illustrators and photographers as well as with typesetters and printers or other production specialists to create the final design product.

 

  • Symbols, logos and logotypes

 

Symbols and logos are special, highly condensed information forms or identifiers. Symbols are abstract representation of a particular idea or identity. The CBS “eye” and the active “television” are symbolic forms, which we learn to recognize as representing a particular concept or company. Logotypes are corporate identifications based on a special typographical word treatment. Some identifiers are hybrid, or combination of symbol and logotype. In order to create these identifiers, the designer must have a clear vision of the corporation or idea to be represented and of the audience to which the message is directed.