1. Sarah Alder Silver

    Managing Director at Cranmore Digital Consulting Ltd

    21 March 2011 21:36pm

    Sarah Alder

    I'm doing research for a global client and the feedback is that the site doesn't look global enough, it looks too British. I wondered what features/design elements make you think of a site as global rather than as US, or British (this will be an English language site initially with country versions as phase two).

  2. Ashley Friedlein Staff

    CEO at Econsultancy

    22 March 2011 09:59am

    Ashley Friedlein

    Hi Sarah

    I'd be very worried if I were being asked to create something 'global' looking? What on earth does that mean? I can only think that means 'completely neutral / nothing-y looking / can't offend anyone' which isn't great. Makes me think of that nasty corporate stock photography.

    I think there are some broad differences between US and UK - look at our newspapers' designs for example. US tend to be more 'guru' led, tend to be more copy/CTA driven, less imagery, generally less 'designed'. Compare US and UK TV adverts and you quickly get the idea. But all that is still a gross generalisation. Within the US (as with the UK) there's a whole world of difference from what a New York crowd might expect versus the Mid West etc. etc.

    I guess you can look at functional elements to give it a 'global' feel e.g. language settings, URLs and so on.

  3. Sarah Alder Silver

    Managing Director at Cranmore Digital Consulting Ltd

    23 March 2011 21:18pm

    Sarah Alder

    Thanks Ashley, I was a bit sloppy with my copy in that post. They are a genuinely global company but they feel the website doesn't reflect that. The URL is a good point. Cheers.

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