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Tagged Marketer’s Toolbox

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Marketer’s Toolbox: Adobe Creative Suite

adobe_collage Here's Part Two of the Marketer's Toolbox series, for part one on HTML and CSS, click here.

Possessing graphic design skills is not a mandatory hard skill to have when working in marketing but it can be extremely helpful and even enjoyable. I personally find learning more about and experimenting with the Adobe Creative Suite an enriching experience.

Adobe CS, Huh?
Here's a quick breakdown of the suite (see the picture to the right for all respective logos):
Photoshop - Editing, correcting and manipulating graphics and photographs
Illustrator - Creation of vector graphics
InDesign - Page creation and layouts; a publisher's software solution
Flash - Development of animations, movies and interactive multimedia
Premiere - Post-production video editing
After Effects - Video compositing
Dreamweaver - HTML, CSS, PHP etc. editor
Bridge - Media manager for organizing Adobe documents
Fireworks - Quick and simplified website layout development
Soundbooth - Audio editor for creating and customizing
Lightroom - Photo management
Acrobat - PDF creation and manipulation

Why are Graphics Important?
Now, keep in mind, I'm not asking you to be a full-fledged graphic designer. What I'm asking of you is to possess -- at the least -- basic understanding and beginner skills with the Adobe Creative Suite. Adobe is by far the industry-leader and if it's name is a mystery to you, visit Adobe's website for more information.

But back to the question at hand, why are graphics important? They hold incredible value in any marketing department because they cultivate an image, carve out a visual identity and brand for the organization, and also build out that brand to achieve recognition and loyalty. So, if you can comprehend the inner-workings of graphic design then you can perhaps better market your brand.

To Get Started
The main graphics software within the suite are Photoshop, Illustrator and InDesign, the other solutions all cater to different areas as noted above. I would suggest beginning with either Photoshop or Illustrator, if you're interested. These two foundational solutions will provide you with an unprecedented understanding of the world of graphics. Have an open mind, keep your creative marketing juices flowing and think of how the best-of-the-best do it.

Resources
Adobe.com
Adobe Design Center
Lynda.com
Layers Magazine Tutorials
Youtube.com

Marketer’s Toolbox: HTML & CSS

The Marketer's Toolbox will be an ongoing series in which I explore the critical hard and soft skills all marketers should possess.

HTML & CSS

Whether you're an amateur, a professional, or someone considering marketing as a career path -- the skill set I will outline throughout this series is part of what defines you as a marketer and how you are perceived in the workplace.

Part of my journey in developing this blog was taking on the challenge of teaching myself HTML, now evolved into XHTML, and CSS. A daunting task at first but a supremely beneficial one given the skills I now possess.

The Basics

HTML: Hypertext Markup Language -- A specialized language consisting of tags and rules used to build websites, emails, and other multimedia online.

XHTML: Extensible Hypertext Markup Language -- A stricter and cleaner version of HTML that acts "as a reformulation of HTML to an XML application".

CSS: Cascading Style Sheets -- Style sheets are used in conjunction with HTML/XHTML documents to specify formatting of all content defined in the document.

The ability to code effectively in HTML and CSS is often underrated. One can possess the skill but still not be fluent in the language. It is in fact another language that appears overwhelming at first but the foundations of the two are extremely basic. It is the mastery of them that can be more of a challenge.

When I decided to learn, I already possessed a rudimentary understanding of HTML but what I wanted to achieve was fluency. I applied myself and set the goal of designing AND coding my own website. This blog has certainly evolved from its first iteration (and will continue to do so) and my coding has also enhanced to a point where I am comfortable in an HTML environment.

Websites vs. Emails

There is a stark difference between coding for a website and for an email. For a website, tables are deprecated styles and should not be used to formulate the structure of the site, instead CSS should provide that structure in terms of positioning, formatting and look.

However, emails do not follow the same methodology. This is due to the wide array of email clients available to users (i.e. Outlook 2003/2007, Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc.). In order to ensure your email appears as it should in all clients, tables must be relied upon with a high level of proficiency. CSS is unreliable in email clients and must be limited to a minimum until email standards are enforced across all clients.

Understanding this difference is critical to being able to work in both environments.

Cross-Browser Compatibility

Along with the distinction between email and website, is the harsh distinction that exists between browsers -- Safari, Internet Explorer 6, 7 and 8, Firefox, Opera, Chrome. As with email clients, browsers also possess their own quirks and differences but do offer more standardization.

However, you should always test your code in all major browsers to determine whether or not the email and/or website appears without flaws and erroneous code.

TIP: Always start with Firefox, it is considered the truest browser in its translation of your HTML and CSS and will consistently present your code accurately. From Firefox move to Internet Explorer and Safari, and then the rest. (IE8 is now available but many are still operating on version 7 (and far too many on version 6) which can be problematic for your code, so keep this in mind.)

To learn on your own, try these great resources:

W3Schools - Learning centre for web developers

Lynda.com - Online training for all mainstream software solutions

NeTTuts - Converting your PSD Design into HTML

Cheat Sheets - For HTML and CSS

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Name: Simren Deogun