Brochure Printing and Mistakes to Avoid

Printing a Brochure? Avoid These Common Mistakes
A company brochure is an essential element for marketing any business. Brochures are one of the best ways to communicate with your customers about what services your company offers, who you are and any special deals you are offering. A professionally designed brochure can grab your customer’s attention and call them to action. A poorly designed brochure can wreak havoc on your company’s image. Here are some design tips in how to make your brochures look professional and keep them in your customer’s hands and out of the garbage.
Templates
Many online printers offer down loadable templates to help you design your brochures. Templates are extremely helpful in showing you the size of the printable area on your brochure. But don’t rush in right away filling in your brochure. The best idea is to print the template out and draw by hand how you want your information to look. With a hard-copy visual guide you can avoid simple mistakes such as using the same picture twice or using the wrong text.
Size
Yes, size is everything. Determine ahead of time what size brochure you need. The standard size for a brochure is 8.5″ x 11″ with 2 to three panels, but other popular sizes are: 8″x9″ with two panels, 8.5″x14″ with three or four panels, or 11″x 17″ with two to four panels. 8.5″x11″ or 8″x 9″ are great if you want to mail your brochure whereas a larger, 8.5″ x 14 or 11″ x 17″ is better for trade shows or for product displays.
Text
How hard is it to read a long, drawn out sentence that seems to go on and on and … well you get the picture. Your readers want to understand your point quickly and clearly. Droning on about how wonderful your company is will only lose your reader’s interest. Keep your copy short and sweet. Use smaller sentences for easier readability and break-up your paragraphs with space in between.
Design your copy to do the work of your sales team. There is a reason why someone would want to read your brochure, remind them of what that reason is. How can you help your reader? In simple terms explain the features and benefits of your company and why your customers would want your products and services.
Photos
Quality is king. For print, high quality photos are absolutely essential. Using low-quality Jpeg’s will alter your pictures and make them look pixelated due to compression and not appealing at all. The best type of photo is save in RAW format. RAW photos are the best to alter but they have a large file size and are hard to store. The next best picture files to work with are tiffs or bmp’s which are crisper, smoother, and immensely superior in quality.
When using photos and graphics in your brochures make certain to resize them in your photo programs. Resizing them within your document can change the quality of your photo especially if you are resizing a photo from 72 inches down to 2 inches. The same applies for any touch-up. Fix your photos and pictures ahead of time so when you start working on your brochure everything is ready. If you keep going back and forth fixing photos then this may cause issues. You might not delete the right photo, or overlap two photos.
Keep in mind using stock photos will make your brochure look thrown together. Dress your brochures for success. Take the time to find quality photos or art that will best represent your company.
Color Management
Computer monitors emit color as RGB (red, green, blue) light yet the printing process uses CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black). Therefore, what you may see displayed on a computer monitor might not be identical to what you envisioned for your brochure. Because of the printing process, digital art must be converted to CMYK color before printing your brochures. Images can easily be converted before hand to help preserve your photos and pictures. Check your setting on your publishing program before saving your file.
Above all, always use a professional printer to print your brochures unless your company has high quality printing devices. Your brochures represent your company. Printing your brochures on your office computer printer will make them look amateurish and unprofessional. Create the right impression and don’t skimp on quality printing.

Published by PrintFirm.com

Katherine is a professional copywriter and social media manager at PrintFirm.com. She fell into online marketing in 2010, and built her career around this dynamic field. She earned her B.A. in Political Science from California State University, Northridge (Summa). When she's not writing, Katherine enjoys photography, skateboarding, graphic design, and chasing her dog around with her husband. Connect with her on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Google Plus