This 2019 Colour Forecast by Sherwin-Williams Can Help Your Business Tell Better Stories with Colours

colour design

What is your favourite colour? When people ask me that, I will always answer; “Black.” I know some people say that black is not a colour, but I don’t care. From head to toe, my stuff is coloured with black. If people ask; “why black?” I’d say, “I feel comfortable with black.” And it’s true. I feel like I’m flowing with energy every time I wear black so I wear everything black almost every day. This tendency of wearing black has become my identity over time. People in my groups or my co-workers know me as ‘the gothic chic’ or ‘the black witch.’ Like I said, this is not about a colour anymore, this is more about identity and how that colour shapes you into a person you consistently are and that colour is what people recognise from you. This got me thinking; as someone who works at a creative agency that provides services for business owners, I often help my friends from the web design team with colour inspirations that can represent the clients’ business identity. Even though the clients already have their own identity colour, of course we still have to make variety of that colour without being out of character. Why? That’s because the proper set of colour palette is important for the business identity. Not only can this shape the business identity, this can also increase consistent brand awareness. For the past few years, our company has helped clients’ businesses find ‘their colour.’ How do we do that? Well, let me give you a warning; don’t be surprised. My friends and I in the company are always inspired by Sherwin-Williams colour palette. I know this sounds kind of absurd since Sherwin-Williams is basically a company in general building materials industry, but after reading this article, trust me, it will all make sense. Therefore, please keep reading to find out!

Sherwin-Williams Company is an American Fortune 500 company in the general building materials industry manufacturing, distributing and selling paints, coatings and many other related products to industrial, professional, commercial and retail customers. The company operates more than 3,000 stores in the United States, Canada, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico. I’m not writing this to promote Sherwin-Williams, but I got to admit, they are really colour specialists – let me just tell you that. Why? With over 1,500 collections of paint colours and colour palettes, they really know colour and how to make it flow through every project. Also, they make colour forecasts based on imagery and the meaning of the colours flowed in selection of themes which represent “the free thinkers.” Imagery-based decisions are often stronger than text-based because that visual story is often seen first by our eyes and the text comes later. Colours help bring stories alive. Colours bring business identity alive and actualised. That is how we learn from Sherwin-Williams’ colours.

In 2019, Sherwin-Williams released another set of colour palettes with several themes. According to Sue Wadden, director of colour marketing at Sherwin-Williams, her team approached each colour in their colour forecast as a unique personality that when it is used on its own or combined, it can tell a story. Humans are born with different kinds of personalities and colours are also a personality. By thinking about each palette as a person, they assigned attributes that could inform decisions by business owners or consumers. And guess what, your business can find inspirations from that too, be it for your business brand identity or for your website design! So, what is the 2019 colour forecast by Sherwin-Williams that you can learn from? Let’s check it out below!

Aficionado

Timeless traditions and nostalgia are what shape this palette theme. According to Wadden, Aficionado evokes an emotion of what’s best-in-life, well-worn and bespoke. It is ostentatious but without being fake or showy, and has the right amount of charm. This colour palette theme is ‘timeless’, denoting classic but not old-school and modern but not too trendy. Rich and deep colours that include copper and gold ground the merlot and grey. This colour palette is suitable for the identity of companies like law firms, book stores, or boutiques.

Shapeshifter

This palette was originally inspired by the healing energy of spirituality and the cosmos. Coupled with majestic blues from deep oceans to the galaxy, rooted by strong geometrics and clean lines, everything about shapeshifter is mystical but modern at the same time. Wadden denotes this palette as the atmospheric wisps of colour, grounded by deep, mysterious blues capture the unique space between technology and spirituality. This colour palette works well with businesses like hotels, psychiatric clinics, fashion boutiques, salons, or beauty spa destinations.

Wanderer

Wadden explained that the Wanderer palette is sun-washed and warm. It brings you to a modern desert made of one-part cowboy, one-part Scandinavian style the produces a luxurious atmosphere. This colour palette gives you a sense of adventure. With subtle earthy colours such as clay, caramel and browns, this colour palette combines adventures with modern desert aesthetic which may be suitable for interior design companies, rustic-themed restaurants, furniture companies, or beauty clinics.

Enthusiast

Enthusiast colour palette theme is intended for those with free-spirited minds – the free thinkers. This is for those who don’t know the meaning of less is more – those who know no limit. This palette was inspired by artistic expression and confidence, taking ‘maximalism’ into the next level and pushing the boundaries with colour. The mix of rich blues, lush greens, reds and golds are suitable for those who are not afraid to experiment with colours – like antique stores, art galleries, traditional restaurants, art stores, souvenir shops, or modern art museums.

Your business needs your own trademark colours that identify your brand and differentiate your brand from other brands in the same industry. It becomes your colour and identity. For that reason, when you think about the colours for your brand and your business website, make sure you adjust it to your business type and values, so that people can understand more about your brand as a whole.

The Million-Dollar Question: How Answering Questions Can Help Your SEO Efforts

SEO tips

In the twenty plus years since the internet was made publicly available and a decade since the iPhone made it possible for us to access the internet almost all the time, we now rely on the internet for almost everything. We use the internet for dating, to watch a film, to listen to music, to order food, to get a ride somewhere or to simply talk among ourselves. Because of these various roles the internet has now filled within our lives, it’s easy to forget what it was designed for in the first place, to provide an easy mean of exchanging information.

Technically, exchanging information is still what the internet is primarily used for. The various social media platforms available are an extension of that but it’s the kind of thing that people tend to easily forget given just how versatile the internet now is these days. Whenever I stumble upon a word I don’t recognize in a book or when I want to check some trivial information about a famous person, the internet is what I use to answer those questions. To help answer a question remains one of the most popular uses of the internet and knowing how to take advantage of this fact could be very useful for SEO services and marketers.

The changing roles of a search engine

It used to be that when you’re trying to find an answer to a simple question, like “how old Nicole Kidman is”, you type the quoted phrase into a search engine and the search engine will show you a list of pages where the answer to that question might be found. Usually, you’re just going to be led into the Wikipedia page of Nicole Kidman, where her detailed birth date can be found. However, if you type that phrase into Google now, you’re going to be presented with a direct answer (she’s 51 years old FYI) plus a short biography taken from Wikipedia for good measure.

Search engines no longer act as a signpost that tells you where something can be found, they’ve begun to act more and more like a place where those answers can be found, even if technically, they pull that answer from other places. By taking advantage of this feature, it is possible for a page from your website to be featured prominently, above the rest of the results, on a given search engines results page (SERP), which can potentially draw a huge amount of web traffic your way. If you’re thinking of optimizing your content for questions, you might want to take note of the following.

Avoid optimizing for questions with short, easy and direct answers

The Nicole Kidman’s age question above is an example of this. Because of the nature of the answer, Google could simply pull the answer out of your page and display them on the SERP, which is going to effectively stop any traffic coming your way. Sure, the URL for your website might get some prime real estate at the top of the page but have you ever actually paid any attention to the URL when you’re using Google? I honestly don’t know anyone who does.

The idea is then to look for questions commonly asked of your industry that either can’t be answered in a single sentence or one that would need to be backed up by a solid argument. On the other hand, you’d want to provide a summary of sorts for Google that partly answers the question while giving a tantalizing glimpse of what users might found on the actual page. You want to give them enough to be interested but not too much that they’re satisfied with what you’ve already given them.

Use the inverted pyramid approach

The inverted pyramid approach is what I like to call good journalism. In this age of clickbait and misleading headlines, it’s very common to see overly melodramatic article titles that don’t really tell you anything and whose sole purpose is to entice unsuspecting users into seeing the story, which tends to have an anti-climatic result. The oft-cited headline ‘Man tries to hug a wild lion, you won’t believe what happens next’ is one example of a clickbait headline.

This ultimately meaningless headline is in contrast with the practice of quality journalism, which tends to be forthcoming with the gist of the story and uses the article to fill out the details. As I’m typing this for example, a headline in The New York Times simply states ‘Alternate Brexit plans rejected, Theresa May offers to step down’. With the inverted pyramid approach, you already have an idea on what the article is going to tell you.

In this approach, you start with an answer and then fill in the rest with the details and the context of how that answer came to be. This approach fits in with the point above, by giving out a summary or a shortened version of the answer, you provide enough information to the readers but in order to understand the big picture, they’re going to have to read the rest of your article. As with journalism, this approach helps build your credibility as publication that has to resort to clickbait headlines is never going to be taken seriously.

Take advantage of the ‘People also ask’ feature in Google

So you’ve landed on a popular question with no easy answers related to your field of business that has a potential to draw traffic to your website but optimizing the content for your website around a single question isn’t practical so you’re going to have to find more questions to optimize for. The good news is that you can use that one question in your repertoire to find related questions easily by using the ‘People also ask’ feature in Google. Try typing that question into Google and see what happens.

In Google, right under the featured answer at the top of SERP is the ‘People also ask’ (PAA) column, which is a list of expandable questions that are related to the question you typed into Google. If I ask Google on ‘who is the best F1 driver of all time’, the PAA column list questions such as ‘who is the most successful F1 driver’ and ‘who is the highest paid F1 driver of 2018’. Clicking on those questions will open up more questions relating to the ones I’ve just clicked.

By taking advantage of the PAA column, you could land on an ever-growing list of questions in your industry that you could optimize for. Combine this list of questions with keyword research tools to ensure that the question you’re optimizing for is actually getting some heavy traffic. What’s also great about the PAA column is that each of the questions listed there also have their own featured answer, giving SEO services and marketers more opportunity to be featured in a given SERP.