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E-Mail : Think Small Screen

Challenges and solutions for e-mail design
Larry Burditt
Aug 1, 2008

Beyond the issue with screen dimension, designers must be keenly aware of the file size of the images making up their designs. E-mail campaigns work by keeping all the images on a central server rather than as an attachment to customers' e-mails. They must be small so download times are very quick. The tide has turned, and more people are on some version of a high-speed Internet connection than not. But your target audience might not be in the demographic typically having a high-speed connection. Even if it does, the tolerance for even a moment's pause in downloading is low. As content providers, for better or worse, you must work diligently to minimize the wait time. The easiest solution is to use the tools you already have to optimize your images. For example, the "Save for Web and Devices" feature in Photoshop does a good job of reducing image size to a palatable level.

Watch Your Colors, and Work Your Colors
Color is one of the key elements to any design, and of course the palette is larger with any kind of design displayed electronically, since you will work with an RGB palette instead of CMYK. But colors don't translate to every screen exactly the same. Yes, the days of needing to worry about Web-safe colors are largely behind us, but most monitors are not going to be calibrated and adjusted. They are going to range from high-end LCDs to hand-me-down CRT screens.

Another little quirk in the mix: The colors on a Mac screen are lighter than on a PC. What does this mean for your design? You should avoid subtle color differences if they are critical to your message. If you want something to be read, keep the contrast high. But do the work to check your colors, too. Those programs that will let you preview how the colors will look on both Macs and PCs are your friends. Find other monitors, laptops and different operating systems to view your designs. Some colors, particularly warm browns, have a tendency to appear very unappealing on certain screens.

Keep It Simple and Clean
Good design has breathing space. If every pixel of space is filled with content, the overall design has a cheap look and feel. Open up the spacing, and allow some emptiness. Without all the visual competition, it becomes easy to make the important things prominent. I know sometimes this is easier said than done when your client or project director is focused on maximum material on a page. But good designers are good communicators, so explain in dollars and sense how the cleaner design will help the bottom line and the company image.



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