Branding
The best description of branding that I’ve read is from Gumroad:
A brand is nothing more than people’s perceptions. Since Gumroad is defined by how the world feels about us, we like to make a good impression.
When I think about who typical customers are for education products, here’s the persona I have in mind:
40-something year old woman with a Master’s degree who does some type of social science-related work. She is really good with Excel and probably learned to use some other statistical software (SPSS, SAS, Stata, etc) in grad school. She’s heard about other people using R and is intrigued but at the same time is scared by what she’s heard about how hard R is to learn.
With this persona in mind, I’ve intentionally tried to make the R for the Rest of Us personality:
- Friendly
- Welcoming
- Not too serious
All of the marketing I do takes a laid-back, conversational approach. I start all emails, for example, with the phrase “Hi friend”. Any time someone asks a question, I reassure them it’s a good question (people are afraid to ask “dumb” questions when it comes to R). These are a couple ways I try to implement the brand.
Logo, colors, typography
When most people think of branding, this is what they’re asking about. You can find the various logos, colors, and typography that I use on Canva.