Our thoughts, opinions, and ideas on all things brand strategy, digital marketing, social media marketing, post-production, content creation, and graphic design.

Nina Epting Nina Epting

Identifying Your Target Audience: Why It’s Important & How to Do It

Before you establish your visual identity, before you make content, before you start posting on social media: know who your target audience is.

‘Why is that the first thing I need to do?’

Glad you asked. I’ll answer your question with a question: How can you create effective content that connects you to your audience if you don’t know who your audience is? You need to identify key elements about your audience to market to them effectively. I say this because you shouldn’t plan on marketing to 20-year-old girls the same way that you would market to 50-year-old men. Marketing isn’t a one-sized fit all.

If you want to be able to identify your target audience, be able to gather information about your audience, and improve how much you know your audience so you can make more accurately targeted content- keep reading.

When you don’t target your content, your content becomes aimless. While it is true that great content will attract a crowd, if you don’t target a specific audience it’ll be really hard to attract a specific crowd and get specific results.

When working with clients that are establishing their visual identity, I will often give them a questionnaire to help best identify their brand. I ask things like…

  • What problems do your products or services solve?

  • Who are your current customers?

  • Who is your competition? Why should potential customers choose you over them?

After answering these questions you’ll be able to answer these questions about your audience and the content you make for them:

  • Who is going to look at my content?

  • What is my competition doing? Can I do it better?

  • Why should my customers look at my content vs my competitors?

We know it can be overwhelming to think about all this stuff but it’s simpler than it at first appears to be. Don’t think too deep into it. These answers will soon turn to the stepping stones that guide you in identifying your content core.

Finding Your Content Core

The purpose of identifying your content’s core is so that you can know what to talk about to best promote what you do. It’s not always important to talk about yourself, your services, your products, or the problems you solve. Sometimes you need to talk about the things your customers are talking about. Sometimes you need to talk about relevant things in your chosen industry. We try to make Nina Kay Digital’s content be 20/80. 20 percent about us and our services, 80 percent about entertaining or informative stuff that my audience wants to hear or needs to know.

Tips to Find Your Target Audience

-Create Target Audience Profiles. By creating your ideal consumer profile you will be better suited to spot your target audience in real-time when the time is right. These won’t always directly reflect what your target audience ends up looking like but it’s a great place to start. Here’s a sample of a Consumer Profile that I made for a cosmetics company.

Tip: When you first start you might not have an audience to speak to yet. Using your ideal consumer profile, you can then make content geared towards that consumer. This will help you speak to your audience even if they haven’t found you yet. This w…

Tip: When you first start you might not have an audience to speak to yet. Using your ideal consumer profile, you can then make content geared towards that consumer. This will help you speak to your audience even if they haven’t found you yet. This will help you convert people from looking at your content to sales.

-If you have a pre-established audience (big or small), you can ask them some valuable questions This helps you know what your audience is thinking so you can best accommodate their needs and wants. When figuring out what questions to ask them keep in mind to make questions simple to fill out to aid in audience retention.

-If you have a website or Facebook group or an account with Google Analytics, you can use these dashboards to collect data for your audience. You can use this data to avoid making incorrect assumptions about where your audience is or what they want to see.

Once you know WHO your target audience is it’s important to then figure out what their pain points are. What do they want to do better? What stresses them out? Solving your consumer’s problems will give your content credibility and traction. Use this new-found knowledge to make content that is useful to your audience.

Tips for Creating Content that Converts

Share the benefit! Most people confuse features with benefits. Try not to do this. In other words, focus on the needs of your consumer vs your need to sell. Produce content that helps your audience be & do better. Information to help people solve problems on their own is one of the best forms of free marketing there is.

Always make sure your content has a call to action it. You got to tell your audience what to do. When you are direct, it leaves no room for misunderstandings. When you try to make sure every piece of content you make has some type of basic call to action, you will get better conversions. Don’t be shy!

When you see a lack of conversions with the content being made it’s usually because of an unclear call to action. Want someone to share your post? Say it! Want someone to sign up for your newsletter? Say. It. You can’t expect anyone to read your mind.

Don’t forget. Great content starts with a great understanding of your target audience! Now go out there and make some awesome stuff.

If you are still feeling overwhelmed after reading all this - Nina Kay Digital offers assistance in identifying your target audience, content strategy, and content creation. Contact us today and let us know if we can help you!

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Nina Epting Nina Epting

5 Color Palette Ideas

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Not knowing what colors you want your content to be can feel super overwhelming. I don’t know about you but I tend to spend a long time looking at inspiration for the perfect color palette all the time.

It’s pretty common knowledge that color directly influences your energy/vibe…but did you know that it also plays a major role in your brand identity? The right choice of colors will entertain and captivate your audience-this aids in audience retention and gives your brand a better platform via your color selections.

The right color palette will entertain and captivate your audience and show off your brand's identity in a way that words would never. To stand out against your competitors and to ensure consistency across all your marketing materials. Said consistency is what will aid in audience retention and is what will build up your digital credibility. You must put aside some time and energy into creating an effective color palette.

Below you can find five color palettes that I designed for you on Illustrator. I used photos that I gravitated to and used the eye drop tool to pull the colors that spoke to me out of the photo. After I selected my colors, I combined the photo that inspired me and the colors/hex codes for your reference. You can either use these color schemes or use my palette boards as inspiration so that you can make your own.

If you end up making a color palette, do send it my way- I would love to see what you come up with.

Photo credit: Adobe Stock          Designed on Adobe Illustrator

Photo credit: Adobe Stock Designed on Adobe Illustrator

Photo credit: Adobe Stock          Designed on Adobe Illustrator

Photo credit: Adobe Stock Designed on Adobe Illustrator

Photo Credit: Fashion Nova         Designed on Adobe Illustrator

Photo Credit: Fashion Nova Designed on Adobe Illustrator

Photo credit: Adobe Stock          Designed on Adobe Illustrator

Photo credit: Adobe Stock Designed on Adobe Illustrator

Photo credit: Adobe Stock Designed on: Adobe Illustrator

Photo credit: Adobe Stock Designed on: Adobe Illustrator

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Nina Epting Nina Epting

Defining Visual Identity

Copy of Copy of Pastel Hipster Blogger General Media Kit (25).png

How do you stick out in a sea of competitors and contenders?

Princeton University did a study where they observed people judging other human's likability, trustworthiness, competence, attractiveness, and aggressiveness by their faces.

One of the conclusions of this study? The average person takes about .01 of a second to form their judgments.

Leonard Kim, a professor at Princeton said, "With that reaction time, you need a clean and crisp visual representation of your brand. Otherwise, people may associate your brand with being cheap, unreliable, or even untrustworthy.” You have one shot to have a great first impression. Don't miss your shot.

If you find yourself asking, 'What exactly is a visual identity? And how do you create one?', keep reading.

Part of building your brand is turning the traits and attributes of your business into visual content that aligns with your business. “A visual identity should amplify the intended message of the brand so you want to learn more and follow along with the story. Then the story should sell customers into why they should do business with your brand,” Kim at Princeton University said.

At the core of visual identity are your visual branding ingredients: logo, colors, type, and imagery. However, before designing a logo, you need to have identified the colors, type, and imagery.

A logo is a huge part of visual brand identity. It is a graphic or illustration that conveys what you do. A logo can be a combination of your color palette, type, and design. You have to identify your color, type & vibe you want to give off before you design a logo.

Color

“Your color palette needs to fit what you are trying to convey,” Kim said. “If you’re promoting a luxury product, you may want to use blacks, golds, and silvers. If you have a financial product, you may want to incorporate greens and golds.”

Color psychology is REAL, ya'll! My best tip in regards to picking colors for brand identification (or even content) would have to be: pick one main color and then see what other colors in similar ranges look like with your main color.

Learn more about color psychology by clicking here.

Need some inspiration in regards to color schemes? Click here.

Type

Beyond what the words in your logo say, the size, typeface, and hierarchy of your text are directly related to your visual identity. Using the same 1-2 typefaces will also help reinforce brand identity when posting content online. Keep this in mind as you establish what your visual identity will be.

Imagery

You know the saying, ‘A picture is worth 1,000 words.’? This still rings true in this case. Photos inspire, remind and trigger emotions within. The right imagery will set the tone for the entire deliverable or idea. This is why it’s important to put photos of what inspires you on a mood board. Knowing the imagery that inspires you is a step closer to understanding what type of illustration or vibe you want your logo to have.

Have you established the basics of your identity? Then you are ready to create a mood board.

Mood boards are a vital staple in a brand, goal, or event. After the identity is established, a mood board is used to reference when you or others are designing marketing materials, ads, social media, or other content in the future. Referencing your mood board will always ensure that the content you make is on-brand and consistent matter what.

Another thing that mood boards are great for? Chasing your goals!! Putting a mood board on a fridge or bathroom mirror, etc. is a great way to keep your eye on the prize.

Check out some of my more recent mood boards!

Nina Kay Digital x Moon Child Events

Nina Kay Digital x Moon Child Events

Nina Kay Digital x Whatnot Boutique

Nina Kay Digital x Whatnot Boutique

Nina Kay Digital x Dave & Lindsay’s Wedding Mood Board

Nina Kay Digital x Dave & Lindsay’s Wedding Mood Board

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