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Here is a brochure we made for a law firm. This attorney only worked on yacht transactions and his law firm wanted a brochure design that would make him look like a leader in his area of expertise. Please click to see the attorney brochure design.

 

This brochure was made for a company that performs maintenance on aircraft for clients around the world. They also sell parts for jet engines and their clients include almost every airline in the world. They wanted a brochure designed to make them look like the world class leader in the aviation industry that they are. Please click to see the aviation industry brochure design.

 

This brochure was designed for a non-profit children's health organization. The group was part of a large hospital located in West Palm Beach but branched off on their own. We made the logo, came up with a name for the new organization and came up with a very professional brochure design that had some fun colorful elements. Please click to see the healthcare brochure design.

 

The next brochure design example is one that we made for a company that makes fire hoods that go over commercial stoves in restaurants. They already had their logo so we only designedd the brochure and our copywriter wrote the text. Please see the industrial equipment brochure design.

 

We made a simple and inexpensive brochure for a merchant account company. When we thought about service industry brochure design we talked with the client about integrating our new design in their trade show display as well. As part of a full service ad agency we are able to offer our clients a cohesive marketing package in which everything our designers create will match. We consider the total package in our design plans.

 

In the marketing world, a lot of attention is being given to the concept of "Image", both on an individual product level and for a corporation as a whole. Researchers know the perception of a product or service can be vastly different from reality. We are faced with the difficult task of communicating to their consumers exactly what benefits they will derive from using their product or service vs. the competition's offering.

A brochure does this in a very subtle way. Part of a brochures's impact comes from repetition, the very act of seeing a familiar symbol on a continual basis. Every company, every product or service needs a brochure for the purpose of branding.

The marketplace is awash with visual branding solutions, repeated in television brochures, on trucks that pass us by; on packages and signs in the supermarkets; stationery and flyers. The list is endless. It is essential, then, for a brochure to have meaning; to present to the subconscious mind of the consumer a message about the corporation and/or the product it represents.

This isn't an easy task. It's a very complex equation that we must develop. The equation has several image-making factors that must be created and sent out for digestion by consumers.

 
BOSSHARDT