Same product, different impact
I am often asked how brain science can create competitive differentiation. Here is one way to do it. At a recent tradeshow, I noticed the distinction between two vendors who offered similar wood coating products. Even though their products, technically, did not have that much differentiation, HOW they presented those products was radically different.
In the first image, the display is a sensory invitation. You see contrast: ripples and grains, soft waves and jagged swirls, light and shadow.... Click to see the second image, and you will notice a layout that is clean and consistent but also forgettable. The repetition of square panels and neutral tones creates no surprise, no tension, no visual rhythm. It looks more like storage than storytelling.
When it comes to business content, especially in slides, booths, or brochures, many people assume they need a design degree to stand out. You don’t. But you do need contrast. One form of contrast that is helpful in this case is created through repetition and disruption. Consider selecting an element that is important and then disrupting it briefly. In this case, the first vendor did it through juxtaposing different shapes, textures, and colors. In the case of business communication, it could be disrupting symmetry with asymmetry, or a surprise line, a change in pace, or a provocative question.
If your audience can guess what comes next, they are halfway gone. And contrast does not cost more, it just needs more care.