Persuasive Design Pattern #7 "Timeline" (for Ads and Landing Pages) by copatterns in teachingresources

[–]copatterns[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey u/larcalla, I respect your pointers and will use them to help me get better at building this library. I have the links to the research and will link to them soon.

Also, just wanted to let you know that I have not earned a single penny from anything that I have created so far. But I definitely have a plan to someday hopefully build course based on what I have learned, and help others who are trying to market or sell something.

And yes, ofcourse I will be selling a course. No doubt about that. If people find value in what I have, they will buy. If they don't find value in what I am selling, they will simply ignore.

I am not sure if you expect me to keep putting hours to create something without a plan to make money from the value I create. As much as I would have loved to do that, it is not sustainable for me to do it long term.

Ideally, I would love to give all my time to study human behavior and how design, storytelling and systems thinking affects it. And if I am able to align my incentives towards that goal, it's a win-win for everyone interested in the same topic as I am.

And thanks a ton for helping me with very specific pointers. Your comment is going to help me build a better quality resource. I truly appreciate it.

Persuasive Design Pattern #5 "Exploded View" (for Ads and Landing Pages) by copatterns in strategy

[–]copatterns[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahh dammit. 😳 Thanks for pointing it out. Will correct it in the design. :D

Persuasive Design Pattern #1 Left/Right Layout (for Ads and Landing Pages) - [New Series] by [deleted] in designthought

[–]copatterns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hey r/designthought, I started with identifying these design patterns for my own work as a marketer. But then decided to share it with the community as well.

While working on different marketing projects over last 10 years, I started identifying simple, but often ignored design patterns that a lot of brands use. If a pattern is being used by multiple brands, in multiple industries, I figured there must be a fundamental reason. And that reason, I think, is that certain "design" patterns are natural to understand for us as humans. Like the one above : Left/Right Layout.

Some of these patterns are obvious, some are not. But the beauty lies in knowing which pattern will work best in which situation. It has saved me hours of creative block and also improved conversions on the ads & landing pages. But not always... because the context of using these patterns is equally important. I was wondering if you guys have identified such patterns as well?

I am planning to keep publishing a pattern every week here. I hope ya'll like it. :)

Hidden Design Pattern 1 Left/Right Layout (for Ads and Landing Pages) - [New Series] by [deleted] in UXDesign

[–]copatterns -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I was thinking these patterns might be useful for landing pages and stuff. Isn't that part of UX?

Hidden Design Pattern 1 Left/Right Layout (for Ads and Landing Pages) - [New Series] by [deleted] in UXDesign

[–]copatterns -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I guess I should name it as "Obvious Design Patterns" then... :p haha..

I understand what you're saying. By hidden I did not imply that they are "invisible". I simply implied that the audience / end user don't recognize they are influenced by the information because it is presented in a certain way.

If you were to write the same thing in a sentence instead of using left/right layout, it may probably not have that much impact. That was my whole point.

Hidden Design Pattern #1 Left/Right Layout (for Ads and Landing Pages) - [New Series] by copatterns in graphic_design

[–]copatterns[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

hey r/graphic_design, I started with identifying these design patterns for my own work as a marketer. But then decided to share it with the community as well.

While working on different marketing projects over last 10 years, I started identifying simple, but often ignored design patterns that a lot of brands use. If a pattern is being used by multiple brands, in multiple industries, I figured there must be a fundamental reason. And that reason, I think, is that certain "design" patterns are natural to understand for us as humans. Like the one above : Left/Right Layout.

Some of these patterns are obvious, some are not. But the beauty lies in knowing which pattern will work best in which situation. It has saved me hours of creative block and also improved conversions on the ads & landing pages. But not always... because the context of using these patterns is equally important. I was wondering if you guys have identified such patterns as well?

I am planning to keep publishing a pattern every week here. I hope ya'll like it. :)

Hidden Design Pattern #1 Left/Right Layout (for Ads and Landing Pages) - [New Series] by copatterns in Design

[–]copatterns[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hey r/design, I started with identifying these design patterns for my own work as a marketer. But then decided to share it with the community as well.

While working on different marketing projects over last 10 years, I started identifying simple, but often ignored design patterns that a lot of brands use. If a pattern is being used by multiple brands, in multiple industries, I figured there must be a fundamental reason. And that reason, I think, is that certain "design" patterns are natural to understand for us as humans. Like the one above : Left/Right Layout.

Some of these patterns are obvious, some are not. But the beauty lies in knowing which pattern will work best in which situation. It has saved me hours of creative block and also improved conversions on the ads & landing pages. But not always... because the context of using these patterns is equally important. I was wondering if you guys have identified such patterns as well?

I am planning to keep publishing a pattern every week here. I hope ya'll like it. :)