You can create an affiliation among sites in all sorts of different ways. Here are some examples of what some community sites have done:
* Similar main navigation styles (see www.mozilla.com and support.mozilla.com)
* Similar headers and/or footers (see planet.mozilla.org and www.mozilla.org)
* Common font style for logos (most community logos and wordmarks use the Meta Bold font)
* Common color palettes (most Firefox product related sites have a similar light blue color scheme)
There's a lot of discretion here -- some of these examples are more subtle than others and some sites want to have a closer affiliation than others. There's also many different ways to do things since we don't have any common design guidelines that can be used across sites.
I don't know exactly what the Drumbeat site's needs are and how closely aligned we'd like to have things, so it may make sense to talk things over with the people designing the site and then we can report back to the group with some specific recommendations.
David
ms
> _______________________________________________
> community-drumbeat mailing list
> community...@lists.mozilla.org
> https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/community-drumbeat
Definitely. There are a few layers to the whole thing :)
I would love to hear more thoughts on this subject!
Carlo Frinolli[ creative director ] |
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Yes, although there are different Firefox sites they are all linked to within the product so it's one big Firefox site from the user's perspective.
> Though my feeling is that this harmony makes sense between these two
> sites as they are both mozilla products, while drumbeat is a
> different animal; it is an event or a community rather than
> a software product.
Drumbeat certainly isn't a software product, but there is a commonality with Firefox in the sense that it's a major effort by Mozilla to accomplish it's mission. So in some sense it is a product and we can take cues from Firefox branding. If something doesn't rise to the level of 'product' (however that's defined) IMO it shouldn't create all new branding.
> I think a closer model for how Drumbeat relates to the rest of mozilla
> is the spreadfirefox.com, and especially the "Five Years of Firefox"
> micro-site
These are other good examples. Personally though I think we've gone a little overboard with the micro-sites in the community. Mozilla is big and sprawling enough without dozens of unique site designs and I think we need to simplify things at this point.
I'd like to see a small handful of brand designs that most other sites can fall under. Not to say that these sites have to look exactly the same, of course.
Note, affiliation can go beyond design elements. For instance, I think the 'Looking for' set of links at the top of www.mozilla.org is a useful way to link different community sites together. Other sites could have the same set of 'Looking for' links to tie things together but they could style those however they want.
David
| Carlo, great, I'd be interested in hearing your thoughts on this. BTW, I can't make the Monday morning community calls, so if there's enough interest I'd be happy to take part in a design related call at some other point during the week. |
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These are other good examples. Personally though I think we've gone a little overboard with the micro-sites in the community. Mozilla is big and sprawling enough without dozens of unique site designs and I think we need to simplify things at this point.
I'd like to see a small handful of brand designs that most other sites can fall under. Not to say that these sites have to look exactly the same, of course.
Note, affiliation can go beyond design elements. For instance, I think the 'Looking for' set of links at the top of www.mozilla.org is a useful way to link different community sites together. Other sites could have the same set of 'Looking for' links to tie things together but they could style those however they want.
David