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Content Marketing Inspiration from Apple: Use a Boost of Color

Today Apple announced its new MacBook which has Twitter in a flurry not because of its new capabilities—such as being 20% faster than its older iteration—but because of a new color offering: rose gold. Some say it’s too pink. Others say it’s the perfect gold-twinged-with-copper hue.

Whether you’re for or against the new rose gold MacBook, it’s without dispute that color can be a powerful enhancer or detractor of products or content, and yet its power is often underestimated.

Color and Content Marketing

With Content Marketing, emphasis is most often placed on the quality of the content itself and its skeleton design—as it should be. That said, color is an accessory that can strategically be used to enhance content, making it the best that it can be. The power of color can be subtle in some cases; in others, such as Apple’s, it can be a powerful attention-getter.

Color Doesn’t Require a Designer

You don’t need to be a designer to give your content an effective refresh.

Even experimenting with the color of your links on your Twitter profile can be tested to see if your audience is more engaged with, say, green links or red.

Experimenting with Color Is a No-Brainer

In digital marketing, there is relatively little risk involved when testing out a new color, but the payoff can be big. You can start as small or as large as you want—an easy way to test out a new color is to use a quality piece of content, such as a blog or whitepaper, that has gone stale. Re-launch it with a new color refresh, whether that change manifests in its CTA button or in its title or link colors, and measure how its response is affected.

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