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Products and ethical values to heart. In doing so, they target an audience who shares the same concerns. Enthusiastic or factual tone The fourth and final dimension of tone is the level of enthusiasm. Enthusiasm is more than just excitement. It's about effusively expressing your level of passion for the topic at hand, whether positive or negative. That said, it is mainly used in a positive sense, to arouse the audience's enthusiasm for the brand, product, service or subject.
For example, here's how the clothing brand Azerbaijan WhatsApp Number Life Is Good uses enthusiasm in their texts: Life is Good, ton enthousiaste As a brand, Life is Good is always positive. So it makes sense that she would use enthusiasm to express this positivity. She uses tons of exclamation points, bold colors and fonts, and emotional language ("whatever you love" and "fall adventures" in the example above) to show enthusiasm. This is a fundamentally optimistic brand. But enthusiasm doesn't suit every brand. At the other end of the spectrum, some prefer a drier, more concrete tone.
Mr. Porter: Mr Porter, your cont, refined The texts on Mr. Porter's website are much more stripped down, and the graphic choices are in keeping with this sobriety. The example above doesn't just avoid exclamation points, it avoids all punctuation. The text is direct and straightforward. He banishes emotive phrases and just presents the facts: 104 new designs are on sale that day, many from designer Brunello Cuccinelli. Their use of neutral colors and space, not only in their design, but also in their product photography, creates a sense of high-end minimalism. This design, combined with a factual tone, retains only the essential and lets the products speak for themselves. It's important to note here that a factual tone doesn't have to be minimalist to be effective.
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