03 Jun 6 Visual Design Tips That Make Your Printed Sales Collateral More Persuasive (and More Effective)
If you’ve ever handed someone a brochure or left behind a sales sheet, you’ve probably wondered:
Did it make an impression or did it hit the trash?
Sales collateral can be a powerful tool in your marketing kit, but only if it’s done right. With today’s visual-first buyers, the way your materials look often says more about your company than the words on the page.
So how do you design sales collateral that actually works?
Let’s break it down.
1. Start With the Goal, Not the Design
Too many companies start by picking a brochure layout or choosing colors before they’re even clear on what the piece is supposed to do.
Ask yourself:
- Is this supposed to book appointments?
- Educate a hesitant buyer?
- Help a salesperson follow up?
Once you know the goal, the design can do its job and support the message.
2. Visual Hierarchy Isn’t Just for Designers
If someone glances at your brochure for 3 seconds, what will they notice first?
If it’s your logo or a nice stock photo and not your main selling point, you’ve got a problem. Your design needs to guide the reader’s eye from most important to least important, not the other way around.
Bold headlines. Clear subheads. Clean structure. Not flashy. Just effective.
3. Color Should Work, Not Just “Pop”
Summer Gould says it best: “Color shouldn’t just look good, it should make people feel something.” And there’s science to back that up.
Color influences up to 85% of purchasing decisions, making it one of the most powerful tools in your print design strategy.
We’ve seen businesses lose the message by throwing in every color they like. Instead, think about how your colors support the tone of your message. Are you selling excitement? Trust? Calm? Innovation?
The best designs use color with intention, not decoration.
4. Your CTA Shouldn’t Be a Guessing Game
If you’ve ever seen a beautiful brochure with no clear next step, you know how frustrating that is.
Don’t make people figure out what to do next. Tell them. Show them. Invite them.
And don’t bury your call to action. Use space. Use contrast. Use repetition if you have to. If it’s not obvious, it’s not working.
5. Design Doesn’t Fix a Lack of Focus
This is where we can help.
We’ve worked with clients who tried to do it all on one flyer: introduce the business, list every service, quote three testimonials, and showcase a new special. The result? Clutter. Confusion. No action.
Sometimes the best thing a printer can do is help you cut, refocus, and get to the one thing that really matters in that piece.
6. Printing Adds the Final Voice
Design happens on the screen, but impact happens in the hand.
Your paper choice, your finish, your folds — these are not just technical details. They’re part of the story you’re telling.
A smooth, soft-touch finish whispers premium. A thick cardstock feels confident. A folded panel invites exploration. These things matter.
And if you’re not sure what works best for your audience, ask. You’d be surprised how much we know, not just about ink and paper, but about what buyers actually respond to.
Bottom Line
You don’t have to be a design expert. You just have to care about what your sales materials say visually, emotionally, and practically.
Because in print marketing, how you look is how you’re perceived.
If you want help making your brochures, flyers, or folders work harder for you, we’re here to guide you. You don’t need a redesign. You need a reset with the right partner by your side.
Let’s talk about your next piece.