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    <title>Support and Advice: Branding And Anu Logo</title>
    <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content</link>
    <description>Support and advice from Marketing &amp; Communications Division categorised by Branding And Anu Logo</description>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:creator>Jessica.Angwin@anu.edu.au</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Copyright 2009</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2009-02-11T23:08:57+10:00</dc:date>
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    <item>
      <title>ANU Event Equipment Hire</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/equipment_for_hire/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/equipment_for_hire/#When:05:39:04Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}Available Items
The following are available for loan from Marketing and Communications Division.&amp;nbsp;

ANU free standing banners x 4. These are the slim line, 2m high, 1m wide pull up banners. They are easily transportable.
Large ANU PVC banners x 2
Large ANU exhibition stand that comprises of three 3m sections. Lighting is available. However please note that this structure is best suited for large events. 
ANU lectern
ANU lectern sign

How to Hire
If you wish to use any of this equipment, you&amp;nbsp;need to&amp;nbsp;complete a MAC Equipment Hire Form (DOC, 78.5KB)&amp;nbsp;and return it the contact listed below.
Suggestions
If you regularly require an item not listed above, please advise for consideration in purchasing by MAC.</description>
      <dc:subject>Branding and ANU Logo, Event Management, Public Lectures, VIP Events, Visits and Protocol</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-27T05:39:04+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>ANU Rankings</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/anu_rankings/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/anu_rankings/#When:00:59:23Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}Standard statement
When promoting The Australian National University in marketing or publicity materials, you can use of the two following descriptions including the reference.
1) ANU&amp;nbsp;is ranked number one in Australia, top in&amp;nbsp;the southern hemisphere and 17th in the world by the London Times Higher Education Supplement (2009). The University is also ranked number one in the southern hemisphere by the Shanghai Jiao Tong University Institute of Higher Education (2009).
2) ANU is Australia&#39;s highest ranking university and among the world&#39;s best.*
*Ranked 1st in Australia and 17th in the world by The Times Higher Education Supplement (2009). Ranked 1st in Australia and 59th in the world by the Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Academic Ranking of World Universities (2009).
Figures
The following figures can be used if cited appropriately.

The 2009 edition of the Good Universities Guide gave ANU five stars in the following&amp;nbsp;areas:     

student demand
research grants
research intensivity
the educational experience: generic skills
the educational experience: overall satisfaction
the educational experience: teaching quality
graduate starting salary
proportion of research students
cultural diversity &#45; four stars.


In The Times Higher Education Supplement, ANU ranked 17th in the world and&amp;nbsp;first in Australia&amp;nbsp;in 2009.
In the&amp;nbsp;Academic Ranking of World Universities by Shanghai Jiao Tong University, ANU ranked 59th in the world and first&amp;nbsp;in Australia in 2009.
In Newsweek International&#39;s list of the top 100 global universities, ANU was ranked 38th and 1st in Australia in 2008.
In the Melbourne Institute Index of the International Standing of Australian Universities, ANU was ranked first&amp;nbsp;in 2007 (after weighting by scope).
The University&#39;s research record includes four Nobel Prize recipients, the Japan Prize, four Australia Prizes and the 2000 &#39;Albert Einstein&#39; World Award of Science</description>
      <dc:subject>Advertising, Branding and ANU Logo, Marketing, Strategy and Planning</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-13T00:59:23+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>ANU Website Style</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/website_style/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/website_style/#When:03:40:34Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}22 October 2009 &#45; read this first

This web style is being phased out. 
The new web style is now available under an early adoption program. Please sign up for the early adoption register if you intend to develop a new website.
This web style can still be used, but be aware that there will be a requirement to change to the new style in the near future (deadlines to be announced).
Please join the Web Publishers Group if you wish to be kept up to date with new style developments.

Website Guidelines
The guidelines below should be used in conjunction with:

ANU Visual Identity Guide
Website accessibility
Web publishing roles and responsibilities
Web templates and stylesheets

Approval of New &amp;amp; Redesigned Websites
The Marketing Office, OVC is responsible for the University&#39;s corporate identity and the publishing style of ANU publications and website content.
The Office&#39;s role is to work with webmasters, web content managers, and the Division of Information (DOI) to ensure that content and appearance of websites meets all ANU guidelines.
New and redesigned websites should be checked by the Marketing Office before they are made public to ensure the site complies with visual identity and website guidelines. Please email the URL and your contact details to webstyle@anu.edu.au.
Web Templates &amp;amp; Style
All business and academic units should comply with ANU web style. For details of the style, refer to


Web templates and stylesheets &#45; guidelines on the appearance of webpages

Style Templates and Examples &#45; templates for download and examples of the major styles and college colours

Copyright &amp;amp; Legal Issues
Authors should be aware that all material published on behalf of ANU is subject to Australian law and care must be taken to avoid abuses, known or otherwise.
All material published electronically is subject to the same legal considerations as information published through traditional means. All authors should be particularly aware of copyright restrictions as they apply to reproduction of text, graphics or other intellectual property on the web.
For guidance on a specific issue, contact the Legal Office via email at Legal.Office@anu.edu.au.
Help &amp;amp; Support

Join the Web Publishers Group or browse their website.
Make use of the web&#45;related services provided by the Marketing Office. See the topic Digital and Web for details or contact the Digital and Web Publications unit.
Contact your Local IT Support Staff (LITSS) or the DOI Help Desk for advice on technical issues.
Look for training on the Information Literacy Program (ILP) web site or the Training@ANU website.

&amp;nbsp;</description>
      <dc:subject>Branding and ANU Logo, Digital and Web</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-12T03:40:34+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>ANU Editorial Style</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/editorial_style/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/editorial_style/#When:02:02:33Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}Introduction
This is the Editorial Style Guide for The Australian National University, produced by the Creative Services Unit within the Marketing Office. The guide outlines the University&#39;s editorial style requirements for ANU staff to assist them in preparing University publications in printed or electronic form. The Editorial Style Guide has been created to ensure that all publications produced by the University maintain a consistent ANU identity.
In developing the guide, we have used the following publications as our primary references:

Australian Oxford Dictionary, Oxford University Press 1999
Style Manual for Authors, Editors and Printers, John Wiley &amp;amp; Sons 2002. 

For all questions of editorial style not addressed in this guide, recommendations by the above references should be followed.
Release date: 29.03.06Version number: v1.0.0
A
abbreviations
Telephone/Phone T:Facsimile F:Email E:etc.
AboriginalBegins with a capital A
acronyms Eg RSPAS, ACERH, should be spelled out with the acronym in parentheses in the first instance and all caps thereafter. First reference: &amp;lsquo;He is with the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies (RSPAS)&#39;. Second reference: &amp;lsquo;He is with RSPAS&#39;. Also applies to states eg Australian Capital Territory (ACT), New South Wales (NSW) etc.
adviser As used in &amp;lsquo;Adviser to Staff&#39; &#45; not advisor, but advisory
ageing Spelled with an &amp;lsquo;e&#39;
AIDS Appears in all caps
Alumnus A male graduate
Alumna A female graduate
Alumnae A group of female only graduates
Alumni A group of graduates, male and female
am/pm See time
ANUThe official title is The Australian National University and this should be used in the first instance (followed by the acronym in parentheses); thereafter use ANU. When used as an adjective it should be preceded by &amp;lsquo;the&#39; (eg &amp;lsquo;the ANU logo&#39;) but in all other cases &amp;lsquo;the&#39; is omitted. When using the possessive, do not use ANU&#39;s. Reword the sentence or write University&#39;s.
around&amp;lsquo;About&#39; is preferred to &amp;lsquo;around&#39;
Asia Pacific/Asia&#45;Pacific Asia Pacific (no hyphen) is the preferred form when used as a noun, while Asia&#45;Pacific (with hyphen) is preferred when it is used as an adjective ie Asia&#45;Pacific region; part of Asia Pacific.
attribution Always put the person first and then the action. Eg &amp;lsquo;Professor Bloggs said/explained/commented/screamed&#39;, not &amp;lsquo;said (or says) Professor Bloggs&#39;.
audiovisual No hyphen
awards Do not italicise
B
barbecue Not &amp;lsquo;BBQ&#39;
bullet pointsWhere the list is part of sentence (preceded by a colon), begin each point in lower case with no commas or semi&#45;colons, putting a full&#45;stop at the end of the last bullet point. If the list is not part of a sentence, begin each point in upper case and use full stops at the end of each complete sentence. Only number points when will be referring back to them. Do not punctuate lists on flyers.
C
capitalisation ANU style is for minimal capitalisation; that is, only the first letter of the heading or title is capitalised, along with any proper nouns.
characterise No z (also organise, recognise etc.)
Chubb, Professor Ian Vice&#45;Chancellor (began 2001 for seven&#45;year term, extended to 2012) In formal documents (eg event programs,&amp;nbsp;official correspondence)&amp;nbsp;refer to as Professor Ian Chubb AC, Vice&#45;Chancellor and President
Clark (Manning Clark) No &amp;lsquo;e&#39;, eg Manning Clark Lecture Theatre
Chancelry Note one &amp;lsquo;l&#39;, no &amp;lsquo;e&#39;ry
colour Always with a &amp;lsquo;u&#39;
Coombs Herbert Cole H.C. (Nugget) 1906&#45;1997
Coombs Building Home of RSPAS/RSSS
convener With an &amp;lsquo;e&#39; not an &amp;lsquo;o&#39;
counselled, counselling Two &amp;lsquo;l&#39;s
coursework One word
cooperation No hyphen
coordination Coordinator, coordinating
currency See money
cutting edge Two words, no hyphen
D
dates Thursday 17 March 1917 (no commas). Use 12 May, unless directly quoting someone saying &quot;May 12&quot;.
dashes Use spaced &amp;lsquo;en&#39; dash unless it is between two dates or numbers, in which case the spaces are removed (eg 97&#45;98). Do not use an &amp;lsquo;em&#39; dash.
DEEWRSpell out on first reference &#45; Department of Employment, Education and Workplace Relations. Then use DEEWR on second reference and thereafter.
degreeLower case, no capital &#39;d&#39;
driving licenceNot driver or driver&#39;s. &#39;Licence&#39; not &#39;license&#39;.
E
eastern EuropeSmall &amp;lsquo;e&#39; in &amp;lsquo;eastern&#39;
eg No full points
enquiry, enquiries Not inquiry, unless it is an official investigation into something
email Not E&#45;mail. Abbreviation E:
F
face to faceAs in &amp;lsquo;to come face to face with&#39;. No hyphens.
face&#45;to&#45;face As in &amp;lsquo;a face&#45;to&#45;face meeting&#39;. Hyphenated.
federal Lowercase except Federal Government, Federal Parliament
fieldwork Not hyphenated
first class Not hyphenated, except when used as an adjective.
first&#45;rateAs an adjective, hyphenated
focus Focused, focuses, focusing
full&#45;time Hyphenated; not full time
G
Government Capital G when referring to &amp;lsquo;the Government/Government departments&#39;
Government departments Spell out in full in the first instance then acronym thereafter.
gender Avoid gender&#45;specific references where possible &#45; ie &amp;lsquo;chair&#39;, not &amp;lsquo;chairman/woman/person&#39;
gaol With a &amp;lsquo;g&#39;
H
healthcare One word
high&#45;pitched Hyphenated
high&#45;profile Hyphenated
high&#45;quality Hyphenated
high&#45;tech Hyphenated
historic &amp;lsquo;A historic&#39;, never &amp;lsquo;an&#39;
honorificsAlways use Mr, Mrs, Ms in official documents, not in ANU Reporter or in marketing materials. Always check preferred use of Mrs, Ms or Miss. &amp;lsquo;Dr&#39; not &amp;lsquo;Dr.&#39;.
honour Always with a &amp;lsquo;u&#39; honours degree, no apostrophe, no capitals when referring to &#39;he has an honours degree&#39;. When listing a person&#39;s qualifications, BA(Hons).
http://Only use in URL when address does not commence with www. Do not put a full stop at the end of a URL when it ends a sentence.
I
ie No full points
initials Use full points, no spaces &#45; eg A.D. Hope, H.C. Coombs, etc.
Internet Capital &amp;lsquo;I&#39;
Indigenous/indigenous Always capitalised when it refers to the original inhabitants of Australia (eg &amp;lsquo;Indigenous Australians&#39; and &amp;lsquo;Indigenous communities&#39;). Lower case when used to refer to the original inhabitants of other countries. See page 57 of the The Style Manual for Authors, Editors and Printers for more detailed terminology recommended by the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission.
inquiry Official investigation only (see enquiry)
&#45;ise Always use the Australian form &amp;lsquo;&#45;ise&#39; (eg maximise, capitalise, etc.), never &amp;lsquo;&#45;ize&#39;.
italicisingSee titles
L
lifestyleOne word (no hyphen)
like As in &amp;lsquo;appreciate&#39;. Do not use for comparing things, instead use &amp;lsquo;such as&#39; or &amp;lsquo;including&#39; (if it belongs to a group)
lists See bullet points 
long&#45;standing Hyphenated
M
Manning ClarkNot &amp;lsquo;Clarke&#39;
master&#39;s In the phrase &quot;he has a master&#39;s degree&quot;, with apostrophe, no capital &#39;m&#39;; actual degree is eg &quot;Master of Science&quot;.
mature age No hyphen
Middle East(ern) Never hyphenated
money 
Use the dollar symbol followed by the figure ($1,000). Use country abbreviation followed by currency symbol to denote currencies (A$1,000, US$1,000, NZ$1,000). Note that country abbreviation/symbol to use with Australian dollars is &amp;lsquo;A not &amp;lsquo;AUD.
multidisciplinary One word; also multilingual, multifaceted
Muslim Capitalise
N
National InstitutesSpell out in full in first reference (National Institute for Humanities and Creative Arts), then abbreviate (NIHCA or the Institute)
numbers One to nine should be spelt out, 10 and above should be numerals, commas should be used to mark thousands, millions etc. A billion is 1,000 million (UK style). Abbreviate in headings to $1bn (also $1m). Never start a sentence with a number eg &quot;29 people attended the launch&quot;, instead write &quot;Twenty&#45;nine people attended the launch&quot;.
non As a prefix, use with hyphen.
not&#45;for&#45;profit Hyphenated
O
onlineOne word, not hyphenated
organise No &amp;lsquo;z&#39;, also characterise, recognise etc.
one half&#45;year&amp;nbsp;Do not use 0.5 year when describing half a year or six months. Use one half&#45;year with a hyphen.
P
part&#45;timeNot &#39;part time&#39;
per centTwo words spelt out. Only use symbol in tables. etc.
percentage One word
policyholder One word, similarly policymaker
postgraduate One word, no capital
post&#45;nominals VC should be attributed the following post&#45;noms in formal publications where post&#45;nominals are cited: Ian Chubb AO, MSc, DPhil (Oxon), Hon DSc (Flinders). Check for other academics (esp Chancelry)
postwar one word
Professor spell out in full, never &amp;lsquo;Prof&#39;
program not programme
purpose&#45;builtHyphenated
Q
quote marksDouble quotes are only used for speech, while single quotes for emphasis in text. Headlines &#45; single quotes. Single quote marks are used when quoting something inside a quote (eg &quot;The &amp;lsquo;rain&#39; in Spain falls mainly on the plain,&quot; Mr Blah said.) Where the quote&#45;within&#45;quote ends the quote, put single quotes before full stop and double quotes after (eg &quot;When I asked him about the rain in Spain, Mr Blah said, &amp;lsquo;It falls mainly on the plain&#39;.&quot;) Quote marks always come after the punctuation (eg &quot;The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain,&quot; Mr Blah said) unless it is not a full sentence (eg Mr Blah said the rain in Spain &quot;falls mainly on the plain&quot;.)
R
real&#45;life Hyphenated when used as an adjective
recognise No &amp;lsquo;z&#39; (also characterise, organise, etc.)
S
says Present tense is used in ANU Reporter features not &amp;lsquo;said&#39;. &amp;lsquo;Said&#39; is used in ANU Reporter news only.
ships Names in italics (but not prefix eg HMAS Darwin; Endeavour; Southern Cross; Australia II)
southeast Not &amp;lsquo;south east&#39; or &amp;lsquo;south&#45;east&#39;. Capitalise where part of name eg &amp;lsquo;Southeast Asia&#39;.
specialise No &amp;lsquo;z&#39;
spellingUse &amp;lsquo;re&#39; in &amp;lsquo;centre&#39;, etc. (not &amp;lsquo;er&#39;), &amp;lsquo;s&#39; over &amp;lsquo;z&#39; (organisation), program (not &amp;lsquo;programme&#39;) unless it is the name of a particular institution.
state&#45;of&#45;the&#45;art Hyphenated
superfast One word. As in &amp;lsquo;new generation of superfast computers&#39;.
T
targeting, targetedOne &amp;lsquo;t&#39; (eg not &amp;lsquo;targetted&#39;)
tenses Use past tense in reported (indirect) speech (Professor Bloggs said there was a need for more effort), but present in quotes (&quot;There is a need for more effort,&quot; Professor Bloggs said).
three&#45;dimensional or 3&#45;D Hyphenated
time Preferred style: 10am and 2pm, not 10.00am and 2.00pm, 10.30am not 10:30am, 2&amp;ndash;4pm not 2 &#45; 4 pm etc. Use an en dash to show duration, not &quot;to&quot; (that is, 2&amp;ndash;4pm not 2 to 4pm).
titles Publications, plays, movies, conferences all in italics. Band names in ordinary type, album titles in italics, roman in quotes for individual songs. Do not italicise awards.
trade&#45;off Hyphenated
U
undergraduateOne word, no capital
update One word
University Capital &quot;U&quot; when referring to ANU, small &quot;u&quot; when talking about universities generally.
up&#45;to&#45;date Hyphenated
URLs When the URL begins with &amp;lsquo;www&#39;, do not write &amp;lsquo;http://&#39;. If the URL does not begin with &amp;lsquo;www&#39; then include &amp;lsquo;http://&#39;.
V
Vice&#45;ChancellorHyphenated, see also Chubb
W
war Use First World War, Second World War (not World War I or II)
world&#45;class Hyphenated
worldwideNo space, not hyphenated
World Wide Web All caps. References to the &amp;lsquo;web&#39; use a lowercase &amp;lsquo;w&#39;.
web&#45;basedHyphenated
webpage One word
websiteOne word, no capital (also webpage. etc.)
well&#45;known Hyphenated
www Use in texts without &amp;lsquo;http://&#39; when url commences with &amp;lsquo;www&#39; (see also http://)
Y
Y&#45;chromosome Capital &amp;lsquo;Y&#39;, small &amp;lsquo;c&#39;, hyphen.
years old Eight years old, but&amp;nbsp;an eight&amp;nbsp;year&#45;old child</description>
      <dc:subject>Branding and ANU Logo, Print Publishing</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-12T02:02:33+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Stationery</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/stationery/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/stationery/#When:05:04:04Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}Requirements
Corporate stationery reflects the visual identity of the University. In many cases this will be people&amp;rsquo;s first impression of the University. It is therefore important to present a consistent, professional face.
Secondary logos are not permitted on ANU publications or stationery without the express approval of the Director, Marketing Office, OVC. Approval will depend on a strong business case being presented. If you are considering using a secondary logo on any ANU publication or stationery item, please contact publications@anu.edu.au.
To be consistent in presentation, the following styles should be followed.
Paper Stock
Chancelry stationery is printed on OCM white laid 90gsm.
General stationery is printed on White bond 90gsm.
Business cards are printed on Ivory board 300gsm.
Shells
A &amp;rsquo;shell&amp;rsquo; is a preprinted paper that is overprinted as required. The University Printing Service maintains a supply of stationery shells, such as letterhead, which may be overprinted with your departmental and/or personal details.
Templates
For general internal applications, Microsoft word templates are available for letterhead, facsimile and memos. These are available from publications@anu.edu.au
Letterhead
All letterhead is produced through the University Printing Service. No letterhead should be commissioned through any other provider.
Letterhead templates are issued with greyscale logos only as official letters should always be sent on preprinted letterhead shells.
Personalised A4 letterhead is available for use by:

Senior Officers
College conveners
Heads of Research School/Centre
Deans of Faculty
Heads of Central Areas Divisions
Heads of Division
Heads of Department

People who work within a College, including its constituent faculty/schools/centres, will have the College name on their letterhead as indicated.
Corporate Letterhead Example

Personalised Letterhead for Administrative Areas Example

Personalised Letterhead for Colleges Example

&amp;nbsp;
With Compliments Slips
Personalised and general With Complements slips are available. Only official preprinted With Compliments slips should be used.
There is no internal template available.
Where appropriate, With Compliments slips will bear the College name.
With Compliments slips are available from the University Printing Service.

Business Cards
All business cards are produced through the University Printing Service. No cards should be commissioned through any other provider.
All business cards will be landscape unless the email address or the qualifi cations/title/area/College information does not fi t, in which case it will be portrait.
No secondary logos or acronyms will appear on business cards.
The left side of the card will contain name, qualifications, position, College name (if applicable) and area details.
Individual web address can be included, but they should be ANU addresses. If space permits, it will appear on the right below address and contact details, otherwise it will appear left aligned below name, qualifications and position details.

Fax &amp;amp; Memo Sheets
The fax and memo sheets have identical logo and address relationships to the letterhead, ensuring continuity among all typed communications.
Type specifications, positioning and alignment are the same for the Corporate A4 letterhead with new elements as shown.
Electronic templates of the fax and memo sheets (using Tahoma font) are available for either PC or Mac from: publications@anu.edu.au</description>
      <dc:subject>Branding and ANU Logo, Print Publishing</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-07T05:04:04+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Marketing Materials</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/marketing_material/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/marketing_material/#When:03:59:29Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}General Guidelines

Publications should follow visual identity standards unless otherwise approved. 
Default position of the logo is top right. Logos used on small and odd sized publications may deviate from this placement with the approval of the Publications Unit. The logo exclusion zone must be respected in all uses. 
For all areas, single &amp;lsquo;hero&amp;rsquo; cover images should reflect the disciplines involved, be clear and unambiguous. Montages and multiple images should be avoided. 
College name should appear on front cover (for Faculty/School/Centre/Department publications it should appear at the bottom, left aligned with heading, 18pt Rotis Semi Sans Bold for A4/14pt Rotis Semi Sans Bold for DL/etc). 

Publications&amp;nbsp;Services &amp;amp; Approvals
Standard and basic brochures can usually be designed free of charge by the Creative Services Unit, Marketing Office. Areas will pay for printing only.
To ensure we present a consistent image of ANU, any promotional materials &amp;mdash; newsletters, posters, websites, brochures, flyers etc. &amp;mdash; that bear the ANU logo must be approved by the Director Marketing Office prior to distribution, via publications@anu.edu.au. The&amp;nbsp;Creative Services team is available to advise and support you.
Your first point of contact for all publications is the Creative Services Manager on 6125 4170 or email: publications@anu.edu.au
Tier Levels
All ANU marketing materials fall in one of the following tiers. They must display the ANU logo and, where applicable, the College and Faculty/School/Centre/Department name. No more than three levels of organisational hierarchy should be displayed on the front cover (that is, University logo/College name/Faculty, School, Centre or Department name).
Tier 1 &#45; Corporate/University&#45;Level 
All publications and publicity material in Tier 1 use the University corporate publications blue colour as the primary colour (PMS 654). This tier includes Centres not within the College structure, such as the National Centre for Indigenous Studies.
ANU Halls and Residential Colleges should also use the University corporate publications blue as the base colour.
Inside University publications, College colours can be used on College&#45;related content
Examples of Corporate/University&#45;level marketing materials include:

University&#45;level corporate publications including Research Review, Connections, Pocket Profile, Annual Report, etc. 
University&#45;level recruitment publications &amp;ndash; eg undergraduate and postgraduate coursework/research guides 
University&#45;level publicity information &amp;ndash; eg Public Lecture flyers, invitations 
Upper&#45;level advertising templates 
ANU home page and corporate pages of web site 
Campus life publications.

Tier 2 &#45; College level
Colleges should use their College colour to identify their College marketing and publicity materials. They should also have &amp;lsquo;hero images&amp;rsquo; which can be used to represent their College when required.
Examples of College&#45;level marketing materials include:

College&#45;level undergraduate and postgraduate student recruitment publications
College profile brochures
College newsletters
College Annual Reports
College journals
College banners
College advertising templates
College poster shells
College web page.

Tier 2 Sublevel &#45; Faculty, School, Centre or Department
Colleges have the flexibility to produce publications at the Faculty, School, Centre or Department Level within a College. The predominant colour used in these publications should be the College colour. Neutral colours, shades and tints of the College colour can be used for emphasis/variety, but no other colours should be used.
A School, Centre or Department can choose to use corporate publications blue for all of their marketing materials upon agreement with their College. Corporate publications blue must then be used for all materials produced by that School, Centre or Department.
The College name should appear on front cover (bottom, left aligned with heading, 18pt Rotis Semi Sans Bold for A4/14pt Rotis Semi Sans Bold for DL/etc).
Examples of Faculty, School, Centre or Department marketing materials include:

Faculty, School, Centre or Department undergraduate or postgraduate program information and recruitment material 
Faculty, School, Centre or Department scholarship or summer internship information 
Faculty, School, Centre or Department seminar/lecture information 
Faculty, School, Centre or Department newsletters 
Faculty, School or Centre new program information 
Faculty, School or Centre poster shells 
Faculty, School or Centre invitations 
Faculty, School, Centre or Department websites.

Tier 3 &#45; Administrative areas
All publications and publicity material in this tier use the University corporate publications blue colour as the primary colour (PMS 654).
These materials are primarily for an internal audience, both staff and students.
Publications might include brochures and flyers about divisional services for staff and students &amp;ndash; eg Security, Human Resources, Marketing and Communications, etc.</description>
      <dc:subject>Advertising, Branding and ANU Logo, Marketing, Strategy and Planning, Print Publishing</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-07T03:59:29+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Standard &amp;amp; Basic Banners</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/banners/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/banners/#When:03:51:07Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}Production
Standard and basic banners can be produced with assistance from&amp;nbsp;Creative Services, Marketing Office at no cost for design. If areas decide to go to the expense of using an external designer, all banner designs must be approved prior to production, by emailing: publications@anu.edu.au
Requirements
All banners must include the ANU logo. The ANU logo should be at least half the width of the banner and should respect its &amp;lsquo;exclusion zone&amp;rsquo;.
Fonts and type sizes
Use the ANU corporate font, Adobe Rotis Semi&#45;Sans.
Main uppercase heading sizes should be around 60 points at a 1:4 size ratio.
Sub&#45;text information should be in point form, with type sizes of less than 40 points at a 1:4 size ratio.
Keyline borders should be around 10 points at a 1:4 size ratio.
For Tier 2 (College) banners, the name of the College should appear at the top of the banner. For Tier 2 Sublevel (Faculty, School, Centre or Department) banners, the name of the College should appear at the bottom of the banner, left&#45;aligned with the heading.
Example Banners</description>
      <dc:subject>Branding and ANU Logo, Print Publishing</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-07T03:51:07+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Developing Merchandise</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/merchandise/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/merchandise/#When:03:45:09Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}Existing Merchandise
ANU merchandise that is currently available can be viewed at http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/merchandise/
Approvals
All designs for merchandise need to be approved by Creative Services in the Marketing Office. Before any production sample is produced, designs must be approved.
Design concepts should be sent to: publications@anu.edu.au
Guidelines
While allowing a certain degree of creative freedom regarding the type and style of merchandise items and the promotional messages on them, all merchandise must promote the University consistently and with integrity &amp;mdash; merchandise includes T&#45;shirts, mugs, pens, caps, rulers, mouse pads, drink bottles and bags.
As a guide, all merchandise should:

incorporate the ANU logo prominantly and so that the required exclusion zone around it is respected 
use the full logo at a size no smaller than 30mm wide
avoid using acronyms (use full text names of areas/divisions)
use the corporate font text, such as for titles and URLs. 

Logo Variations
Logos available for use on merchandise include the full colour logo (positive and reversed), solid logo (black or white), outline logo (black or white) and a merchandising representation for small merchandise or other merchandise where it is not practical to use the full logo.
For advice on logos and approvals, contact: publications@anu.edu.au</description>
      <dc:subject>Branding and ANU Logo</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-07T03:45:09+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>ANU Colours</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/colours/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/colours/#When:02:50:32Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}Corporate Colours
Colour used in a consistent and cohesive manner is a powerful visual aid in a corporate identity. In general, a predominant use of blue is the identifying colour of the University. While the gold may be used, it is a secondary colour to be used in a supporting role.
The corporate colours for the University are contained in the logo. They are PMS 871 Metallic Gold (if metallic ink is used), PMS 4505 Gold (non&#45;metallic ink), PMS 301 Blue, and Black.
In publications, a dark blue (PMS 654) is used rather than PMS 301 Blue (outside of the logo).

 

&amp;nbsp;
Example
PMS
CMYK
RGB
HEX

 


ANU Blue
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 301
10045018
096150
3E5E8E


ANU Metallic Gold
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 871
NA
NA
NA


ANU Gold
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 4505
0157836
17415362
9D9271


Black
&amp;nbsp;
Process Black
000100
000
000000


ANU Publication Blue
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 654
10067038
2156114
153872



Corporate Texture
Additionally the ANU corporate texture (blue/black image) may be used. Texture images can be obtained from publications@anu.edu.au

College Colours
Each College has its own colour which is to be used as a unique identifier for the College. The predominant colour on all College publications and those of its constituents should be the appropriate College colour.
Any school, centre or department may choose to use the corporate colours instead of the College colours as its identifying colours That decision should be made in concert with the College administration. If the decision is made, the corporate colours must be used on all materials (including the web).
Textures similar to the ANU Corporate Texture are available in College colours from the Publications unit.

 

&amp;nbsp;
Example
PMS
CMYK
RGB
HEX

 


ANU College of Arts &amp;amp; Social Sciences(Blue)
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 286
100 66 0 2&amp;nbsp;
34 82 158
22529E


ANU College of Asia &amp;amp; the Pacific(Orange)
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 158
0 61 97 0&amp;nbsp;
212 118 18
D47612&amp;nbsp;


ANU College of Business &amp;amp; Economics(Gold)
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 130&amp;nbsp;
0 30 100 0
232 181 0
E8B500


ANU College of Engineering &amp;amp; Computer Science(Red)
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 187&amp;nbsp;
0 91 72 23
172 26 47&amp;nbsp;
AF1E2D


ANU College of Law(Purple)
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 260
52 100 0 26&amp;nbsp;
100 0 106&amp;nbsp;
64006A


ANU College of Medicine, Biology &amp;amp; Environment(Turquoise)
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 3145&amp;nbsp;
100 0 19 23
0 141 168
008DA8


ANU College of Physical Sciences(Dark Green)
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 560&amp;nbsp;
80 0 63 75&amp;nbsp;
0 72 51&amp;nbsp;
004833&amp;nbsp;


ANU Colleges of Science*(Green)
&amp;nbsp;
PMS 355
94 0 100 0&amp;nbsp;
19 143 52
138F34



*Only to be used when covering both ANU College of Medicine, Biology &amp;amp; Environment and ANU College of Physical Sciences</description>
      <dc:subject>Branding and ANU Logo, Print Publishing</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-07T02:50:32+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Typography for ANU Print Publications</title>

      
            <link>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/typography/</link>
      <guid>http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/content/support_advice/page/typography/#When:02:10:11Z</guid>
      
      
      <description>{satopic_overview}Overview
Adobe Rotis Semi Sans and Tahoma are the standard ANU fonts for printed publications. For screen based design, refer to the website style guidelines.
Adobe Rotis Semi Sans
Adobe Rotis Semi Sans is the primary font for the University. Only the Adobe version of Rotis Semi Sans should be used. Other versions of Rotis (such as Agfa Rotis) are not acceptable.
Used by: Publications, internal designers within the Colleges and other areas of the University, external suppliers (graphic designers, printers, advertising agencies, other suppliers)
Used for: All printed material and advertising representing the University or its constituent areas
Not used for: Not mandatory for general applications such as letters, faxes, bricks, long texts etc. as produced by ANU staff and administration for internal communications
Purchasing for ANU
The font is available for ANU employee use only at a per machine cost of A$30.
Email publications@anu.edu.au and provide name, area name, contact telephone extension, contact email, operating system (PC/Mac), number of licences required, ANU internal charge code and computer number for each computer on which Rotis is to be installed.
Division of Information will facilitate installation of the font.
Purchasing for an external supplier
For Suppliers, the Adobe Rotis Semi Sans font family can be purchased online from Adobe for approximately US$136. This gives you a standard end user license that allows for installation of Rotis on up to five machines.
Sample of Adobe Rotis Semi Sans font

Tahoma
Tahoma is a secondary font for internal use only. Tahoma is a PC and Macintosh compatible royalty&#45;free system font which most users will have on their computers. It can be used as an alternative to Rotis Semi Sans when printed materials are to be used for internal distribution only.
Used by: All ANU staff
Used for: Any short&#45;form communications (such as flyers and posters) that are not being distributed externally, where Rotis Semi Sans is not available on the computer being used to create the material.
Not used for: Personal correspondence or long&#45;form texts such as bricks
Sample of Tahoma font

Headlines, subheaders &amp;amp; body copy
Headlines or titles should be ALL CAPS with second line offset three spaces (see below). Third line should return to left align.
Supertext words at the beginning of a line to 75 per cent of the main type size (that is, if your headline is 24pt the supertexted word should be 18pt). Only small words (not including &amp;lsquo;&amp;amp;&amp;rsquo;) at the beginning of the line should be in supertext. The top of supertext word should align with top of regular text.
Ampersands (&amp;amp;) should be used instead of &amp;lsquo;and&amp;rsquo; in titles and headlines. &amp;lsquo;The&amp;rsquo; never precedes the College name in headlines or subheads &amp;ndash; it does in body copy.
Subheaders should be in ALL CAPS.
Body copy should be justified, and type should not drop below 6pt for any application. The standard size for brochure/copy type is 9.5pt on 13.5pt leading.

&amp;nbsp;</description>
      <dc:subject>Branding and ANU Logo, Print Publishing</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-08-07T02:10:11+10:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    
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