The Swiss Air global gateway: When one flag isn’t enough
When it comes to web globalization and, in particular, global navigation, the general rule about flags is to avoid using them.
By avoiding them, you avoid stepping into any number of politically sensitive issues.
Nevertheless, companies love to use flags on their web sites.
And sometimes the use of flags can result in some rather curious implementations.
Case in point: I recently came across the global gateway for Swiss Air and saw something that can best be conveyed via video:
Did you see the “flashing” flag?
I’d be curious to know if residents of the UK and Ireland would be bothered by this hybrid flag. Perhaps it’s not a big deal, but the flashing alone made this flag stand apart from all others. Frankly, it looks silly.
The flashing flag is also included in the pull-down menu, as demonstrated below:
Had Swiss Air simply avoided flags in the first place, it would have avoided this issue altogether.
Flags can be troublesome. When it doubt, leave them out.
To learn more, check out my new book The Art of the Global Gateway.
2 Responses to The Swiss Air global gateway: When one flag isn’t enough
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Recent Posts
- Taking Mobile Global: Tips for Aligning Mobile and Global Web Strategies
- Philips improves its global gateway
- Web Professionals interview on web globalization
- Who’s going to register .brand? Google, for starters.
- Windows 8 primed to win tablet war — at least in languages
- Q&A with Jukka Korpela, author of Going Global with JavaScript and Globalize.js
- Canadians love their country code
- You Say Falkland Islands. I Say Islas Malvinas.
- Hotels.com: The best global travel website
- France to offer support for actual French domain names
Blog Categories
- Apple (50)
- Arabic (23)
- Brazil (17)
- Business globalization (315)
- Byte Level Books (6)
- China (123)
- Completely unrelated (10)
- Country Codes (ccTLD) (75)
- Crowdsourcing (12)
- Culture (78)
- Domain names (63)
- Events (22)
- Facebook (20)
- Global By Design (26)
- Global navigation (39)
- Google (91)
- Guest Articles (13)
- India (25)
- JavaScript (2)
- Languages (54)
- Machine Translation (44)
- Maps (5)
- Microsoft (14)
- Mobile (5)
- Multilingual search (3)
- Q&A (2)
- Reports (4)
- Retail globalization (2)
- Russia (33)
- Software Localization (57)
- Translation (138)
- Twitter (9)
- Unicode (20)
- US Hispanic Market (39)
- Vendors (118)
- Video Game Globalization (5)
- Web fonts (1)
- Web Globalization (833)
- Wikipedia (9)






[...] The Swiss Air tellurian gateway: When a single flag isn't sufficient | Global … [...]
It just shows the hoops you force yourself to jump through once you’ve decided you want to use flags as symbols for languages.
And yes, it is weird (speaking as non-Irish person living in Ireland) but not as weird as this: http://tinyurl.com/britoirish