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If your company is expanding into new markets, it’s mission-critical to have your website available for potential new customers’ preferred languages. Traditional website translation will undoubtedly generate interest among these customers—but to create genuine connections that lead to conversions, you’ll need both translation and localization, too.
The terms “translation” and “localization” are often used interchangeably. Both ideas function to connect and communicate your website content, and ultimately, your product, business, or services to potential clients. Think of website localization as the umbrella term under which translation is part of a greater whole. While accurate translation is crucial, there’s the bigger picture. Without knowing how to “speak” your audience’s language, both literally and figuratively, how can you successfully reach them?
While translation and localization offer similar functionalities, there are essential differences between them. Understanding what distinguishes these terms, processes, and services will allow you to extend the reach of your website more efficiently and profitably. The two concepts need to be defined to understand how website translation and localization services differ.
The concept of website translation is very straightforward. Website translation is the process of taking your website content in its original language and adapting it, often word-for-word, into other languages to make it accessible and usable to global customers. For a website, this means that a translation project will only change the existing content on your site for accurate sentences in another language. Translated content mirrors the style and tone of source content but doesn’t consider the context.
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Website localization goes beyond a word-for-word translation experience. It involves refining website content through culture, language, and flow to provide users with the most valuable and relevant experience. Localization considers language dialects used in a target region or country and adapts all website content elements for local or regional consumption. The localization method modifies the language and website elements to appeal to the linguistic and cultural preferences of the target customers.
There are several elements of website localization that are important to consider when deciding how to develop a multilingual website:
So, while translation is one aspect of localization, localization can also be seen as a fundamental aspect of translation. Therefore, the two concepts are important for multilingual website development, both as standalone concepts or working together. Similarly, transcreation combines the two concepts to function as a strategy that is slightly more involved.
Transcreation is a type of creative translation that involves adapting a message from one language to another while maintaining its tone, style, and context, and ensuring that the meaning of the original message is not lost in translation. The goal of transcreation is to recreate the message in the target language in a way that resonates with the target audience and culture and is relevant and effective in the target market. It is commonly used in advertising, marketing, and branding to adapt campaigns and slogans to different cultures and languages. Unlike traditional translation, transcreation often involves more freedom in the creative process and may involve cultural research and adaptation of the original message to ensure that it is culturally appropriate and relevant.
Transcreation is particularly important in advertising, marketing, and branding, where a catchy slogan or campaign can make or break a product’s success in a particular market. In these fields, a poorly translated message can not only be ineffective but can also damage a company’s brand reputation. Transcreation, on the other hand, can help to create a campaign that resonates with the target audience, strengthens the brand’s image, and increases sales.
Anyone who’s traveled overseas knows the value of communicating in the “greatest hits” phrases of the local language such as “please,” “thank you,” “how much,” and similar common phrases. But if you weren’t fluent in the language, you probably became frustrated, fast, by your inability to communicate when it mattered most.
Your customers face a similar challenge when interacting with your business online. They need a website that “speaks their language” so they can easily grasp what you’re conveying. There’s no room for frustration or confusion. If they experience friction, they’ll often leave your site before converting. Websites presented in local languages yield better market responses than those that aren’t. According to a recent Common Sense Advisory review study, nearly 73% of customers prefer to purchase a product or service from a site that provides information in their own language, and 56% of consumers said the ability to obtain information in their own language is more important than price.
So, why should you localize your website? In a nutshell, while translation is vital, it will only get you so far.
Your global customers can not experience friction when they visit your website. If they do, they’ll abandon it.
Though it’s possible to use machine translation software like Google Translate to convert your web content into other languages, it is widely considered a best practice to employ human translators whenever possible. People are still more effective at crafting and editing translations for accuracy and nuance than computer assisted translation systems.
Machine translation software like Google Translate has its advantages – it’s easy to utilize and maintain and can translate less critical website content at a less expensive cost. Keep in mind that machine translation software does not have interpretative or cultural knowledge of language. It would be able to translate content word for word but will not be able to take context into account. An additional disadvantage of Google Translate is that while machine translation focuses on swapping out words and language on a website, it doesn’t create searchable, indexable versions of those translated pages, which is important from an SEO standpoint.
Website localization goes beyond the word-for-word linguistic conversion of conventional translation and instead uses words and phrases that resonate within specific markets.
Region-neutral translations are very effective, but localization is more persuasive to many multilingual customers.
For instance, consider the differences between the words “trousers” and “slacks.” The terms are identical in meaning, but one resonates far better in the UK than in the United States.
These slight differences, just like those found between British English and American English, can be easily lost in translation. Word-for-word translation cannot account for nuances in cultural differences and local preferences. When you communicate to specific regional markets with phrasing that’s uniquely relevant to them, you increase the likelihood of your brand being fully understood and accepted.
But website localization can go beyond word choice. Savvy marketers often customize their multilingual websites to highlight local holidays, celebrations, or customs. This illustrates fluency in a local market’s culture, quickly generating customer trust.
Other examples of localization include creating special promotions for specific markets or crafting unique, trust-building messaging to establish credibility in brand-new markets.
In the early days of serving a multilingual market, it was not uncommon for a company to be greeted with local skepticism. Local customers often wonder how committed a company is to the market and its needs. When brands use localized content, they don’t appear opportunistic – they appear authentic.
If you translate your content without considering the nuances of your chosen language, your website, app, or marketing content may present differently. Website localization includes things like layout adjustment, reading technique, and word count. For instance, certain romance languages like French and Spanish need about 30% more words than English to get the same message across. Conversely, Finnish actually requires 30–40% fewer words. Website translation only deals with the language, but localization makes sure copy looks right.
At this point you’re probably asking yourself: should I invest in translation or localization for my website? Both options differ on a strategic level, so the answer may not be black and white. Simple translation may be appropriate for some content types in specific markets. Localization is most often required for adapting highly emotive creative marketing content so it clearly resonates across regions.
Websites usually contain several content types, from marketing copy to legal and technical information and user-generated forum content. For reasons of efficiency and cost, consider which types of content require localization and where you can simply ask for translation. What you may find is that a blend of translation and localization accentuates what you want to communicate to your target audience, and adds the flavor needed to reach them on a more personal level.
Translation alone can be helpful to address many people who speak the same language, even though they may originally come from different countries. Translating broadly enables readers to grasp messaging, regardless of their origin. This phenomenon frequently happens in the United States with people who speak the same language, such as Spanish. While the U.S. has Spanish speakers from many different parts of the world, they embrace varying sets of cultural nuances, phrases, and dialects. In this case, a well-crafted, broader translation would purposefully avoid using regional phrases or words from any specific country and acknowledge the broader Spanish market in the localized, U.S. market.
Translation alone is a less expensive option. Some web pages or translation jobs are not so important that they require human translation. MotionPoint may use machine translation for one page and human translation for other, more important pages. Localization creates more cohesion, but it is more costly. Localization also requires content verbiage translation upkeep and considers web design as well. That can include changing graphics or developing entirely new web pages, depending on the target language and cultural differences from the original website.
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Localization would benefit you most if:
MotionPoint looks at business needs and can tailor website translations or localizations (or, more often, the blending of both). Here are several case studies that highlight how the needs of a company can determine how a single website can develop into robust, multilingual websites to address customers and help businesses grow.
Master Lock, a leading U.S. manufacturer of retail and commercial security and safety products, needed both website translation and localization when they began expanding globally. Localized websites offer a true strategic value for Master Lock. Distributors and sales teams utilize the Master Lock website to gather product information for regional customers, and customers can also access Master Lock’s comprehensive online product and service information. Additionally, Master Lock’s websites change regularly, based on frequent updates when a new product or segment is rolled out, so accurate translations are critical for the business. To date, Master Lock has translated and localized websites that are supported in Chinese Simplified, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, and Spanish.
Rio Bank is a community bank with branches throughout the heart of Southern Texas, many of them near the Mexican border. Business was growing, but Rio Bank found they weren’t getting adequate customer feedback important for marketing and customer service. When a customer survey was developed in Spanish and feedback increased sharply, Rio Bank quickly realized the need for better communication with their Spanish-speaking customers. So Rio Bank asked MotionPoint to translate their website and create an immersive, dual-language experience for all clients. Translating their website yielded increased customer satisfaction instantly, where more than 90% of their customers speak Spanish.
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If you’re considering ways to translate and/or localize your company website for varied markets, look for solutions that deliver accurate and authentic translations, as well as engagement-boosting localizations. Global success hinges on how you communicate in your customers’ local languages authentically. If you ignore that difference, you’ll miss out on effective ways to optimize your web content for multilingual customers.
MotionPoint understands that publishing market-relevant localization across multilingual websites is more challenging than it sounds. It requires powerful technology to customize website code to present the appropriate localized content to the right customers. It demands translation-management technologies that easily publish, track, and update customized content. And it requires world-class translators who are fluent in languages, cultures, and customs. MotionPoint can work with your business to find the solutions you need for anywhere you want your business to be in the world.