Legend has it that while all dragons have a choice as to whether they want to be good or evil, there are some general predispositions based on type. Modern fantasy has grouped dragons into two main categories - the good, kindly and courageous metallic dragons and their evil counterparts, the chromatic dragons.
Hearts Of Gold - Metallic Dragons
There are 5 different kinds of metallic dragons: gold, silver, bronze, brass and copper, each of which is distinctly different in physical appearance as well as in nature.
- Gold Dragons: With large twin horns that are metallic and smooth gold dragons are resolute in their allegiance to quash evil and often embark on self-appointed missions to promote good.
- Silver Dragons: Extremely sensitive in nature, silver dragons are committed to protecting the innocent and helping the meek. They have strong chins, pointed tongues and beaklike noses.
- Bronze Dragons: With an innate sense of justice, bronze dragons are intolerant of any anarchy or cruelty and wage a constant battle against malicious sea creatures. They have smooth, flat scales; webbed feed and a beaklike snout.
- Brass Dragons: The most extroverted of all dragons, brass dragons are noted for their penchant for conversation and sunlight. The adult brass dragon has brass-like scales that have a warm, burnished appearance.
- Copper Dragons: Incorrigible pranksters, copper dragons love to ask riddles and tell jokes. Their enormous shoulders and thighs are good for jumping and climbing.
The Color of Evil - Chromatic Dragons
The five different kinds of chromatic dragons include black, white, red, blue and green.
- Black Dragons: Evil tempered, abusive and malevolent, with hearts as black as their slimy black scales, black dragons are obsessed with death. They have a grim, skeletal frame, two great horns that curve forward and down and eyes that lie deep in the socket. They breathe a venomous, sizzling acid and feel most powerful and confident in the darkest hour of the night.
- White Dragons: Small and intelligent, white dragons have sharp, intelligent eyes, wide feet with sharp claws and scales that resemble fur. They have an aura of icy coldness around them and even breathe a chilling frost. White dragons have a strong proclivity for chilled food and will pack their victims away in the snow until they are properly frozen.
- Red Dragons: Insatiably avaricious and fiercely territorial, red dragons are obsessed with increasing their hoards of treasure. They have extended wings, two long horns and a long, red forked tongue. Smelling of sulfur and smoke, red dragons breathe a deadly fire and love to dine on blood. Tiny flames often dance in their nostrils when they are angry and their eyes gleam with unrepressed greed upon spotting any treasure.
- Blue Dragons: Large and vibrant, blue dragons have frilly ears, glossy eyes and a single horn upon their head. They are brooding, vain and have an air of regality around them as they sit and reflect. They are good at tracking and prefer to ambush caravans and lone travelers as they cross the land.
- Green Dragons: Belligerent and cruel, green dragons are champions of intrigue and politics. They are not overtly aggressive; preferring instead to devise elaborate schemes to acquire wealth and power with minimal fuss and effort. Acutely envious and obsessed with life, green dragons aspire to live eternally. They have an elongated neck and multiple hornlets on their head and breathe a toxic gas.
Whether large or little, sinner or saint; there's nothing drab or dreary about dragons. Fiery and feisty, dragons are brimming with charisma and intrigue.
You Never Really Know
This can be a very important distinction, and you might even be able to go for quite awhile without knowing the answer and it won't harm you, but eventually you'll have to wise up.
The way this begins is that a company decides on what their marketing message is going to be. Let's say they're planning so poster printing and they need to have a strong theme for those posters. Well, rather than actually research their customers to find out what the actual customers want, they just decide on a specific message that they want to push.
All of these posters are made pushing something like, let's say, low prices. This is the central part of the advertisement the idea of lower prices. Now, along with this the poster also shows a variety of different products on it too. This isn't the most important part of the poster, but it is there.
When these posters are put up people gravitate more to the list of products than the do the low prices that the poster is promoting. The variety is really what is making them come in and buy stuff, and the company might end up thinking that their marketing push was entirely successful because they are seeing sales increase.
It all sounds well and good, but this isn't going to last forever. Eventually that company will come up with a different poster printing push, and with this one they'll maintain the low price angle, but lose the variety part of it without thinking. After all, they didn't know this was working, so why not chop it off in favor of something else?
Suddenly those sales start to dry up, and the company is left scratching their heads at what they did wrong.
All of this is very possible and happens quite often. You might unknowingly maintain decent sales with a marketing push that doesn't really work with your customers simply because some part of it is, but even then, you won't be getting the sales you could've had you actually looked at what your customers were after.
The easy way to avoid this completely is to take the time to really look at what your customers are after. Do the research into your market to find out what it is that makes them want to give a company business. Learn how to get them excited about your store.
Once you know the real answers you can apply that information to future marketing campaigns without being afraid that they won't work. Pushing your own message is never going to be quite as effective as finding out what your customers really want.
Both John Hill & Kaitlyn Miller are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
John Hill has sinced written about articles on various topics from Travel and Leisure, Property Guide and Real Estate. Hedgepig.co.uk offers a range of including. John Hill's top article generates over 450000 views. to your Favourites.
Kaitlyn Miller has sinced written about articles on various topics from Credit Cards, Advertising Guide and Brochures. For more information, you can visit this page on . Kaitlyn Miller's top article generates over 22200 views. to your Favourites.
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