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WRITING RULES (SPANISH, ES)

Get ready to write with these basic rules for grammar, semantics, trademarks, SEO and formatting

In order to consistently communicate on Henkel Adhesive Technologies, we rely on some basic rules for writing. Consistently creating engaging content is only possible when we follow a common best practice for how to do things with intellectual property, words, digits, punctuation, SEO, and other areas.

Trademark notice symbols (® and ™)

Intro: 

Different countries have different rules regarding trademark symbols: in some countries, it is illegal (and in a few countries, criminal) to use the ® symbol if the mark is not registered in that country; in others, we cannot use the TM symbol unless we have a pending application in that country. In the US, notice of trademark rights is required in order to obtain damages in an infringement suit. But in other countries (such as Germany), there is no legal benefit. Other countries fall somewhere in between.

® symbol

A. For products and materials distributed only in the US, the ® symbol should be used with ALL marks that are registered (not just pending) in the US. If you are unsure if a particular mark is currently registered, please contact the TM Department.

B. For non-US and global products and materials:

  • We know that LOCTITE® AQUENCE®, BONDERITE®, TECHNOMELT® and TEROSON® are registered in the countries in which we do business. Therefore, we always use the ® symbol with these marks. 
  • This refers to PRITT® and PATTEX® for non-US purposes as well. For US use please contact the TM Department.
  • For all other trademarks, we say: «Todas las marcas utilizadas anteriormente son marcas comerciales y/o marcas comerciales registradas de Henkel y sus filiales en EE. UU., Alemania y demás países».

™ symbol

  • As a general rule, we do NOT use the ™ symbol. 
  • The sole exception is in the US only, where we traditionally add the ™ symbol next to the LOCTITE product numbers (for example, LOCTITE® 690™). Note, however, that certain product numbers (namely, 242 and 404) are ALSO registered trademarks, so should get the ® instead of the ™. 

How to use

1. ® symbol should be used in:

  • headlines, titles, and other prominent uses, and
  • the first time the trademark is used in normal text

2. All trademarks should be shown in a way that distinguishes them from the surrounding text – usually in ALL CAPS, but italics or a different font or color would also be okay.

Do:
Do:

Fijador de roscas LOCTITE

Fijador de roscas Loctite

3. Use descriptors. Brand names should always be used as adjectives, not nouns. To avoid the mark losing its distinctiveness, always use a descriptor (e.g., adhesivos LOCTITE). No plurals – Instead, use the brand with a plural descriptor afterward, and do not make the trademark itself plural.

Do:
Do:
Don't:

Materiales de interfaz térmica GAP PAD®

Almohadillas de marca GAP PAD®

GAP PADs®

4. Trademarks should refer to the product, not the business. 

Don't: “LOCTITE’s equipment . . .” or “LOCTITE’s portfolio of glue products.”
Do: “LOCTITE-brand equipment” or “Henkel’s LOCTITE portfolio of glue products.”

3rd party brands

Always check with the TM Department before using another company’s trademarks - particularly those of our customers and competitors. You need to be sure we are actually referring to a 3rd party’s product rather than our own, and that the use will not open us up to liability. Also, there may be specific contractual requirements we have to meet with respect to disclosure or TM usage.

«Henkel” vs «Henkel Adhesive Technologies” vs «HAT” vs «us/we”

Use “Henkel” only to explicitly refer to the Henkel company with all its businesses (i.e., not only the adhesives’ business).

Do: «Henkel se fundó en 1876»
Don't: «Henkel Adhesive Technologies se fundó en 1876»
Do: «Henkel Adhesive Technologies proporciona la fiabilidad y la procesabilidad necesarias para aplicaciones complejas, hace posible un diseño innovador e impulsa dispositivos móviles inteligentes, con capacidad de respuesta y numerosas funciones»
Don't: «Henkel proporciona la fiabilidad y la procesabilidad necesarias para aplicaciones complejas, hace posible un diseño innovador e impulsa dispositivos móviles inteligentes, con capacidad de respuesta y numerosas funciones»

Use «Henkel» only to explicitly refer to the Henkel company with all its businesses (i.e., not only the adhesives’ business).

Do: «Henkel Adhesive Technologies es […]»
Don't: «Henkel Adhesive Technologies son […]»

Don’t use the abbreviation «HAT»: only use «Henkel Adhesive Technologies»

Do: «Henkel Adhesive Technologies es […]»
Don't: «HAT es […]»

Use «Henkel Adhesive Technologies» in the 1st mention, then speak as «we» [«nosotros / nosotras» though often dropped due to grammar structure].

Do: «Henkel Adhesive Technologies es […]. Hacemos […]»
Don't: «Henkel Adhesive Technologies es […]. Henkel Adhesive Technologies hace […]»

WORDS

a. Abbreviations and acronyms

If there’s a chance your reader won’t recognize an abbreviation or acronym, spell it out the first time you mention it. Then use the short version for all other references. If the abbreviation isn’t clearly related to the full version, specify it in parentheses.

  • First use: Hoja de datos técnicos
  • Second use: TDS [HDT]
  • First use: Adhesivo sensible a la presión
  • Second use: PSA [ASP]

If the abbreviation or acronym is well known, like API or HTML, use it instead and don’t worry about spelling it out.

Never use the acronym «HAT». 

b. Capitalization

We only capitalize the first letter of the first word, in headlines as well as in body copy.

Do: Diferencias entre grados de fijadores de roscas
Don't: Diferencias entre Grados de Fijadores de Roscas

Remember that capitalizing random words in the middle of sentences for emphasis is not allowed.

Do: Adhesivos instantáneos fabricados para una unión rápida y fiable
Don't: Adhesivos Instantáneos fabricados para una Unión rápida y fiable

c. Ellipsis

Don’t use ellipsis for emphasis or drama. It’s ok, though, to use ellipsis in brackets to show that you’re omitting words in a quote:

«La apertura de nuestra planta de última generación en Songdo es un hito […] para nuestra amplia clientela global en el segmento de la electrónica con soluciones de alto impacto […]» afirmó Jan-Dirk Auris, Executive Vice President de Henkel Adhesive Technologies.

d. Bold

We don’t use bold to amplify a certain message in regular body copy. For that purpose, you should take a step back and re-write your messaging to make it more engaging.

However, using typography as visual support for messaging in headlines is a central part of our branding efforts. Read on for more information about usage of typography.

e. Pronouns

Currently, in Spanish there is no officially accepted single pronoun you can use if your subject’s gender is unknown or irrelevant, you may use «él o ella» (he or she) depending on the context. Use «él/su/de él» and «ella/su/de ella» pronouns as appropriate. Don’t use «uno/a» as a pronoun.

f. &

«&» cannot be used to replace «y» (unless it is the official name of a brand)

Do: Mantenimiento y reparación
Don't: Mantenimiento & reparación

DIGITS

a. Numbers

In general, spell out numbers one through nine and use numerals for numbers larger than that.

Do: Hoy hemos lanzado tres adhesivos
Do: Hoy hemos lanzado 12 adhesivos

However, since our writing can be technical, we may need to break this rule. If you come upon a case where you have two related numbers in the same sentence, you should write them both as numerals if you would write one as a numeral. The idea is to write them the same way when they are in the same sentence.

So even though you would normally write «Hoy hemos lanzado tres adhesivos», you should actually go with numbers in this case: «Hoy hemos lanzado 3 adhesivos que son capaces de tirar de un tren de 11 toneladas».

b. Dates

In general, we spell out dates to avoid any confusion among countries that order them differently. So: Use the appropriate date arrangement for the country you’re writing for. Even if you order a date improperly, spelling out the month provides clarity to the user so that it won’t be misinterpreted.

Do: 24 de enero de 2023

c. Temperature

Use the degree symbol and the capital F abbreviation for Fahrenheit or capital C for Celsius. The degree symbol and the capital F or C are always written without any separating space, but there must be a separating space between the number and the measuring unit:

Do: 200 °F
Do: 200 °C

d. Telephone numbers

Use dashes without spaces between numbers. Always use a country code:

Do: +34-604-123-459

e. Decimals and fractions

Spell out amounts less than one.

Do: Dos tercios
Don't: 2/3

Use decimal commas when a number can’t be easily written out as a fraction, like 1,375 or 47,2. This is a general rule that doesn’t apply to technical documentation.

f. Percentage

Use figures and the % symbol, no space in between. (E.g., 25%)

g. Money

For numeric amounts, use the symbol for currencies (e.g., €5, £2,000, $10,000). Indicate currency by using its three-letter abbreviation, such as USD for American dollars or CAD for Canadian dollars.

Use the currency symbol and decimal/comma system for larger amounts. For amounts exceeding $1 million, use the $ sign and numerals up to two decimal places. As in: «tiene un valor de 4,45 millones de $».

h. Time

Use numerals and a.m. or p.m. with a space in between. Don’t use minutes for on-the-hour time. You may also use numerals and the 24-hour time notation. Don’t use minutes for on-the-hour time and separate hour and minutes with a colon.

Do: 7 a.m. / 7
Do: 7.30 p.m. / 19:30

Use a hyphen between times to indicate a time period. If a time period is entirely in the morning or evening, use a.m. or p.m. only once.

Do: 7 a.m.-10.30 p.m. (mañana y tarde) / 7-22:30
Do: 7-10.30. (solo mañana) / 7-10:30

Always specify time zones.

i. Dashes & hyphens

Use an en dash (–)without spaces on either side to offset an aside. Use a true en dash, not hyphens. When the sentence introduces an apposition, use a comma or a colon instead.

Use a hyphen (-) without spaces on each side to link words into a single phrase, or to indicate a span or range.

PUNCTUATION

a. Apostrophes

Use the straight or typewriter apostrophe if needed.

b. Commas

When writing a list, do not use a comma before «y».

Do: Como líder del mercado en adhesivos, selladores y recubrimientos funcionales para el sector de la automoción, Henkel impulsa los diseños de automóviles aumentando el rendimiento y la comodidad, y reduciendo al mismo tiempo el peso de los vehículos.
Don’t: Como líder del mercado en adhesivos, selladores, y recubrimientos funcionales para el sector de la automoción, Henkel impulsa los diseños de automóviles aumentando el rendimiento y la comodidad, y reduciendo al mismo tiempo el peso de los vehículos.

Otherwise, use common sense. If you’re unsure, read the sentence out loud. Where you find yourself taking a pause, use a comma.

c. Colons

Use a colon (rather than an ellipsis, em dash, or comma) to offset a list. As in:

«Tal y como ya se anunció en 2021, LOCTITE ha validado varios materiales en las impresoras ETEC Envision One, incluyendo: LOCTITE 3D 3955 HDT280 FST, LOCTITE 3D IND406 HDT100 High Elongation y LOCTITE 3D IND402 A70 High Rebound».

d. Periods

Titles, subtitles, headers and CTA buttons should end without a period. 

Periods go inside quotation marks, except for the final period, which goes outside. 

  • They go outside parentheses when the parenthetical is part of a larger sentence, and inside the parentheses when the parenthetical stands alone.
Do: «Gracias a su sobresaliente concepto de solución de problemas, esperamos poder eliminar los residuos plásticos y generar un impacto positivo en el medio ambiente».
Do: «Gracias a su sobresaliente concepto de solución de problemas, esperamos poder eliminar los residuos plásticos (y generar también un impacto positivo en el medio ambiente)».
Do: «Gracias a su sobresaliente concepto de solución de problemas, esperamos poder eliminar los residuos plásticos. (Generar un impacto positivo en el medio ambiente supone, naturalmente, otra ventaja)».

e. Question marks

Question marks go inside quotation marks if they’re part of the quote. Like periods, they go outside parentheses when the parenthetical is part of a larger sentence, and inside the parentheses when the parenthetical stands alone.

f. Quotation marks

Use quotation marks to refer to words and letters, titles of short works (like articles), and direct quotations. They should be Latin angular quotation marks («»), with no space between the quotation marks and the words.

Periods and commas go within quotation marks, except for the final period in a quote. Question marks within quotes follow logic—if the question mark is part of the quotation, it goes within. If you’re asking a question that ends with a quote, it goes outside the quote. Use single quotation marks for quotes within quotes.

Do: El CEO afirmó: «Esto marca la mayor inversión individual en la historia de nuestra empresa».
Do: El VP comentó: «Ya saben lo que se dice, 'Los pioneros son aquellos que tienen el valor de ir allí donde nadie ha ido antes'».

g. Dashes & hyphens

Use an en dash (–) without spaces on either side to offset an aside. Use a true  en dash, not hyphens. When the sentence introduces an apposition, use a comma or a colon instead.

Use a hyphen (-) without spaces on each side to link words into a single phrase, or to indicate a span or range.

Do: Incremente la rentabilidad coste-rendimiento sin reducir el desempeño
Do: Somos líderes con soluciones de alto impacto en cuanto a coste-rendimiento
Do: Para reducir los fallos y optimizar la producción –lo cual debería ser siempre un objetivo– ¿por qué no pasar de un encaje mecánico a presión a una solución de unión adhesiva de curado rápido?
Do: Las soluciones potenciales deben ser de curado rápido: fallar no es una opción.

h. Exclamation marks

Use exclamation points sparingly, and never more than once at a time. They’re like high-fives: A well-timed one is great, but too many are annoying.

Exclamation points go inside quotation marks, except at the end of a quote. Like periods and question marks, they go outside parentheses when the parenthetical is part of a larger sentence, and inside parentheses when the parenthetical stands alone.

Never use exclamation points in failure messages or alerts. When in doubt, avoid it.

i. Bullet points

Choose formatting based on the average length of the majority of bullet points in the list.

  • CASE A) If sentences, end each one with a period (full stop).
  • CASE B) If just one word, a few words or fragments, use no end punctuation.

SEO

a. URL naming

  • Keep URLs as simple and accurate as possible.
  • Keep URLs short and clear. 
  • Include target keyword(s). 
  • Use hyphens to separate words. 
  • Use lower case letters. 
  • Avoid numbers.

b. Page title

  • Include target keyword(s) in the beginning of the title. 
  • Use active language (CTA/Feature). 
  • Use the brand name. 
  • Use how, what, why and where. 
  • Use words that trigger an emotion from the user. 
  • Keep length between 55-65 characters. 
  • Keep consistency between SEO title and page content.
  • Use a unique SEO title for each page.
  • Avoid ALL CAPS in SEO titles.

c. Meta description

  • Create a unique meta description, for each page, that summarizes the page content. 
  • Include target keyword(s). 
  • Include CTA and brand name. 
  • Keep the length less than 155 characters.

d. Image filename and alt text

  • Make image filename short and without spaces and dashes. 
  • Describe the image with a maximum of 125 characters. 
  • Select image alt text that reflects the image and keywords. 
  • Make image filename short and descriptive. Use only hyphens to separate words.
  • Assign for each image a unique filename.
  • Use unique images.
  • Include for each images a specific alt text.
  • Write a descriptive alt text (imagine having to describe the photo to a blind person).
  • Keep the alt text length up to 100 characters.

e. Header tags

  • If possible, include the target keyword in the H1 tag and secondary in H2 tag. 
  • Only include one H1 tag on the webpage, and it must be placed above any other heading tag. 
  • If using page H1 as SEO title, make sure to adapt it using active language when possible.

f. Links

1) Use descriptive keywords in anchor text. Anchor text is “descriptive” if it includes the exact match of the keyword you are targeting. For example: «descubra nuestras soluciones de fijación de roscas» links to a page about threadlocking solution.

2) Use natural and relevant links

3) Type of links: in text vs buttons vs teasers vs images

  • Use links in buttons + teasers-links according to page-types’ and modules’ designs stated in the Website guidelines (Brand-Hub)

  • On top of the above, also use text-links – when natural – to help users and Google navigate the website at best   

  • Do not link images

4) How many text-links:

  • do it, but not overdo it

  • less than 1 every 200 words

  • only when helpful for users, you can go above the limit of 5 per page

  • in the same page, do not iterate the same text-link (e.g., if in the same page you mention in text 3 times «soluciones de fijación de roscas», hyperlink «soluciones de fijación de roscas» only once)

5) Same vs new tab:

a) open internal links in the same tab

b) open external links in a new tab

6) Follow or no-follow links:

  1. internal links: always "follow"

  2. external links: always check that the domain we link to is trustworthy. If not sure, “no-follow”

g. Body copy

  • Cover different angles on the topic. 
  • Include branded and/or target keyword(s) within the first 100 words. 
  • Keep reuse of content to a minimum to avoid duplicate content. 
  • Include secondary and other long-tail keywords. 
  • Avoid keyword stuffing – you are writing to the user and not to a search engine.
  • Content should match the user’s search intentions and be as in-depth and clarifying as possible

Extra

a. URLs

Capitalize the names of websites and web publications. Don’t italicize.

Avoid spelling out URLs, but when you need to, leave out http://www.

Do: Next-henkel-adhesives.com
Don’t: Next-Henkel-Adhesives.Com
Don’t: http://www.next.henkel-adhesives.com

b. File extensions

When referring generally to a file extension type, use all uppercase without a period. Add a lowercase to make plural. As in: GIF, PDF, HTML, JPGs.

When referring to a specific file, the filename should be lowercase. As in: press_release_1.gif

c. Names and titles

The first time you mention a person in writing, refer to them by their first and last names. On all other mentions, refer to them by their first name.

Titles should be capitalized when they immediately precede one or more names.

Do: Executive Vice President Jan-Dirk Auris
Do: Doctores Simone Bagel-Trah y Michael Kaschke

When a title stands alone or is offset from a name by commas, it should be lowercase.

    Do: El científico presentó varios avances importantes.
    Do: El ingeniero, Peter Thompson, inventó una solución brillante.
    Do: Carsten Knobel, el director ejecutivo, lleva al mando desde 2020.

    d. States, Cities and Countries

    Spell out city and state names. Don’t abbreviate city names.

    In the United States, all cities should be accompanied by their state, with the exception of: Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Honolulu, Houston, Indianapolis, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, New Orleans, New York, Oklahoma City, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Washington.

    On first mention of a country, write out the full name. On second mention, the commonly accepted abbreviation is fine (Unión Europea, UE; Reino Unido, RU, etc.).

    e. Schools

    The first time you mention a school, college, or university in a piece of writing, refer to it by its full official name. On all other mentions, use its more common abbreviation.

    Do: Heinrich Heine Universität Düsseldorf, HHU
    Do: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT