- Ignoring Cultural Differences:
Although cultural differences have always been an important part of the translation mistakes process, they have become more valuable in today’s world where people don’t take issues lightly. Many companies ignored the cultural differences when creating their marketing campaigns this year and suffered the consequences.
- Memes Localization:
Internet users can make memes to joke about important issues, but businesses trying to add humor to serious topics don’t work. A lot of websites and social media profiles of big companies tried to joke about serious issues and ended up facing backlash for that.
- Clear Opinion:
In order to keep all of their audiences happy, businesses use language that is complicated and saves them from taking sides. But when translated into other vernaculars, the same message becomes even more confusing. This is why every business should have a clear opinion.
- Website Formatting:
New businesses don’t plan ahead a lot of the times, which is why when they expand to different countries and get their website translated, they end up with formatting issues. It is worth remembering that some languages take more space while some take less.
- Social Media Language:
The language used on the internet has a special vocabulary, but even that is culture oriented. People forget that a slang that is common for English speakers would not make sense to those who only know Spanish. This is why it is important to create neutral content for social media.
- Omissions:
In a world where Twitter’s microblogging platform is so popular, companies tend to create shorter messages too. But sometimes, they omit portions of their message after translation, so they don’t exceed the character limit. The omissions not only change the meaning of the text but also eliminate important aspects of it.
- Current Affairs:
We have just entered June and so much has already happened this year. But since people are always up-to-date, they expect businesses to do the same. However, companies end up wishing their different audiences greetings for festivals without acknowledging the tough times we are going through. They need to understand that even if there are linguistic barriers between people, they are connected to everyone through the internet, and they care about each other.
- Missing the Context:
A mistake that translators make is not reading the reference material. This causes them to miss the context and translate the text in a way that does not make sense. It can be confusing for the audience to read a text that does not make sense to them.
- Similar Terms:
There are closely related languages that sometimes have similar-sounding words. Inexperienced translators end up using the word from one tongue when they should be using the word from the other language. This disappoints the target audience because they figure out the company does not know them.
- Line Breaks:
This is another error that tells an audience that you don’t know them and their language. Every vernacular has rules about line breaks. For instance, in Chinese, no line begins with a punctuation mark. This is why translators have to choose the line break seriously.