Logo
Design - Branding - Brand Identity Guru
Do you have any
idea how important your company logo is? Well you should.
It appears on everything from your corporate identity system,
brochures to your website, reaching customers, prospects,
vendors and the press. In other words, your logo gets to everyone
and as they say you only have one chance to make a first impression.
Present yourself clearly and dynamically, and you'll look
like a professional, even if you are a small company.
We also recommend
hiring a branding company to execute your logo. They can help
you with positioning your company and creating the logo design.
Here are some tips for effective logo design:
1. Your logo should
reflect your company and it’s positioning. If your logo
contains a symbol--often called an "icon"--it should
relate to your industry, your name, and a defining characteristic
of your company or a competitive advantage you offer.
What's the overriding
trait you want people to remember about your business? If
it's quick delivery, consider objects that connote speed,
like wings or a clock. Consider an abstract symbol to convey
a progressive approach--abstracts are a great choice for high-tech
companies. Or maybe you simply want an object that represents
the product or service you're selling. Be clever, if you can,
but not at the expense of being clear.
2. Avoid too much
detail. Simple logos are recognized faster than complex ones.
Strong lines and letters show up better than thin ones, and
clean, simple logos reduce and enlarge much better than complicated
ones.
But although your
logo should be simple, it shouldn't be simplistic. Good logos
feature something unexpected or unique without being overdrawn.
Look at the pros: McDonald's, Nike, Prudential. Notice how
their logos are simple yet compelling. Anyone who's traveled
by a McDonald's with a hungry 4-year-old knows the power of
a clean logo symbol.
3. Your logo should
work well in black and white (one-color printing). If it doesn't
look good in black and white, it won't look good at any color.
Also keep in mind that printing costs for four-color logos
are often greater than that for one-or two-color jobs.
4. Make sure your
logo's scalable. It should be aesthetically pleasing in both
small and large sizes, in a variety of mediums. A good rule
of thumb is the "business card/billboard rule":
Your logo should look good on both.
5. Your logo should
be artistically balanced. The best way to explain this is
that your logo should seem "balanced" to the eye--no
one part should overpower the rest. Just as a painting would
look odd if all the color and details were segregated in one
corner, so do asymmetric logos. Color, line density and shape
all affect a logo's balance.
Many logo gurus
insist your logo should be designed to last for up to 10 or
15 years. But I've yet to meet a clairvoyant when it comes
to design trends. The best way to ensure logo longevity, in
addition to the rules I've listed above, is to make sure you
love your logo. Don't ever settle for something half-baked.
And once you commit
to your logo design, be sure you have it in all three of these
essential file formats: EPS for printing, JPG and GIF for
your website. Essentially, these file conversions render your
logo as a single piece of art-so it's no longer a symbol with
a typeface. Which brings us to the most important rule in
logo design. . .
Never, ever re-draw
or alter your logo! If you want to animate it for your website,
fine. But don't change its essence. Reduce and enlarge it
proportionally. And if you become tired of your logo, that's
good. Because that's usually about the time it's starting
to make an impression on everyone else!
To measure how
strong your brand is copy and paste: (http://brandidentityguru.com/bightml/brandmasterpiece.html).
Then click "Take the brand strength test". This
is a short survey that measures the strength of any company's
brand. It's a great tool to see where you are today.
Scott White is
President of Brand
Identity Guru , a leading brand consulting and market
research firm located in Easton, Massachusetts, USA, near
Boston. Brand Identity Guru specializes in creating corporate
and product brands that increase sales, market share, customer
loyalty, and brand valuation.
Over the course
of his 15-year branding career, Scott White has worked in
a wide variety of industries: high-tech, manufacturing, computer
hardware and software, telecommunications, banking, restaurants,
fashion, healthcare, Internet, retail, and service businesses,
as well as numerous non-profit organizations.
Brand Identity
Guru clients include: Sun Life Financial, Coca Cola, HP, Sun,
Nordstrom, American Federal Mortgage, Simon (America’s
largest shopping mall manager) and many others, including
numerous emerging growth companies.
Scott White is
a very enthusiastic speaker and has the gift of being able
to explain the principles of branding in a compelling and
entertaining manner so that people at all levels can understand.
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