Small Business Brief
Small Business
Ideas Forum
Small Business
Resources
Small Business
Software
Small Business
Articles
Small Business
Opportunities



-

Subscribe to the Small Business Brief Newsletter!

Our free newsletter is delivered once a week and provides a digest of small business ideas and articles that inspire, inform and generally keep small business owners up to date with the information they need to succeed. Your email address will NOT be given to third parties.




3 Qualities Shared by all Great Logos
August 28, 2007

by Winnie Anderson

Your visual identity is often the first thing that captures the attention of consumers. How does the designer visually communicate the essence of your brand and how do you know they’ve got it right?

Here are 3 qualities shared by the best corporate identities. Measure the designs submitted to you against each one of these features.

Unique
You might think it goes without saying that all logos are unique; but next time you’re in a store, stand in an aisle and look at the company logos on the products there. Do you see any significant differences? Probably not.

If your brand doesn’t differentiate your company and products as completely unique in the marketplace, then how will your customers make that determination? When you and your offerings aren’t seen as original, you become a commodity in the eyes of the consumer and you’re forced to compete on price.

Utilitarian

Those things that are utilitarian stress usefulness over beauty or other considerations. A brand’s logo must be easily replicated in any type of environment. It must be easily recognized whether it’s on a billboard, a product label, or an envelope. It must communicate the same core brand elements whether it’s in color or black and white.

Uncomplicated
Consider the appearance of some of your favorite brands. Chances are very good their identities communicate one basic message over all other themes. They support one core positioning statement. If the logo is simply the name, that name has no more than one special design element. If there is an image along with the name, then the name is even more simple, allowing the image to do it’s primary communicating.

Companies should resist the temptation to adopt elaborate brand images simply because technology makes it easy to create them. The point of a brand image is to communicate the organization’s brand essence, not simply create some cute image.

Discuss this in our Forum

About the Author:

Abiah, LLC is a brand strategy and full-service marketing firm whose solutions make a bottom-line difference for clients. Visit abiah.com/brand_test/index.php to take our brand test and see how your brand stacks up. Join the conversation about brands and marketing at brandreturn.com.

Article Source: impactarticles.com

Copyright © 2007 by Abiah, LLC.

ABCSearch





Copyright © 2006 K. Clough, Inc. All Rights Reserved.