Lots of organizations come to our company, Advertising for Humanity, asking for “a new brand.” They typically mean a new name, or icon, or a new look and feel for their existing name. Lots of people think that brand begins and ends there — that once we shine up the name they can stick it below their email signature, pop it on their website, and, voila, they have a new brand. Much of our work consists of disabusing people of this notion.
Brand is much more than a name or a logo. Brand is everything, and everything is brand.
Brand is your strategy. If you’re a consumer brand, brand is your products and the story that those products tell together. Ikea’s kitchen chairs’ tendency to fall apart after two years is part of the company’s brand. If you’re a humanitarian organization, brand is your aspirations and the progress you are making toward them. Share Our Strength’s audacious goal to end child hunger in America in five years is its brand. The work the organization is doing to get governor after governor on board is its brand. Its seriousness is its brand. Back in 1969 NASA didn’t have the best logo. But man did it have a brand. It has a nicer logo now — but the brand no longer stands for anything. If you don’t Read more…
Archive for the ‘Logo Design’ Category
A Logo Is Not a Brand
By: Posted on: June 30th, 2011

GAP NEW LOGO — What do you think ?
By: Posted on: October 6th, 2010
Just the other day, we spotted that Gap’s logo on theirwebsite had changed to this new version. There’s not much to say about our thoughts on it, other than we are all in agreement here at Brian Joseph Studios that the new Gap logo is a shocking direction to go with such an iconic brand.
The revenue issues Gap have been experiencing recently doesn’t have much to do with the branding. The problems all stem from the generic identity of the clothing, the lack of style and mundane fashion involved in their products. With this new brand identity, it appears that the corporate suits at Gap headquarters felt that the traditional Gap brand was partly to blame.
The gradient of the logo really cheapens the overall identity and it lacks any sort of strength or visual interest. It’s a struggle to really understand how this new logo came about, what its purpose is and why it fails on so many levels. I’m sure we’ll find out as the days go by……
Branding across borders – creating a successful international brand
By: Posted on: October 1st, 2010
I’ve recently returned from the 2010 HSBC Business Thinking ‘Thought Exchange’ trip to Istanbul, a chance for up-and-coming UK businesses to get together and talk Turkey (and business).
The week’s discussions reinforced two important points for me – firstly, that emerging markets like Turkey are absolute goldmines of ecommerce opportunity just waiting to be explored, and secondly, just how important it is for companies to think about how their branding will travel across cultures before they go multinational.
E-commerce is growing much faster in emerging markets than in its traditional heartlands of North America and Western Europe. Turkey, for instance, is the fifth largest internet consumer in Europe, behind only Germany, Russia, the UK and France, with some 35 million web users – that’s just under half the population – despite ADSL only being introduced in 2003.
The trend bears out in other emerging markets as well – Chinese is the second most widely used language online behind English (with almost 300 million more users than the third most popular language, Spanish). Meanwhile, in India internet use has doubled since 2007, from 42 million to 81 million users.
So it seems that, just as ‘tele-commuting’ may be the future of work, ‘tele-exporting’ will be the logical future of business, especially for start-ups without the ready resources to get established on-the-ground in foreign markets.
But what does Read more…
Brand Building Ain’t What It Used to Be
By: Posted on: August 2nd, 2010
Because the overwhelming majority of your customers are going online to find suppliers, products and services, that’s where you should focus your brand-building efforts. Naturally, you have a website to promote your brand, but a website alone is not enough. To raise the visibility and increase the strength of your brand, choose programs that offer both branding and lead generation benefits.
Branding is often undervalued. The mantra at many companies is “leads and sales, leads and sales,” with most marketing investments going toward lead generation activities. In addition, marketers often believe that branding results are difficult to measure.
The Internet has relegated these notions to the garbage bin. With a comprehensive online presence and investments in the right marketing programs, you can gain 24×7 visibility, build brand value, increase opportunities for sales, and measure the results of your efforts.
Another assumption is that “branding is nice, but it doesn’t help the bottom line.” Not true. In fact, if you don’t have any brand value, it’s easy to be considered a commodity. Take Nike(NYSE: NKE), for example. Without brand recognition, would customers be willing to pay a premium for its sneakers? Probably not.
You want your company’s products and services to be unique and to be known for benefits that you alone can deliver. How can branding help your company? There are three main ways, each Read more…
10 Steps To Design a Logotype
By: Posted on: July 19th, 2010
When designing a logo, you shoud know which type of logo would be the most fit for the client, type that will help you achieve a great solution. There are three basic types of logos, Iconic Logo, Logotype and the third is Combination Marks which combine between Iconic and Logotype, Each of these different classifications of logos have its own design challenges and features. We will talk about Logotype – also sometimes named Wordmark or Typographic logos -. Logotype is a standardized graphic representation of the name of a company, institution, or product name used for purposes of identification and branding. Type fonts that you are use or design come in thousands of possible sizes, variations, shapes and styles, each of them conveying a slightly different impression upon your intended audience.
In this article, we will talk about 10 points you should know as a logo designer and considering when you designing a logotype.
1. Begining with Reading
Undoubtedly, If you do not knew typography rules and how to works with letters, You can not design a professional logotype. Therefore i recommend you to read Thinking with Type book for Ellen Lupton. The book include three sections, namely Letter, Grid and Text. So it will helping you so much to design professional logotype. Read Most 20 Books You should read them
2. Sketching
Start the Logotype process Read more…
45 Rules for Creating a Great Logo Design
By: Posted on: June 28th, 2010
This list is an exploration of design principals used in some of the world’s most famous logos.
At the same time, the list was created as a way for designers to question themselves and the creative techniques they use when creating a logo design. Forcing the reader to reflect not only on the actual list, but also on their reaction to each listed insight, the last rule is the most important.
Do not use more than three colors.
Get rid of everything that is not absolutely necessary.
Type must be easy enough for your grandma to read.
The logo must be recognizable.
Create a unique shape or layout for the logo.
Completely ignore what your parents and/or spouse think about the design.
Confirm that the logo looks appealing to more than just three (3) individuals.
Do not combine elements from popular logos and claim it as original work.
Do not use clipart under any circumstances.
The logo should look good in black and white.
Make sure that the logo is recognizable when inverted.
Make sure that the logo is recognizable when resized.
If the logo contains an icon or symbol, as well as text, place each so that they complement one another.
Avoid recent logo design trends. Instead, make the logo look timeless.
Do not use special effects (including, but not limited to: gradients, drop shadows, reflections, and light bursts).
Fit the logo into a square layout if Read more…
The Principles of Good Logo Design
By: Posted on: June 23rd, 2010
Logo design is playing an increasingly vital role in the personalisation of companies, products, and services. As the cornerstone of brand identity, a good logo helps set the stage for the development of a successful and long-lasting brand.
Designing an exceptional logo is time consuming and a lot of hard work. To be able to interpret a design brief and come up with a design concept that distills the very essence of a company takes a very unique individual.
Aside from having a combination of raw talent, communication skills and a lot of patience (to name a few), it is essential that the designer develops an astute understanding of the basic principles of what makes a good logo design.
A good logo should be; simple, distinctive, relevant, memorable, timeless, and versatile.
Lets take a look at those principles in more detail.
1. Simple
Example: Seven Network (Australia) Logo
Designed by Ken Cato, in 2003
A good logo is simple in its construction, but not in its concept. Quite often to the inexperienced eye, a good logo may look so simple that it looks like it was put together in a matter of minutes.
The vast majority of logo designs that are both simple and successful are backed by many hours of research and unused concepts that never made the cut. It is usually the result of an extensive and exhaustive logo Read more…
7 Personality Types of Designers Today
By: Posted on: May 20th, 2010
Design is a universal language. It transcends all cultural and national boundaries. It is diverse and ever-changing. Despite the fact that designs can be universally appreciated, the artists behind them are all unique and talented individuals.
What kind of designer are you? What is your philosophy? How do you contribute to the design community? Designers from different walks of life might have similar answers to these questions, and yet we are all different.
Some designers take it upon themselves to educate those who have not yet developed an appreciation for Web design and art. Some designers aim to improve the overall quality of design on the Internet.
And of course, some designers strive primarily to make a good living from their talents so that they can live a comfortable life.
Whatever your reason for being a designer, you are unique.
If you want to be a well-paid designer, please the client.
If you want to be an award-winning designer, please yourself.
If you want to be a great designer, please the audience.
Spotting the 7 Different Designers
Human beings constantly wear masks to hide their true feelings, thoughts and personality quirks. Designers wear masks of their own: one to attend to clients, another to handle a project’s details, another to collaborate with colleagues and yet another to communicate with family and friends. Human nature is to wear a different Read more…
How NOT To Design A Logo
By: Posted on: April 28th, 2010
What is A Logo?
To understand what a logo is meant to do, we first must know what a logo is. A logo’s design is for immediate recognition, inspiring trust, admiration, loyalty and an implied superiority. The logo is one aspect of a company’s commercial brand, or economic entity, and its shapes, colours, fonts, and images usually are different from others in a similar market. Logos are also used to identify organizations and other non-commercial entities.
It makes me wonder why people have no logo or why they would even bother with a cheap logo design if a logo is meant to do all of these things?
Logo Design Contests
The worst deal you could probably go for is a logo design contest. Logo design contests are where you give a brief and then you have multiple designers come back to you with their designs. Although this sounds like a mighty good deal, the quality is usually far from anything you would want to represent your business.
You will be wasting your money and in the long term, in terms of damage done to your business, that amount could be quite considerable.
On another note, design contests & designers who design on a speculative basis are damaging the design industry as designers should not have to invest time and resources with no guarantee of payment.
Too Good To Be True Deals
If Read more…


