I Hate My Logo! What You Should Get For Your Money and Why
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I Hate My Logo! What You Should Get For Your Money and Why
This is not a how-to design a logo. This is a guide to
educate you on how an experienced designer can help you
through a project whose outcome you will need to live with
for years. Learn how greatly the symbolic significance of
your corporate identity can impact your business. To say
anyone can design a logo is to say anyone can design a 53
story high rise. Here are some key lessons that will tell
you if you're choosing the right architect for your
corporate identity!
Simple Definition- On The Surface
A logo design is composed of one or more elements of shape,
type, and thematically chosen colors. In a glance, it
conveys a substantial amount of information to the viewer,
much in the form of short gut feelings that aren't vocalized
—good, hesitant, authoritative, dignified, classy, upscale,
expertise, cheap…the list is endless.
Your logo is a symbol that will stand on every piece of
printed or electronic collateral for at least the next 10
years. Remember that thought. Changing your logo in a year
because you don't like it breeds confusion and mistrust that
spreads like weeds within your audience. Many people over
look that fact when they have a logo designed from the
Internet for $25.
Your identity is an extension of your business that
communicates visually, through appearance, and emotionally,
through symbolism. Curtailing or ignoring thought,
revision, and growth in the design process will hurt your
finished product and corporate image. A good graphic artist
will lead you through the design process. He or she will
help visualize your company as the world sees you.
"I'm not creative," "I can't draw," "Make it green cause
green is my favorite color and I'm the boss and it's my
logo!" If you find yourself thinking along these lines,
you're pretty normal so don't worry! If your passion and
talent lie in matching the perfect violin to a young
blossoming talent that walks into your music store, you're
probably not going to do your own corporate tax returns.
Tax returns are done every year. Your logo, the heart and
soul of your business is created once. It's part of you,
and is the face of your business the world will see. Let a
graphic artist, whose own passion is design, help you with
what they do best. It's well worth the investment. Let's
look at why…
In the following we'll discuss some obvious and not so
obvious things a logo communicates and illustrate by
examples you'll recognize. You will have a greater
understanding of how much power your little icon can
potentially have.
Logos: The Obvious Characteristics
>From a usability and visibility standpoint there a several
key factors that must be built into the design. Your logo
must be clear and simple enough that it does not lose
meaning when reproduced at different sizes, specifically
smaller. If it is too cluttered and muddy on your business
card your first impression will be a disappointment to a
potential client.
It must not lose meaning when reproduced in one color. The
Internet and online marketing let you produce things in
blazing colorful glory without extra cost. However, don't
forget those equally important other places your logo will
be seen like packaging, shopping bags, faxes, Xeroxes,
newspapers, business cards, brochures and letterhead. Those
are important items in building brand loyalty and
recognition to your product. If they don't look sharp,
neither will your image, and neither will your sales.
Logos: The Quiet, Harmonic Subtle Qualities Often
Overlooked
Your logo is a symbol of your company's ideals, practices
and missions. A well-developed, carefully sculpted logo can
inspire vision, stability and comfort. Your image can make
a viewer feel he or she is in the best, most experienced
hands. With this visual interaction you are building a
trust with your audience.
Instill trust and a solid foundation
A logo can build trust and credibility. When you see a
company's logo, even briefly, you feel something. That
something can make you uneasy and worried about what you'll
get for your money, or it can make you feel safe. How about
McDonald's? (Fat grams and calories aside for a moment),
when you see the Golden Arches, most people think good, fun,
always-know-what-to-expect-even-in-a-strange-land hamburger.
If you are lost in a foreign country, sighting the
McDonald's Logo creates a sense of familiarity and relief.
How about a black circle with two little circles on either
side, toward the top. Mickey. (Yes, that might make some
mom and dad's feel faint at the ticket prices), but beyond
that, there's an unparalleled, magical feeling of childhood,
laughter and joy. What powerful emotion from three, joined,
black circles that transcends language and culture.
If we say your logo is a symbol, by definition it represents
the heart and root system of your company. The ultimate
goal is for your audience to feel and understand your
business on an emotional level and remember it. Sometimes
logos can have an abstract relationship, sometimes right in
your face. Either way, they must make sense and uniquely
tie into your business. If you buy a pair of sneakers with
a swoosh on them, do you have any doubt that they will wear
out too soon, be uncomfortable, or a waste of money?
Show you are proactive and visionary
Say you're in the market for a luxury car. You are probably
less worried about the obnoxious sales people and more
attune to advertising you've seen. Which companies
immediately come to mind when you think of precision,
perfection and technological achievement?
Logos like Jaguar, Mercedes, or BMW convey enough inherent
sense of forward thinking that they can appear as the only
element on a billboard. There is a confidence you're in a
class of superior engineering, advanced technology, and
luxurious style compared to low and mid range automobiles.
And even more intriguing, if you're an owner or in the
market for one, doesn't seeing that particular logo
reinforce those ideals to you? How can a little silver
kitty on the front of a hood evoke such deep emotional
reactions?
Portray confidence and expertise
Calvin Klein, Ralph Loren, and Coca-Cola are recognizable
from across a room. With each, you know purchased products
are consistent in quality. I'd suggest the most obviously
confident is Calvin Klein. But it works, doesn't it? The
smell of CK cologne might trigger a good (maybe bad!) memory
for you. Who in real life is more confident than the
perfect underwear models that seem to be in endless
production? If they don't radiate self-confidence to that
corporation, I'm at a loss for what does!
People will argue Coke is better than Pepsi or vice versa.
It really doesn't matter because both are regarded as the
best cola drinks made. Either one far surpasses any of the
knock off brands. They are experts in their field. So how
does a designer create an image like these for your
company?
How does a designer begin? Every creative professional has
his or her own methods, but the initial premise and ultimate
journey is the same.
Design Is A Process
Research
It is impossible to find parallels of symbolism and create a
logo identity without learning about the company,
interacting with its employees, understanding the products
and services, and examining the competition.
Here a designer starts to understand what ideals the
corporate image must convey and what makes the company
unique. Now, how to communicate those thoughts, feelings,
and ideals onto paper.
Brainstorming/Draft
I usually carry a small tablet around with me when I'm
working on a logo design. I sit at lunch, at red lights,
and through the day sketching, scribbling, jotting down
thoughts that pop into my head. These aren't anything for
show, but quick ideas that usually springboard to new ones.
Eventually one common thread stands out and I'll extrapolate
some tighter focused ideas around that theme.
Revision
This is the most important process of design. This is where
shapes and words combine into life. Here is where ideas
evolve into concrete concepts. These concepts are further
reworked, poked and prodded, transformed into more detailed,
individual entities. A new idea may still enter into the
mix, but results become much more refined and defined.
At a point when gut instinct and some outside opinions say,
"That's a keeper!" I'll present the top three concepts to
the client. I may offer some thoughts about color or other
added aesthetic enhancements, but I'm more interested in
conveying the underlying meaning of the symbol, and how I
think it would speak to an audience and drive the company
forward.
Conclusion
I strongly suggest you let an experienced designer help you
with your logo development. It's not unreasonable to pay
several thousand dollars for a design. That design should,
however, take more than two days to develop and a lot of
interaction and explanation! But you have to live with the
results and they should be nothing less than great.
When interviewing several graphic artists, ask them how they
develop a logo. What steps do they take? Their way might
be a bit different than this article, but the general
thought should be the same. You're business is probably
your most valued investment. Help the world believe that
too by having a logo that conveys it.
Name recognition, building trust, and brand loyalty take
time. All of the companies talked about were new once too.
And, all are innovators with their own unique, wonderfully
expressive faces to the world.
About the Author
John Krycek is the owner and creative director of
<a href="http://www.themouseworks.ca">theMouseworks.ca</a>.
Read additional articles on <a href="http://www.themouseworks.ca/
html/website_articles_indx.html">logo design</a>
and graphic and web design in easy, non-technical, up
front English!
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