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Blog posts tagged logo

Five easy ways to avoid collateral damage and win more business

May 19, 2010 by Fiona Humberstone

You’re probably savvy enough to realise that you need to get the pros involved when it comes to creating your logo and website. But what about everything else? The reports, invoices, proposals and posters that you create yourself? Are they sending out the right signals, or do they chirrup “cheap! cheap!”.

The good news is that you can make some simple changes to the way you design your own collateral in house that will make a big difference to how people perceive your business. Get it right and you’ll build more confidence and win more business. And you don’t need a graphic design degree or an expensive piece of software to do it. Here’s how…

  • Work out what’s important (it’s probably not your logo!)
  • Get some decent structure in place
  • Use fonts that enhance your brand (that means no Arial or Verdana!)
  • Use colours that engage and attract your ideal clients
  • Make sure your images are relevant and do you justice.

1. Work out what’s important

With the exception of your business stationery, your company logo and name shouldn’t take centre stage – so move the logo away from the top! Think about what message your clients will respond best to and make sure that’s what stands out.  Secondly, think about what you’re asking people to do. Your call to action also needs to be clear.

2. Get a decent structure in place.

Don’t send your text from one side of the screen to the other! Use columns and grids to add structure and clarity. And remember, odd numbers are good – threes, fives, sevens. Feel free to “break the grid” and use text across two columns.

3. Use fonts that enhance your brand

Fonts are often overlooked, even by some graphic designers, but nothing will scream amateur more than a dodgy stock photograph coupled with Verdana! The point is that fonts subconsciously create moods and send your clients signals about your business. Ask your designer to advise you on what fonts will work best with your brand and use them for all printed material. Emailing something? Consider creating a PDF if it’s important.

4. Use colours that engage and attract your ideal clients

Colour psychology is a powerful thing. Using the right colours will have a big impact on how your clients and colleagues perceive your business. And it’s not just about the colours you use – think also about the tones and how they all fit together. Ask your designer to recommend you a colour palette and make sure you use it!

5. Make sure your images are relevant and do you justice

Images can make or break your design. Try to avoid the temptation to use over-used and clichéd “clever” images that you have to shoehorn a headline around. Instead, pick images that are relevant to what you do and are also visually pleasing.

And finally… let’s not get things out of perspective. I’m not suggesting for one moment that these simple tricks can replace your fabulous graphic designer. But I’m a realist – I know you’re always going to need to design something in house – so why not learn how to make it look a cracker!

Fiona Humberstone of Flourish

Branding - let's start with the basics

January 27, 2010 by John Hayward

A healthy and strong brand will stand above the competition, standing more chance of being chosen if it's not been tried before as well as having a loyal customer base once it's been purchased.

It all started with cows and making sure you could distinguish your cow from someone else's cow. That led to the most basic form of branding with a unique stamp on your cow's rear end region. With most businesses being a little more complicated than cows nowadays, branding and brand management have had to become more and more sophisticated. 

Even now this rather more basic cow example of branding is what people think it's all about - the name and the logo. It's not that simple, and lots of different inputs from all around your business will work together to make up your brand.  What is blissfully simple however is the benefit of a well managed, clearly thought through and strong brand. And that is the very catalyst behind the cow example above: being unique, standing out and being identifiable.

That's because a strong healthy brand can:

  • Act as a short-cut to what your brand is and how it's different from the competition
  • Stand for a central promise - a brand positioning
  • Become familiar

This is all fairly critical to us humans, especially when you account for the fact that your average person is exposed to over 5000 messages each day. That's huge. People process information very quickly, and so you have to be at the top of your game to ensure your brand can cut through quickly, be understood, resonate and then become part of a consideration choice. Notice we haven't got to purchased yet!

John Hayward of Brand Glue

Let your logo speak a thousand words

June 03, 2009 by Marketing Donut

‘A picture is worth a thousand words’  is a saying that we have all heard many times before. It is an old Chinese proverb which means that a single image can be far more influential and expressive if crafted and designed properly with a vivid concept behind it.

The symbol, or in this instance, your business logo, conveys the message of a thousand words to customers old and new. This is why businesses whether huge, medium or small, always get their corporate image or logos designed in the best possible manner to create a unique identity in the minds of their existing and potential customers/clients. This is where logo design companies come into play.

I shall focus on logo designs for small business owners as big businesses can afford to spend fortunes on hiring a top notch designer or commandeering a glitzy ad agency to look after their entire marketing and branding regime. The humble  small business owner needs to be very prudent in allocating their budget when it comes to having a logo for its business – So online logo design companies are the most appropriate and affordable option for them.

Why logo design companies? A reputable logo design company is:

  • Affordable
  • Professional
  • Experienced
  • Supportive 24/7
  • Fully equipped with a bunch of tried and tested designers.

Remember! You as a small business owner need to make intelligent decisions in order to survive and move up the ladder in this critical economic recession. But that doesn’t mean you should get entrapped by amateur freelancers offering graphic design services at cheap prices. You get for what you pay for in most cases and considering your logo could be someone’s first encounter of your business, trust me you do not want to end up with an awful logo design which will only hurt your business.

Do some research; ask fellow small business owners what approach they took, if there is a logo out there that you like find out the story behind it and when you have your perfect logo, let it speak a thousand words about your business.

Posted in PR | Tagged logo, image, design | 1 comment
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