The 7 Commandments of Brand Design
photo: Charlton Heston in the Cecile B. DeMille film "The Ten Commandments"

The 7 Commandments of Brand Design

"Your brand is the single most important investment that you'll make in your business." - Steve Forbes

When I talk about branding, I often talk about the 3 R’s: recognized, remembered and revered. The success of any brand can be measured by how well it has achieved those three simple words. But how do you get there? The design of a brand has to hit on a lot of cylinders to get to those 3 R’s. Here are seven of the key attributes of a brand’s design that are critical to success.

1st COMMANDMENT:  Make It Beautiful

Beautiful design is proven to be a quantifiable competitive advantage. Having an elegant, contemporary design is what today’s consumers expect. Great brand design is easy to look at. You need to look successful to be successful. A homely, amateurish brand design is going to make people click away from you, and you're not going to build your business that way. No one is going to volunteer to be an evangelist for an ugly brand.

2nd COMMANDMENT:  Make It Simple

The world is way too noisy and too complicated. We're inundated with a tremendous amount of visual stimulation and information every moment. Everyone's looking for simplicity in their lives. If you make it simple, you make it a less complicated and less stressful experience to interact with your brand. You also make it easier to be remembered (there’s an R again) and easier for customers to communicate what you do to others.

3rd COMMANDMENT:  Make it Strategic

Hoping it looks good is not a strategy. Your brand design has to be created with intentional focus on what your target customer avatar wants and is expecting from you. You have to display an aspirational aesthetic and speak their visual and verbal language. Great brand design is about reduction. Getting rid of all that is unnecessary and boiling down to the essence. Brand design strategy is as much what not to show as it is what to show. All design execution needs to stem directly from the brand strategy.

4th COMMANDMENT:  Communicate

All strategic brand design is communication. You need to communicate who you are, what you do, how you do it, how you do it differently and why people should care. Powerful brand design communicates through three things: semiotics, the meaning of symbols and images, through color theory and color psychology, and through verbal or written communication. By artistically weaving those three together, you tell a brand story.

5th COMMANDMENT:  Be Different

From the time we're adolescents, we all seek to fit in. Humans naturally gravitate towards the median,  to “normal”. It takes a lot of work, concentration and real courage to be different. Just like the brand’s unique selling proposition, having a brand design that visually differentiates you from your competitive environment can make breaking through the noise a hell of a lot easier. Just ask Method the home cleaning products brand. By adopting a product line in clear bottles with whimsical shapes and a rainbow of liquid colors they smashed through the sea of blue and orange dominating the laundry aisle owned by Tide and Gain. Not an easy thing to do. But they did it through design.

6th COMMANDMENT:  Be Consistent

In order to be recognized, you have to be remembered, and in order to be remembered, you have to be consistent. Everywhere your brand shows up, at every brand touch-point; online, retail, social, outdoor, packaging, media, your imagery, your color, all of your brand design elements have to be absolutely consistent. Every inconsistent touch-point erodes customer recognition. Inconsistency bleeds brand equity.

7th COMMANDMENT:  Be Memorable

If you're simple, if you're different, if you're consistent and if you communicate, you'll be memorable. And being memorable is the gold standard of brand design. If you're memorable, people will return to you, and they'll recognize you wherever they come across you. You'll create brand evangelists who will ultimately do the work of building your brand for you. And it doesn’t get better than that. Amen.


?


Philip VanDusen is a creative thought leader as well as owner and principal of Verhaal Brand Design an agency that specializes in leveraging brand strategy and design to build brand affinity and equity for companies and entrepreneurs. Get more from Philip in his newsletter brand?muse, His YouTube channel or connect with Verhaal Brand Design on Facebook.



Paul Haycock

Commercial Cleaning | Delivering Cleaning & Hygiene solutions in a changing Covid world

6 年

Philip, I'm loving your input! Many businesses would benefit from this.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Philip VanDusen ??的更多文章

  • 10 Steps to Drive a Billion-Dollar Social Media Platform Into the Ground

    10 Steps to Drive a Billion-Dollar Social Media Platform Into the Ground

    *rant warning..

    19 条评论
  • Your Business and the Cricket Effect

    Your Business and the Cricket Effect

    There’s a cricket in my basement. He's been doing a lot of singing lately.

  • 12 Trends in Social Media Marketing for 2024-2025

    12 Trends in Social Media Marketing for 2024-2025

    Social media has become the dominant force in modern communication, eclipsing traditional media like TV, print, and…

  • the next big wave

    the next big wave

    Ever heard of wakesurfing? Picture this: you're slicing through the water on a surfboard. But you’re not on the open…

    3 条评论
  • what's your problem?

    what's your problem?

    Here are the two most common frustrations I hear from creatives: Problem #1: “I have trouble getting clients to want to…

    3 条评论
  • where's your Lambo, bro'?

    where's your Lambo, bro'?

    We’ve all seen the tech ‘bros and their Lambo’s. The ‘I got rich quick’ social influencers flooding our feeds who hold…

    8 条评论
  • what'll you have?

    what'll you have?

    In the heart of Tokyo, there's a tiny café that serves only one customer at a time. It’s not famous for its coffee or…

    4 条评论
  • tiny but mighty

    tiny but mighty

    Danionella is the tiniest, but loudest fish on the block. Just 12mm long, this transparent minnow manages to boom out…

    4 条评论
  • mr. potato head was right

    mr. potato head was right

    In the 1950’s, Brooklyn inventor George Lerner had an ‘ah-ha’ moment in the shower. He suddenly realized that the toy…

    4 条评论
  • why is this so uncomfortable?

    why is this so uncomfortable?

    Lately I’ve been doing yoga more. Mostly I do it to maintain flexibility.

    6 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了