Logo Archives – Liquid Creativity Liquid Brand Agency, Melbourne Tue, 18 Jul 2023 17:04:41 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.5 Is My Brand Okay? https://liquidcreativity.com.au/branding-help-for-companies/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/branding-help-for-companies/#respond Tue, 13 Nov 2018 22:01:43 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=14184 Some businesses find branding intimidating, we take a look at a recent case study and guide you through how to determine if your brand needs help.

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BRANDING   |   POSTED ON 15.11.2018

Is My Brand Okay?



The branding journey always starts with a problem. Quite often, a business will approach our agency as they believe their website is holding them back and they want to take their business to the next level. Usually, they are looking for a refresh or to update the look and feel. They understand it has something to do with their brand but they can’t articulate exactly what needs to change.

The triggers that sparks action

One company that we worked with recently decided to take action after losing a major and long-standing client of nearly 30 years. The company directors wanted answers into why they lost the client.

Their understanding of why they lost the contract to a competitor was because of weakening client relationships or a few incidents that had occurred or maybe something to do with their brand. After being in business for decades, they also believed poor communication may have been part of the reason.

It wasn’t until their Business Development Manager joined the company and wanted to start talking to new clients about their business and highlight their points of difference that they found they lost the contract for different reasons. With no documentation or brand guidelines helping the manager to market the company to prospective clients, they realised they needed to look at their brand and its future. They asked themselves who they were? What was their direction? What did they stand for and how are they different? Unsure about how they would answer these important questions, they approached Liquid for help.

branding case study resource

The key to solving a branding problem

The initial stages of helping the company was to ask the CEO and executive team questions about the business and also gain a different perspective from their employees and clients. Often there is a gap between how a business thinks they’re perceived and how they’re actually perceived.

We understand that it’s difficult to ask these types of direct questions if you work for the company and are invested in the relationship with clients. At Liquid, we can have fair and objective conversations with staff and clients and can balance the needs of everyone involved. Through our discussions, we determined that there was a gap between the company’s perception of the problem and the needs of their client.

The reasons why they lost the contract in the end was not about relationships but more about the company not being innovative. Their client said he used to view the company as the leader in their field, but the opposition had surpassed them over the last five years. The client also pinpointed what areas the company needed to change to be an industry leader again.

The client suggested that the company needed to:

• update and invest in their IT systems
• update their reporting method
• offer more expertise and training to managers
• understand what the industry needs
• demonstrate their vision so clients know the company’s direction
• invest in mechanical equipment and technology
• improve the culture in the filed
• be transparent

Valuable insights to improve your brand

These specific insights along with feedback from staff and other clients helped Liquid to present a clear outline of what clients were looking for in the company and a branding pathway to meet their needs.

As a result of the consultations, the company determined their key objectives were to:

• Have strong proactive relationships
• Be an innovative supplier
• Be good problem solvers
• Be a supplier with good systems
• Deliver on what they say

Understanding what’s important to clients and closing the gap between how you’re actually perceived and how you want to be perceived is key to any branding process. By understanding these needs, we could help the company communicate more effectively to their clients. The more you can find out about what your business is doing well and how you can improve, the more you can closely align yourself with your clients. This amounts to better connections and engagements with existing clients and helps you understand how to attract new clients with the same needs.

The company now understands the power of conversations and communication with their staff, suppliers and clients. By keeping them all happy, companies can retain and attract the right staff and their ideal clients. These insights help articulate why, how and what they do.

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How well do you really know your brand

A business can talk about their brand internally on a daily basis but the discussions are usually about what they provide, their internal processes and how they can improve these processes. They often don’t see the brand from their customer’s perspective. Do you know what they think of your brand? What is their understanding of your business and what do you offer them? What is your website and brand really saying to your clients?

Similarly, do your staff members really understand who you are and what you do? How are you helping your staff fulfil the needs of your clients? What is your company really about?

Is there a divergence between how clients talk and feel about your brand compared to how it’s represented on your website? If you’re feeling that your company needs to refresh the logo or website, you may need to start having a deeper conversation about your brand.

Where would you like to be in the future?

Start by understanding where you would like to see your brand in 3 – 5 years. This helps you develop your objectives for the future. From there, it’s easier to work out a pathway to achieve them. To meet those objectives, always start with an understanding of the current brand from a personal perspective – talk to staff, suppliers and clients. It’s a different, but effective way to look at your brand. Focus on how you would like to be perceived and how you’d like to position your brand in the market.

Ask the important questions of your brand:

• Have strong proactive relationships
• Who are your customers?
• What are their needs?
• How are you different from your competitors?
• Who would you like to target?
• Who are your ideal customers?

This conversation is the foundation for your brand. If you have difficulty clearly answering these questions, you have identified the areas that need assistance. This is where a branding consultant or agency like Liquid can help.

Build your brand from the foundations

Once you have a deep understanding of your brand, what it stands for and the needs of your clients, the next stage is to communicate this brand knowledge through different marketing channels. Your new brand will help grow your company with a new customer perception that truly reflects your company.

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If your business is thinking about taking your brand to the next level, talk to us and let’s maximise your branding’s potential.

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]]> https://liquidcreativity.com.au/branding-help-for-companies/feed/ 0 Your Business Needs a Brand Visual Language https://liquidcreativity.com.au/brand-visual-language/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/brand-visual-language/#respond Tue, 21 Aug 2018 23:49:42 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=14149 Businesses can no longer rely on a simple style guide to maximise their brand's power, a brand visual language ensures all you are sending the right messages across all your visuals.

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BRANDING   |   POSTED ON 20.08.2018

Your Business Needs a Brand Visual Language



A brand style guide or brand guideline is a document that many successful businesses and big brands use to make sure all their branded communications and marketing are consistent with their brand’s identity and values. It’s become a standard for many businesses that want to ensure that employees really understand the brand and how it needs to be used across all touch points.

CSIA branding style guide
This is a page of a brand visual language for CSIA, the Customer Service Institute of Australia that Liquid created. A good brand visual language shows more than a font and colours as shown above, but as you will see further in the article, a good visual language should set a standard aesthetic strategy.

What’s a visual language of your brand?

As online disruptors flood marketplaces with competitors, most businesses are now seeing the need to take their branding to the next level. A visual language is the way your brand creatively and emotionally connects with people. It’s how you capture your brand story, personality and values. It depicts an emotion, such as whether your brand is caring, family orientated or fun.

Why does your brand need one?

A basic brand style guide usually details rules for using the logo, colour palettes, font guidelines and other aesthetic rules. From iconography, to graphics, photos and illustration styles, your visual language ensures that everything is working to make your brand unique, stands out above the rest and is memorable for your target audience.

brand visual language

Make brand consistency easier

Often brands think that if they have a beautiful logo and the right set of colours, everything will fall in to place and the customers will come. But no longer can you rely on sitting pretty if your competitors are communicating more value for your customers or if they’re snapping up the top spots on search engines. Businesses need to have their brand singing from the same brand style guide.

A visual language helps your brand relate to your audience in a memorable way. Today, brands produce more content for social media and online than ever before, and if your imagery and visual styles look like a hodgepodge or your Facebook graphics look like a completely different brand to your Instagram page, then you’re confusing your target audience and putting up barriers. Strong, consistent and clear communication across all mediums helps convert people into paying customers.

If you create branded marketing and communications that have no clear, visible links between them, you dilute your brand’s impact and your audience can miss the key messages of your campaign or worse, they mistake it as content from your competitors.

CSIA branding iconography

Concentrate your brand power

Starting to consider your brand’s visual language, allows you to reflect on your target audience and how you can create a visual style that appeals to their needs. Your overall brand visual direction should be very targeted and tailored to appeal to your specific customer, rather than trying to appeal to all people. The more you know and understand how your customer thinks and their needs, the more you can tailor your visual story.

If you are using different photographic and illustrative styles across your marketing, advertising and branded communications without considering what appeals to your audience, you may not be capturing the attention of potential customers. People usually make purchasing decisions when they have seen a message that resinates with them over and over again. The message gains trust the more people see it in a consistent way.

CSIA brand photo style

Ensure your brand’s visual essence is maintained

Once you’ve determined your brand’s visual language, an aesthetic style and emotive story that appeals to your preferred customer, then it can be outlined in a guide for your employees to use when building your brand through marketing and branded communications.

Maintaining your emotive essence of your visual branding is the key to consumers creating positive first impressions of your brand. In fact, a study from Northumbria and Sheffield Universities found that 94 percent of first impressions of a brand or service is based entirely on the design of visual content. This purely aesthetic decision-making leaves no room for clashing styles and confusing graphics and a brand visual language ensures there is always a quality control document that employees can reference.

branding first impressions

Brands need to move beyond a simple logo and colour style guide and start thinking about the emotive visuals they can use to bring their brand identity to life and add meaning. Your business might have a beautifully designed logo but if your visuals don’t mean anything, don’t connect with your customer, are not on message and they don’t tell a story about your brand, it says to your customer that you don’t know who you are as a brand. And why would a customer bother with a brand that is confusing and can’t communicate what they can do to make their life easier or better?

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If your business is thinking about taking your brand to the next level with a brand visual language strategy, talk to us and let’s maximise your branding’s potential.

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]]> https://liquidcreativity.com.au/brand-visual-language/feed/ 0 A Look at Crumpler’s Rebrand https://liquidcreativity.com.au/crumpler-rebrand/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/crumpler-rebrand/#respond Wed, 06 Jun 2018 00:20:40 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=12907 From friendly, colourful bike messenger bags to cutting edge fashionable accessories, we take a look at Crumpler's recent rebrand and examine how a brand evolves for the contemporary market.

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REBRAND   |   POSTED ON 06.06.2018

A Look at Crumpler’s Rebrand


Bag designer and manufacturer Crumpler has turned heads in the last couple of weeks with the launch of their rebrand. The local Melbourne brand is evolving and as The Age headline declared the “laptop bag icon grows up”.

Crumpler has well and truly established itself in the area of laptop bags, backpacks, work bags and travel bags in the last few years. Walking the streets of Melbourne, you can spot their bags worn by men in suits, university students and backpackers alike. This is a far cry from the messenger bags aimed at bicycle couriers and messengers that debuted in 1995 when Crumpler launched.

The launch of a new brand identity came with a repositioning of their brand strategy making Crumpler a really interesting case study to examine how a business can do a full rebrand in every sense of the word from design to marketing.

Before the rebrand: Function over fashion

The original range of bags, with their bright colours, clever designs, durability and functionality has evolved to backpacks, suitcases, laptop bags and work bags. With their ever-expanding range of styles and looks, Crumpler realised that their current branding didn’t reflect who they were today.

“A lot of our early bags were function over form,” tells Patrick Regester, Marketing Content and Community Coordinator to The Age, “and while function still matters, we want our bags to look awesome.” The same could be said about their iconic red logo with the handwritten typeface and the Crumpler man.

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Crumpler marketing materials before the rebrand.

At the time it helped their cool bags stand out from the pack and supported their irreverent marketing approach, but as CEO Adam Wilkinson says, “ As times have changed, and the world has become more connected, our customers have evolved too, and it was time to honour the brand with a refresh and to bring the Crumpler man into the 21st century.”

Evolving Crumpler into the 21st century

All businesses have to evolve to fit the needs of their target audience and to appeal to the contemporary market and while the branding, like their bags were well-known and functioning well, they found the large round, red logo was clashing and not fitting in with the new styles and range of bags they wanted to create.

As bags have become more and more like a piece worn to complement one’s work wear, Crumpler needed to appeal to the fashion, trends and sensibilities of an audience wider than bike couriers and so did their brand identity.

The Crumpler man grows up and gets a haircut

With the launch of “Pronounced Alive”, their newest range of bold, bright futuristic bags, is a more versatile and adaptive logo with the new wordmark taking primary place on the bags and the new Crumpler man – which is made up of the letters in the wordmark – being used more subtly and as a supporting feature.

crumpler rebrand logo

It’s an edgier brand identity that suggests that Crumpler still plans to be innovative in their designs rather than follow trends of fashion. Their choice of using the wordmark allows for easier adaptability as it can change colours and is less “in your face” as Regester puts it, than the original logo.

This new brand identity is a clever way of making a brand identity more flexible with the vast array of new products and collections for different demographics and it really lets the design of the new bags attract the attention and be the hero.

After the rebrand: A new direction

The Crumpler brand is growing up and is opening itself up to be a bag for a wider range of users for different purposes, and the branding did need to move on and be that new identity.

No longer are their bags just for couriers. Crumpler needed to reflect this change if they want to attract the university student who’s on trend, to the working professional looking for a bag to impress and represent their professional style.

rebrand crumpler brand positioning

rebranding crumpler new brand style
Crumpler’s new Pronounced Alive marketing campaign with the new branding.

Crumpler’s rebrand shows how a business can evolve and still be true to their original values and principles. It highlights the need to continually assess how your brand is perceived in the contemporary market and how you would like your brand to evolve for future growth and expansion.

By repositioning their brand to reach a wider audience and appeal to more people, Crumpler manages to still be an innovative company with a passion to making well designed bags that stand the test of time – and now for Crumpler, has the right brand identity to help them do just that.

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If your business is thinking of rebranding or wondering if you should rebrand,  contact Liquid and let’s chat about what your brand needs.

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]]> https://liquidcreativity.com.au/crumpler-rebrand/feed/ 0 How to Build a Brand: A Business Owner’s Guide https://liquidcreativity.com.au/brand-building-business-owners-guide/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/brand-building-business-owners-guide/#respond Thu, 17 May 2018 01:17:22 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=9517 In today’s world of global brands battling it out with an ever-increasing number of start-ups, a beautifully built brand is a necessity. Here's our starter guide to building a brand out of your business.

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BRANDING



How to Build a Brand: A Business Owner’s Guide


Creating a brand with real appeal is something every business owner aspires to and for good reason.

In today’s world of global brands battling it out with an ever-increasing number of start-ups, a beautifully built brand is a necessity.

Think of branding as a way to use your logo, brand name and colours to trigger memories, emotions and a sense of relationship in the consumers’ mind.

Your goal is to build strong connection with everyone in the market – most particularly your target audience – one they will instantly recognise and relate to.

Is branding really that important?

I’m sure you’ve heard that to be successful in business, you need to understand cash flow is king, leadership is a skill to be mastered and innovation is the key to success.

So next to these, can branding really be that important?

Yes, it is; and the difference branding can make is seen in one of your most important measures – sales.

US brand agency MBLM looked at 386 companies in its Brand Intimacy Report for 2017, from 15 industries across three distinct markets: America, Mexico and the United Arab Emirates.

What they found was brands which rated in the top 10 for ‘intimacy’ achieved an average 10.3% annual growth in revenue over the last decade compared to 3.2% for Fortune top 500 companies.

A brand guide

So how does your business get a piece of this superior performance?

Let’s start with one piece of advice: great brands operate on three levels: a promise your product will solve a problem, an emotional connection customers respond to, and an association customers believe says something about them to their social group.

To stay in business, your brand simply must deliver on the first level. To prosper, great brands, build all three aspects into their media, marketing and communications.

Positioning in the market

Successful brand building strategies are highly selective about where their brands stand in the market place.

To do this well, you need to be fundamentally clear on which part of the market you want to serve and which you don’t.

The best way to think about this is not as old-style measures such as price versus quality, but rather what your target consumers are thinking about and feeling when they choose which brand they buy.

Think of these as the sticky elements which appeal to the real purpose behind a purchase – containing an emotional element and a social reason.

For instance, someone buying sausages for a BBQ may be as attracted to telling their guests about how their butcher draws on their European heritage to hand make their product, and they wouldn’t dream of buying a value pack from their supermarket.

As you can see from this example, while differentiation from competitors’ brands may be important, how you engage people and meet their underlying needs is as important as any physical difference between your products and others in the market.

Once you have determined what you want your brand to stand for, it’s time to crystallise this understanding into a positioning statement.

Your positioning should be a clearly worded guide ensuring your brand always lives up to its promises. Make sure it’s:

  1. Clear, simple and memorable
  2. Crafted to the emotional and tangible needs of your customers
  3. Unique – differentiated from competitors
  4. Credible
  5. Matches perfectly with evidence your brand works
  6. Definitive, a guide for your business decisions.

Creating a brand name

Consider your brand name carefully so that it is appealing and sustainable, lasting for years without the need for chopping and changing.

Your brand name needs to fit in with your positioning statement and strike the right emotional chord.

What is does not have to do is literally name the product, as this can be rather limiting in the long run. And it’s always best to avoid a play on words as these usually comes across as cheap and amateurish.

A great example of a brand name that avoids these two drawbacks is Red Balloon, which emerged from the highly competitive on-line gift market a decade ago.

Red Balloon doesn’t describe the gift buying process but in combination with its brand identity, is about finding experiences and gifts. The name reflects the RedBalloon brand, it is unique, memorable and emotive, which is why it has proven to be a very successful brand.

Brand identity

Brand identity is just another way of describing how you design the visual aspects of your brand – logo, colour scheme, font style, imagery and other cues which bring your branding to life.

Designing a complete brand identity is quite a process in itself which we have described here but suffice to say, when your customers see your brand’s visual cues (logo, colours etc.) your goal is for them to recognise it and respond in just the way you want them to.

Keep talking and listening

No matter how small your business is now, your customers are one of the most important assets you have – if you keep engaging with them.

Listening and responding to their needs and always keeping your messages ‘on brand’ will reinforce that you’re serious about your brand’s promise.

Naturally enough, the rise of social media provides brands with an ideal way to engage with customers, impress their friends and get your message out into the market. But it also gives you real-time intelligence on what you’re doing right and where you need to lift your game.

One of the better examples I’ve seen lately is a Melbourne real estate agent who has been running competitions on Facebook asking people to creatively name features of their local area and share with at least three people to be eligible for a prize.

For this business, being seen as a local is key to their brand strategy – and the prompt to share is rewarding their customer base for getting the word out.

Your brand guide is a living document

Great brands take on a life of their own, and just like people, successful ones evolve some of their characteristics over time but they never change their underlying essence.

Once you have completed your brand building guide, you should incorporate regular reviews (say every 6 to 12 months) into your process and a refresh of your entire brand every 3 – 4 years.

Balancing consistency with an evolving relevant personality will help ensure the brand you build will help your business achieve ongoing success.

If you’d like to learn more about how to build a brand, contact brand agency Liquid Creativity and let’s make a great brand from your business.

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]]> https://liquidcreativity.com.au/brand-building-business-owners-guide/feed/ 0 Pulse: Creating a Brand for a New Digital Platform https://liquidcreativity.com.au/pulse-brand/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/pulse-brand/#respond Tue, 01 May 2018 23:50:40 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=11043 When MMG approached us about creating a brand for their new communications platform, we wanted to make sure that the brand endures. This is the story of how Liquid created the Pulse brand.

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BRANDING   |   POSTED ON 02.05.2018

Pulse: Creating a Brand for a New Digital Platform


When a century old media organisation approached us about creating a brand for their new media and communications platform, we wanted to make sure that the brand we created would last the test of time.

A new brand for a veteran media group

McPherson Media Group is a regional media organisation that owns and produces local newspapers for regional centres as well as creating websites and printing media and communications for community groups, industry associations and organisations.

MMG wanted to diversify their product offerings and launch a communications platform that centralises all their clients’ communications needs in one place. The brief was to develop a name, brand identity and brand strategy to communicate how the platform can help companies reach more customers. The brand was required within a small timeframe in order to launch quickly. The brand needed to be powerful, simple and articulate the purpose of the platform.

After discussing MMG’s requirements with this new brand, Liquid set about to find a name express the powerful reach of the platform. The challenge was finding a short, memorable name which was also available as a domain name.

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The name game

We set about brainstorming names and developed a shortlist that captured the feeling of a central platform, movement, power, reach and connection. We worked with many different configurations and combinations of words to flesh out the possibilities.

We provided a shortlist of names which focused on these emotions, supported by rationales explaining the brand strategy behind each. Out of this process came the name Pulse.

The name came from the idea of “being on the pulse” or knowing the most up to date and current information.

Pulse also brings to mind continuing bursts of energy and vitality generated from one source but with a powerful reach. Pulse gives the feeling of being alive, active, informative and always current.

This helps communicate how the platform can regularly connect and engage customers with industry knowledge and expertise. It’s about reaching more people than ever before. Pulse is the place to keep customers informed with current and future information.

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Discovering Pulse’s identity

With the approved name, we set about creating a vibrant and friendly brand identity to communicate all these principles that underpinned the name. We researched competitors to ensure we positioned the brand differently and created an identity that stood out in the market.

We started sketching initial logo concepts and tagline ideas illustrating the themes and ethos behind the name. This initial process was similar to the brainstorming section with developing the name Pulse. It was about exploring all the different ways the name Pulse could be brought to life and add more meaning through the brand identity.

We then assessed the concepts to determine the best approach in line with the brand strategy. The best concepts were then developed further, to refine and simplify the visual message as much as possible. This development process takes time but ensures the final brand identity is strong and really captures the core essence of the brand.

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Ready to launch in the market

We then sent a shortlist of the best brand identities to MMG for review. The client returned with a clear direction of their preferred concepts and asked for some colour versions and refinements to consider.

The name, identity and positioning really captured the message of ‘a powerful communications hub’. The brand was launched with a website, sales brochure and tender document. These communication tools consistently supported the strategy and helped staff to easily sell the platform to potential clients.

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What’s happened since

The Pulse staff can now clearly talk to prospective clients about how the platform can add value. The marketing manager at Cameron McPherson stated that Pulse is “already receiving great feedback from our market.”

He also commented on the process; “the experience of working with the team at Liquid has been great – start to finish – as they are genuinely interested in our business and what our goals are. They’ve produced an exceptional brand and presence for us…and we look forward to future opportunities to work with them.”

The whole process of creating a brand can be daunting for any business. This case study demonstrates that a considered branding process in collaboration with a brand specialist gives you an objective perspective on your brand. Looking at your brand from a business and customer perspective helps to accurately define your brand and create a strategy and identity that communicates the right message to staff and customers.

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You can see more of our work with Pulse here, and if you’re thinking of building a new brand or refreshing your current brand, contact us your brand agency Liquid Creativity and let’s start making a brand that reaches your business’ full potential.

 

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]]> https://liquidcreativity.com.au/pulse-brand/feed/ 0 Branding and Design Trends to Keep an Eye on in 2020 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/2018-branding-trends/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/2018-branding-trends/#respond Thu, 18 Jan 2018 04:45:31 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=9535 Branding continues to be an exciting and creative industry as we go through the most interesting trends that the industry is watching as we head into a new year.

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BRANDING   |   POSTED ON 19.01.2018

Branding Trends to Look for in 2020


As we start a new year, the annual predictions about what to expect in the year ahead from design and branding media websites all come rushing out. We scoured the internet for the predictions that we think will come into fruition and hope it inspires you in your brand identity and logo designs for your brand in 2020.

1. More typography and the return of the serif

Typography, the fundamental design element that you are seeing right now as you read this sentence – or the more widely used term of fonts – will continue to be an important part of brand identities.

More and more brands are deciding to not have graphics and imagery in their brand identity and instead choosing custom type to express their brand values through.

In other news on the font front, 2018 will see the return of serifs as brands start to rediscover their beauty and use in the digital sphere. Expect more modified and customised fonts that blend the modern and traditional to create their own unique look and stand out.

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The English Premier League’s brand identity is able to adapt and change to suit the size and space it needs to be in without losing the essence of the branding.

3. Responsive logos

The most frequently mentioned trend in design and branding websites this year is the rise of the responsive logo – a brand identity that can be applied across a number of platforms. It makes sense that this trend is becoming more and more popular as the future progresses towards a mobile and digital future.

Brands have come to realise that their logo, just like their websites need to be legible and recognisable on a myriad of platforms from their packaging to the small, round profile picture on social media.

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3. Moving away from flat design and rediscovering form

You don’t have to be a designer to see that flat shapes and simple colours have been in vogue in brand and logo design the past couple of years.

While we doubt we will return to the abstract and blobby 3D shapes that used to be popular in logo design, 2018 will see a blending of the flat with dimensions, including drop shadows and gradients.

As augmented and virtual reality rises in popularity more brands will be thinking about their use of space seriously – online and in print. Big brands have begun to think about how they can present themselves to and wow a market that is now more educated about the digital world.

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Spotify is one of the brands to use bold colours in their branding and marketing campaigns recently.

4. Bright colours and gradients

The shift from pastels to bright bold colours is already underway as brands continue to experiment with new colour combinations that pop in a platform filled with so many distractions.

These striking colours are being used in all sorts of marketing materials and branding such as the identity of the iPhone X which uses bold colour gradients. Instagram and Spotify have already adapted to this trend in their brand identity and more brands – particularly tech and youth-focused businesses – will be using brighter colours this year.

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Take trends with a grain of salt

Like with shoulder pads, grunge and Gangnam Style, trends come and go so always be weary of being too fashionable. Companies that morph and change with every new design fad don’t have the longevity and loyalty that established brands have.

While it’s always good to know what is going on in the world today, the best brands stick to the best design principles and are underpinned by values and a strong strategy. They evolve by taking on the best of contemporary brand thinking and adapt to the times and their audience’s needs. These are the brands which will outlast the fashion of the seasons and live well into the future.

If you’d like to learn more about how to make your brand a classic and outlast the volatile trends of today, contact us and let brand agency Liquid Creativity help your brand live forever.

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]]> https://liquidcreativity.com.au/2018-branding-trends/feed/ 0 The Birth of the Iconic Apple Logo https://liquidcreativity.com.au/birth-of-the-iconic-apple-logo/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/birth-of-the-iconic-apple-logo/#comments Tue, 09 Jun 2015 06:25:41 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=4241 Why has the logo been so successful and still stands the test of time? Well it all comes down to the fact that it ticks off all the basics of logo design.

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Apple logo

LOGO   |   POSTED ON 09.06.2015

The Birth of the Iconic Apple Logo


Sometimes things just all fall into place. A simple idea, a short turn around and yet it all just works.

While you may not be familiar with the name Rob Janoff, we guarantee you are familiar with his work. How do we know this? He is the creator of the iconic Apple logo – the same design used today to represent one of the largest organisations in the world.

You can read more about the Apple logo story on Rob’s website but it goes a bit like this:

‘The initial identity development was to coincide with the introduction of the brand’s first personal computer, the Apple II. The entire design process with the upstart client only took about two weeks. After the agency’s initial meeting, Janoff went to work developing the Apple icon based on his examination of physical cross-sections of real apples. A single design illustration was then created of a ‘rainbow-striped’ apple.

The design with its multi-colored stripes was promptly approved for production by Steve Jobs. Production artwork was then developed for print ads, signage hardware emblems and software labels on cassette tapes, all in preparation for the launch of the Apple II in April of 1977 at the West Coast Computer Fair. For the next 20 years, the now famous ‘rainbow version’ logo adorned all Apple products from its computer products to the Newton PDA. The only concept ever presented to Apple was an immediate success!’

‘The creative director thought I had a good way of simplifying and visualising difficult electronic concepts. I knew all the tech kind of stuff went on in Silicon Valley but I was never enough of a computer geek to really understand how it worked.’ – Rob Janoff

Why has the logo been so successful and still stands the test of time? Well it all comes down to the fact that it ticks off all the basics of logo design.

  • It’s clean and simple;
  • It didn’t follow the trend of the time which tended to be more intricate/fussy designs;
  • It’s use of colour (both now and back then) aligns with both the market and the product offering;
  • It’s not changed too frequently – the core design hasn’t change since the very beginning – allowing the company to build unprecedented brand recognition;
  • It wasn’t too literal – an apple but not selling fruit, selling computers;
  • It didn’t copy anyone else;
  • It couldn’t use too many fonts – in fact, the logo doesn’t include any words at all simply because the design meant that it didn’t need it;
  • It worked/works in a range of contexts and sizes (from the products to billboards) without losing legibility;
  • It offered a unique point of difference.

‘A lot of people ask me what it’s like seeing your logo every time you turn around. It’s a fabulous experience and it’s rare. I don’t think a lot of people get that opportunity. Watching what I created in the ’70s go through changes is kind of like having kids and watching them grow up. I’m terribly proud of my kids and I’m terribly proud of the logo as well.’ – Rob Janoff

Another great example of a single design idea evolving through the years and the changing markets is Shell (below).

shell_logos

Not all, in fact hardly any, logo design processes are as simple and as fast as the process for the iconic Apple logo but it definitely highlights how a great, professional design can stand the test of time and evolve with the market.

To learn more, contact your local brand agency Liquid Creativity today.

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]]> https://liquidcreativity.com.au/birth-of-the-iconic-apple-logo/feed/ 1 Hillary Clinton’s New Logo https://liquidcreativity.com.au/hillary-clintons-new-logo/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/hillary-clintons-new-logo/#respond Wed, 20 May 2015 23:41:43 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=4025 Gone are the days of politicians campaigning solely on credentials and policies. Now it’s just as much about the politician as a brand.

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Hillary Clinton

LOGO   |   POSTED ON 21.05.2015

Hillary Clinton’s New Logo


Gone are the days of politicians campaigning solely on credentials and policies. Now it’s just as much about the politician as a brand. With the US Presidential Election already picking up momentum, we look at the brand and more specifically the logo of Presidential candidate, Hillary Clinton.

In line with launching her bid to be President, a new logo was launched, but it’s not as simple as it sounds.

When Barack Obama ran for President his logo was highly patriotic to offset questions about his unusual name and background – it showed he was all about America and what it stood for.

obama_08_logos

Coming from being a previous First Lady, there was little question about Hillary Clinton’s background, particularly for those of us that lived through the 90s – so the question was how to differentiate Hillary from Bill, from the past and to appeal to and engage with a new generation of voters and a very different America to the one her husband governed.

The logo, while called amateurish by some, first appeared strong yet confusing to many.

Hilary-for-Amrica-logo

With or without the text, the originally launched logo had many questioning the use of the colour red (the colour of her opponents) and the arrow moving to the right (does it mean moving forward or moving to the right in political terms?). And over on social media platforms people also saw symbolism between the logo and a plane flying into the Twin Towers – while that seems laughable to most, it is concerning that many people didn’t seem to engage with the logo and sought to pull it to pieces – piece by piece? The H with an arrow stirred up lots of commentary. It got people asking questions and making comment both negative and positive.

It does beg the question of how much feedback they sought on the logo prior to launch. Did no one question the colour choices? Did no one question the potential meanings of the arrow? It reinforces to us the absolute importance of obtaining objective feedback and lots of it before sending a logo (or a brand) live.

And still being 19 months away from the election it looks like we’ll be seeing many variations of Hillary’s logo.

hrc-gay-marriage-logo_custom1

This week saw the launch of a rainbow coloured logo in support of marriage equality (above), the logo on a background of wheat fields in Iowa and mountains in New Hampshire (below).

hillary_clinton_kingsley_Nevada_Iowa_NewHampshire_social_icons

It’s a little too soon to gauge the success of the logo – it ticks some boxes (it’s simple, it works at different sizes) but not others (it’s being changed so often it may struggle to gain recognition, it may imply messages that are not necessarily correct) so I guess we’ll have to wait and see how pans out over the next year and a half. Whether you love it or hate it, you have to admit, it’s definitely getting people talking and starting to define the issues that are important to Hillary and her campaign (the brand story); sometimes that’s half the battle won.
What do you think of Hillary’s new logo?
If you’re in the market for brandingrebranding and your logo design is part of that process, contact your local brand agency Liquid Creativity for advice.

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]]> https://liquidcreativity.com.au/hillary-clintons-new-logo/feed/ 0 The Basics of Logo Design to Begin Your Branding Journey https://liquidcreativity.com.au/basics-of-logo-design/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/basics-of-logo-design/#respond Mon, 30 Mar 2015 23:18:10 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=3886 While just one aspect of your brand, your logo is often the first impression potential clients have of your business...

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Logo Design

BRANDING   |   POSTED ON 31.03.2015

The Basics of Logo Design to Begin Your Branding Journey


While just one aspect of your brand, your logo is often the first impression potential clients have of your business – better make it a good one. It’s important that your logo best represents your business and is consistent with all other aspects of your branding. And while many new businesses jump straight to the logo design, it’s recommended that the logo design be just one step on your branding journey rather than treated as a stand-alone task.

Before starting work with your branding specialist it’s important that you understanding the fundamentals of logo design.

To do

  • Define and know your audience – before any website design is started you need to work out who your audience is, where your logo will be seen and how it will be used. What will appeal to your target market? Will your logo be on your shopfront or used in a Facebook cover photo? Your logo will need to not only appeal to your audience but be usable across all media.
  • Aim for a point of difference – your logo is your chance to separate your business from all the others so strive for difference to really stand out.
  • Sketch, sketch and keep sketching – Again, even if the plan is to have your branding agency complete the final design and even if drawing isn’t your talent – sketch. Don’t erase anything, just sketch pages and pages if the inspiration strikes. Like a picture brainstorming session – it will give you a great idea of want you like and don’t like and can be given to your designer to highlight the direction you are heading in.
  • Keep it simple – avoid anything that is fussy, confusing or difficult to understand.
  • Pay attention to how it will work – be careful with sizing and legibility, create alternates and variations and pay close attention to spacing and composition – logos will need to be different sizes for different applications so make sure it works and is still legible when reduced and enlarged. Your branding team can help with this.
  • Don’t forget the psychology of colour – different colours mean different things so ensure that the colour/s you select best represent the feeling you want to evoke and the action you want people to take.
  • Get feedback – Ask everyone what they think of your chosen logo (or your top 3 picks) before you roll it out.

logo_design2

Not to do

  • Add too much – the strongest logos are those that are not complicated or overly fussy so focus on one key feature. The more you add to your logo the more you increase the likelihood you will just confuse your audience. If the proposed design is full of detail try removing something and see if it still projects the same message. If it does then that details probably wasn’t necessary.
  • Follow the latest trends – you will just blend in with the other logos that are just following the latest trends and you will end up with a logo that is outdated in a few short years, if not sooner.
  • Change it too frequently – all logos take time to build up recognition, by changing your logo too often you just don’t give your audience enough time to build up that recognition.
  • Copy others – you could actually be committing plagiarism and in breach of copyright laws. The entire point of a logo is to set your business apart from the rest – so don’t just copy what someone has – use this is an opportunity to distinguish your business,  your business name and your brand.
  • Be too expected or literal – sometimes the unexpected can work in your favour. If you sell cars there is no hard and fast rule that says your logo has to be or include a car – think outside the box or recreate the box altogether.
  • Use too many fonts – using numerous fonts will just make your logo appear confused. Most logo designers and branding specialists recommend using no more than two different fonts in a single logo design.

If you’re in the market for branding, rebranding and your logo design is part of that process, contact your brand agency Liquid Creativity for advice.

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]]> https://liquidcreativity.com.au/basics-of-logo-design/feed/ 0 Mobile responsiveness – fitting a round peg in the square hole https://liquidcreativity.com.au/mobile-responsiveness-fitting-a-round-peg-square-hole/ https://liquidcreativity.com.au/mobile-responsiveness-fitting-a-round-peg-square-hole/#respond Tue, 20 Jan 2015 02:06:14 +0000 https://liquidcreativity.com.au/?p=3582 If you are at the beginning of establishing your brand or are ready for a rebrand then mobile responsiveness is...

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Brand Readability

LOGO   |   POSTED ON 20.01.2015

Mobile responsiveness – fitting a round peg in the square hole


So we’ve got that our websites and apps need to be mobile responsive – they must be enabled to be viewed and resized to suit the ever increasingly popular mobile app devices – smartphone, tablets, smartwatches – but in ensuring they are functioning correctly on these devices, we may have overlooked a very important aspect – our logo!

As devices get smaller and design for them more ‘square’ – where does that leave the round, circular, often icon circle logo? For some round logos like ours (Liquid Creativity) they work equally well on all devices – retaining a beautiful circle for others, they may need to be reworked a little since they are left trying to fit a round peg in a square hole for want of a better analogy.

Mobile responsiveness will automatically shrink and rearrange your website to fit and if your logo is square, or rectangular, then you will probably be fine but it does leave some with a round logo with a dilemma – will our logo still be recognised if the shape is changed completely?

So what are the choices to ensure brand consistency, building recognition and ensuring readability?

  • Have two logos, a dual attack if you will – a circular logo AND a rectangular/square, mobile appropriate logo on all sites – for desktops and mobile devices – but is that too much on the smaller screen?
  • Have two logos – a circular logo for desktop viewers and a rectangular or square logo for mobile devices?
  • Redesign the logo/branding to ‘be’ rectangular so that it will automatically suit all current mobile devices and the sizes.

The concern with these options is that they all have the potential to confuse your audience and take longer to build trust and recognition. If you are at the beginning of establishing your brand or are ready for a rebrand then mobile responsiveness is something that definitely needs to be taken into consideration during the brand development process.

You could alter your logo over a period of time to ensure that customers are made aware of the move but this too has risks and would take a strict brand strategy to ensure it is all rolled out in an appropriate manner.

An example of this is the logo changes made by Microsoft.




While mobile responsiveness isn’t the only aspect to your digital presence, it is increasingly important. If you need help to determine how your logo can work in this evolving mobile world, contact your local brand agency Liquid Creativity to learn more.

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