Posts Tagged ‘business logo’
How to Make a Good First Impression in Business
Ensuring your brand remains consistent across the entire marketing mix and across every communications channel is essential to maintaining a consistent and coherent image in any competitive marketplace and should be the first consideration of your advertising agency.The variety of marketing channels available to any company today have their own specific demands and their own rules. A design might look great on your business card or letterhead but may not have the same impact on a poster, tube card, direct mail piece, display advertisement or online.
Print management with a view to not only cost effectiveness, but also how your brand is expressed to its maximum impact across all above, below and through the line channels is vital to effective communication with your target audiences. Central to all this is the initial corporate identity design, aside from its creativity and how it captures the spirit of your proposition, how effectively it can be translated across all those myriad expressions will determine its longevity and impact. There are some important things to remember when designing logos or corporate ID and here are some guidelines:
A logo designed in a vector based program such as Illustrator allows for much more flexibility in terms of colours and results in a much clearer image especially if there is text in the logo and you want to use it in large format. With this in mind, it is inadvisable to use a photograph in a logo. If you can’t use a vector based program then design it as large as possible!
Stick to using just one or two fonts in your logo. Over-use of different fonts can make a logo look cluttered and unprofessional. Any text you want to use in a logo should be clear and legible, or don’t use text at all.
You may need to use your logo for a variety of different purposes and in different ways. Remember that just because something looks good on A4 print materials doesn’t mean it will be so wonderful by the time it’s been expanded to fit exhibition graphics or a billboard. Whatever you create should work well across the smallest to the largest of applications.
You may want to use the logo on black or white backgrounds or dark or light coloured backgrounds so the logo should work equally well as a stand-alone element or in a coloured box. Allow for the possiblity that your logo may need to be used in mono (single colour) as well.
You have probably seen some designs that you like but it’s important to try to make your logo as individual as you possibly can. There is no reason not to incorporate aspects from other logo designs that you find appealing, but when it comes to it being original is what will get your logo noticed.