Simplify Your Logo to Amplify Your Logo

by | Jan 22, 2014 | Branding, Design, Marketing

It’s tempting to jam your corporate identity full of bells and whistles, but the strongest identities are still the simplest ones.

When designing a logo, it’s easy to go overboard. There are so many great elements you can work with (colors, textures, patterns, shapes, borders, typography, gradients, icons, etc.) that it’s tempting to include a little bit of everything to get your point across.

In a massively oversaturated media environment, however, a viewer simply doesn’t have enough attention to spare for complicated logos. A bold and simple logo can cut through the crap and be seen (and remembered), but a complex logo causes the viewer’s brain to simply ignore it.

It’s a defense mechanism to preserve attention because there just isn’t time to engage with everything trying to grab our attention. The more “stuff” you put into a logo, the less it will be seen and remembered.

For this reason, a key trend in logo design is to purge any unnecessary elements. New logos are almost always simpler and cleaner than those being replaced, and many rebranding efforts are essentially just simplifications of the existing visual identity.

Clients often get frustrated with designers constantly trying to simplify things, but there are valid explanations for why customers really do respond better to strong, simple designs.

Browsing through any branding awards, you’ll notice a distinctive trend toward logo simplification. These recent rebranding examples show how companies are really beginning to understand the dramatic and powerful effect of simplicity on customer responsiveness and engagement.

Now, this certainly doesn’t mean that the perfect logo is just the name of the company set in Helvetica Bold. The logo still needs to represent the uniqueness and character of the brand as well as it possibly can, and it needs to offer some kind of visual interest.

This trend towards simplicity means designers need to think like poets, not novelists. Instead of using every tool Adobe Illustrator offers and trying to convey every shred of meaning possibly in the logo, it makes more sense (cognitively and practically) to pare it down to the bare minimum.

What can you do with two visual elements instead of ten? What can you do with a single color instead of an entire palette? Does that font really need an outline, a bevel, a drop shadow, and rivets?

Even though going the simple route can make you feel a little naked (like you forgot to put on pants this morning), it makes complete sense when trying to of create a remarkable, memorable brand experience that will cut through the crap and get noticed by your target audience.

Tags:
Marketing Truths No One Will Admit

Marketing Truths No One Will Admit

In a recent thread on /r/marketing, the question was asked, "What is something no one in marketing will admit, but is definitely true?" While some of the answers in the thread were obviously snarky or pessimistic, there were also several answers that held a lot of...

The Product Design Pyramid

The Product Design Pyramid

If you make it to the top, you'll have one of the best and most delightful products in your market The product design and user experience design industries are full of vague phrases like "delightful experiences" without a lot of specifics about how to get there. Many...

Smart People Always Want to Mess This Up

Smart People Always Want to Mess This Up

Several weeks ago, my company released a new product: a tool that helps small service businesses with client follow-up. We did it very quietly, late one night after most of the department had gone home. A few of the product leaders made the decision, flipped the...

You Know Your Core Values—Now What?

You Know Your Core Values—Now What?

So you’ve identified your core values and everyone’s excited about them. Now what?The powerful experience of identifying a company’s core values is too often followed by the unforgivable act of forgetting about them. People frankly just don’t know what to do with core...

Every Document is an Experience

Every Document is an Experience

One simple but helpful step is to stop thinking about your company’s operational documents as merely transactional tools.Every document your company produces is an opportunity to emphasize and clarify what your company is all about. Spec sheets, release notes,...

Five Pillars of Social Media Marketing

Five Pillars of Social Media Marketing

It's easy to get whipped up into the hype of social media marketing. Maybe you're just getting started with a new brand account, or maybe you've just been put in charge of all the company's existing followers. Either way, here are some basic principles that'll help...

Why I Left the Agency World to Go Product-Side

Why I Left the Agency World to Go Product-Side

There are basically three ways to be a designer: FreelanceAgencyIn-houseEach of those three worlds has its own unique complexities and challenges, and it can take some experience moving between them before you find where you belong.I’ve been on the agency side of the...