An award-winning logo never brought anybody any business.
Neither has a really cool color palette or set of identity
guidelines.
Those are all part of Branding – usually the domain of
design studios and often confused with "Brand." Not the same thing. And
in all honesty, it kind of honks me (me, Woody Hinkle) that design studios
often seem content to let the distinction go unnoticed by clients.
If you've read anything on our web site or know anything
about us, you know that the two things we do are Brand Development and Creative.
We're not a design studio and don't seek out that kind of work. Oh, we can design a
logo or web site and produce a corporate identity guide. And Frank (that would
be ace art director Frank Salonek) can come up with a color palette with the
best of them.
But we tend to try to avoid doing that stuff if the client
doesn't have a clear Brand or until we've helped them develop one. What the
hell good does it do to have a beautiful logo on a snazzy brochure if your
marketing materials aren't telling anybody why the hell they ought to do
business with you?
And I'm here to tell you right now in no uncertain terms
that people don't do business with you because of your logo. We can go out back
and fight about it if you want, but it's the truth.
People will do business with you because of what you offer
that the Next Guy doesn't. Or you offer it in a way that's more appealing than
the Next Guy. That differentiation is what you have to clarify first. Then, you
can make sure your Branding – the logo, ad campaign, tag line and all the rest
(which we can and will produce very well for you thankyouverymuch) – follow
your Brand.
While I realize that I can't paint everybody with such a broad
brush, it has been my experience that design studios and PR firms often have
one thing in common: They are focused on tactical things – what the logo looks
like, what type face works best, what hot-diggity-dog cool stuff they can put
in the web site, or what the message ought to be in the next press release.
And none of that stuff matters at all, if they aren’t
working off a single Brand strategy.
Because
your Brand is, well, it's the reason why anybody should give a damn what the hell
you're selling.
The old joke about clients often revolves around "make
the logo bigger." I'd say, make the logo second.
Do the Brand first.
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