Written by Bernadette Jiwa, on how sometimes even the most amazing designers get stuck at communicating their own message.
You help people to tell their brand stories every day. Designers give people a visual language with which to communicate to their audience.?? When a client comes to you for the design, they have, for the most part, already done the groundwork. They know who they are and who their target audience is. Your job is to pull the whole thing together with compelling visuals.
?How often do you stop to think about how you are communicating to your audience? Where do you start? Whatโs the story you want your own brand to communicate? Who is your audience? Are they ethical, green, large corporations, government organisations, global brands or tiny bakeries? How will you stand out? Is it better to fit in???
How do you begin framing your own brand story?
I think itโs possible to start by breaking it down into ten steps to consider.??
- Mission?
What are you doing right now, today? What happens because youย exist? - Vision?
What are or will be the results and effects of what you do in theย future? - Core values?
What are the attitudes and beliefs that shape your business culture? - Unique selling point?
Whatโs your edge, the thing that makes you standย out? - Emotional selling point?
Whatโs the intangible or aspiration that you sell? Think feelings not facts. Connection, freedom, ego, belonging.โฆ - Brand essence?
The core of what you do, the image it portrays and the signals itย sends. - Tagline?
One line that communicates everything. - Identity?
How the consumer perceives your brand. - Name?
The verbal hook on which all of the above hangs and is communicated, the icing on your cake. Comes in all the way down here at number nine! - Logo
?Last but not least the visual hook that represents your brand, the cherry on the top.???
Design brand framing that works
??Letโs look at some examples of well-framed design brands.??
One of my personal favourites because of their fabulous, flexible and evocative name is Believe in. In another life they were called biz-R! Believe inโs positioning is really interesting, they;
??โWork in partnership with brave clients to deliver engaging, provocative and effective brand experiences driven by ideas and solid research.โ??
Before stepping through their door you know you are going to get imaginative ideas that challenge the status quo.???
There can be no mistaking the niche that Designed by Good People works in. Everything from their name to their clearly stated values tells clients with a specific worldview a story.
??โWe found that we did better work when we worked for clients who believed in the same things we did.?
“We believe in sustainability.
?We believe in ethics.?
We believe in doing whatโs right whenever possible.?
We believe in strong ideas that are solutions to defined design problems.?
You do better work when you believe in what you do.“Thatโs why we set up โDesigned by Good Peopleโ. ?
“We have expertise in design, branding, print, packaging and web. We work in English and Spanish.”
One way to communicate your brand essence is via your portfolio. Miles Newlyn does that extremely well with his. Miles is a typography specialist and is famous for creating iconic brand identities such as the re-designed Honda logo and the Unilever U.??
Hereโs how he tells us about who he works with, and how;
โNewlyn is a world-renowned typographer and designer, specialising in the positioning and iconography of large organizations.?
“The process is simple, and divided into logical steps. It is done quickly, practically, and economically. The results innovate, communicate and add value.
“Large branding agencies make money by selling lengthy process;? evaluation, analysis, consensus, strategy, management… Your business probably has enough โprocessโ already โ you donโt need more, thatโs why the flexible way in which I work will quickly help you reach the world class status necessary for your brand.
“So, when it comes to the idea and what it looks like, come to me.”
?The last line is a brilliantly framed and placed unique selling point, which Miles can back up with his results.???
Eric Karjaluoto pulls off a deceptively simple piece of personal branding with his website. Check out the over-sized typographic menu. It tells us everything we need to know about him in just six words! And the slightly irreverent header on the website gives us a clue to his personality.??
โThis is my website. It is awesome.โ???
These are a few of my personal picks. I have many more but Iโd like to turn this discussion over to you.??
Which designers and design brands do you believe are framed uniquely and why? Who are your personal favourites? Which ones do you admire and respect? David and I would love to hear more in the comments.????
Your own brand storming session
Bernadette has kindly offered to give one commentator a brand storming session completely free (valued at $497). She’ll pick the winner from any answers to the above question(s).
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Update:
Mark Stuckert is the commentator whoโll be receiving Bernadette’s help.
Bernadette Jiwa is a verbal designer and brand architect based in Melbourne, Australia. She works with creative thinkers, entrepreneurs, designers, and bloggers to help them build ideas that spread.
Visit Bernadette’s website, The Story of Telling, and follow her on Twitter.
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