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Why Your Business Needs A Professionaly Designed Logo!

Many business professionals do not understand the importance of why a logo, especially a professionally designed logo, is important for their company. Another underestimated aspect is the cost to design such a logo. Let's take a look at the incredible impact a logo will have on your company, your customers, your prospects, and your competitors. AT&T, BMW, and McDonald's Logos

The Definition

According to Wikipedia, a logo is a mathematical element (ideogram, symbol, emblem, icon, sign) that, together with its logotype (a uniquely set and arranged typeface) form a trademark or commercial brand. Typically, a logo's design is for immediate recognition. The logo is one aspect of a company's commercial brand, or economic or academic entity, and its shapes, colors, fonts, and images usually are different from others in a similar market. Logos are also used to identify organizations and other non-commercial entities. Lets expand on this definition a bit.

 

Here are 7 elements/principles that make a logo iconic. A logo should be:

  • Describable
  • Memorable
  • Effective without color
  • Relevant
  • Simple
  • Versatile

Describable

When you are in the process of designing a logo or having a designer make one for you, you will be asked a series of questions about your company, mission, values, and the way the business runs. This is because all of these elements help create the image within the logo. It helps the designer to incorporate everything your company stands for. It should describe what you do and how you do it. It may not be obvious while looking at a logo, but in some way it should incorporate what your company is behind the scenes. Coca Cola Logo

Memorable

When I say a logo should be memorable, what company do you think of? More often than not, these three come straight to mind with virtually every person I have told this to: McDonald's, Nike, FedEx. What makes these three logos exceptional is the fact that they follow all of these 6 principles. Especially memorable. This is pretty self explanatory. I will let you stare and study these logos for the time being… Apple Logo

Effective without color

Yeah, your logo looks sweet. But how does it look without color? What does it look like with only one spot color? These are important questions that should be raised before a logo is finalized. Believe it or not, every logo does not look good without color. A professionaly designed one will. This should be important because of the different promotional collateral and advertising avenues that you may take on that will only allow for single color/no color printing processes.

Relevant

It is common sense, but over looked. Your logo should be relevant to the industry you are in. If it is old and out-dated, it should be updated to current trends and standards to be competitive with others in your niche.

Simple

An effective logo has to be simple in design and composition. This is because it has to be memorable and quickly recognizable. If you saw a busy logo that was complicated and hard to understand, you would be remembering it for the wrong reasons, if at all. Keeping it simple will allow the public to recognize it quickly as well. By this, I mean if your logo was on a billboard, they would know what it is within that 3 second time span while passing it on the freeway. Federal Express Logo

Can you see the arrow in the FedEx logo?

Versatile

Versatility is important and should be kept in mind while designing a logo. Here's why:

1.Your logo should be in vector format. This is a term that designers reference to, and should be making your logo in, as being scalable without any loss of quality. If you are working with a designer who is designing your logo in rasterized programs such as Adobe Photoshop—RUN! The program of choice for 99% of logo designers is Adobe Illustrator. This will enable your logo to have the best quality (smooth lines and transitions) no matter how big (billboards and posters) nor how small (pens and business cards) your logo will be sized.

 

2. Your logo should work in both vertical and horizontal format. You may not realize it at first, but the more mediums you use your logo on to promote and create brand awareness, the different layouts and formats will enable you to make the most out of the printable or displayable space provided.

 

Click here to see the evolution of 20 different brands over the coarse from when the company started to now. Very cool (and long)!

Conclusion

If your company and designer follow these 6 logo design principles, think outside of the box, keep your mind open to others' ideas and opinions, and brainstorm ideas until you can't see straight anymore, you are more than likely going to be able to come up with a logo that will inspire trust and communicate to clients, customers, and your target market. As long as you are selling products that people want or services that people need, your logo will create that lasting impression that is necessary for brand awareness.

My Plug

You knew it was coming. If you didn't, you should have. You may have been referred to my website by a search engine, friend, or another blog of some sort. Feel free to look around my website and get a feel for the endless amount of possibilities we can come up with together as a team for your business. I specialize in graphic, logo, and website design and can help your business with whatever design problems you are facing. If you are in need a logo for your business, you've found your designer. Just click on Hire Me, fill out the Design Brief, and I will get back to you with a quote.


9 B-E-A-Utiful responses...

  1. [...] Why Your Business Needs A Professionaly Designed Logo! | KDzyne … [...]


    5 Tips to Heat Up Your On-Line Marketing Using Off-Line Tact | gOOd SeLL MaRT on December 15th, 2009 at 7:29 am

  2. great article. added you on twitter.


    Jeremy on December 28th, 2009 at 9:24 am

  3. Thank you Jeremy! I always appreciate comments. I am now following you. :-)


    Kevin Donnigan on December 28th, 2009 at 8:39 pm

  4. Hey Nice post! Although……it looks a little like Jacob Cass’s post http://justcreativedesign.com/2009/07/27/what-makes-a-good-logo/.


    John Mark Herskind on January 6th, 2010 at 1:45 pm

  5. Thanks John. I agree that it does look like JC’s post (who I admire a lot), however, it also looks like David Airey’s post and whoever else believes in the same principles of a good logo design as we do. Those two go into a lot more detail than I have.

     

    My main focus on writing this blog post, and all others in the future, is to:
    1. Educate myself more by actually presenting this information out load instead of repeating it to myself.
    2. Educate the potential clients that come to my website that do not know of JC or DA or any other high profile designers.

     

    My next post will be explaining a recent logo design. I’m sure that will also look like all other logo design process posts as well, because generally, most graphic designers follow the same logo design process. It’s all in educating the clients that reach my website, as opposed to educating people who already know how to do it (like you). Make sense. Anyway, thanks for the comment!


    Kevin Donnigan on January 6th, 2010 at 8:26 pm

  6. Totally agree, I wasnt trying to be critical, please dont take it that way. I totally understand. My biggest problem is people asking me to create all these crazy logos with drop shadows and lens flares and crazy stuff that makes the design look cheap. They dont understand how bad it makes there business look:( 


    John Mark Herskind on January 6th, 2010 at 8:29 pm

  7. Oh I didn't take it personal. I totally got what you were saying, no worries. Funny you say 'drop shadow' on a logo. I just talked to a client about that and how I thought it would look cheap…


    Kevin Donnigan on January 6th, 2010 at 8:37 pm

  8. Man I hate those drop shadows! hahah nothing like a good old drop shadow, bevel emboss, black stroke and a rainbow gradient to make a good logo!


    John Mark Herskind on January 7th, 2010 at 12:19 pm

  9. [...] to Graphic Design, entrepreneurship, & business. Feel free to comment :-) « Why Your Business Needs A Professionaly Designed Logo! [...]


    Logo Design Process: Bumper To Bumper Ads | KDzyne - Graphic, Website, & Logo Designer on January 13th, 2010 at 9:13 pm

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