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5 Common Mistakes in Brand Design Today

The Brand Design Journey

If you’re looking for a brand design or redesign, you’ll need more than a logo or a new website. Brand design is bigger than that. Designing a brand entails designing every moment and experience people have with your brand. It’s about every touchpoint, and these days nothing goes unnoticed. Brand design reflects how your brand looks and how it feels.

This means colors, graphic language, typeface, photography, and your logo. In the end, brand design is what brings the brand to life. It’s what makes your brand recognizable and powerful to the people that matter to your business. Because developing your brand design is no easy task, it’s easy for businesses and the people behind them to fall into common design traps. So before your brand engages in design work, consider these five common mistakes, why they are problematic, and how to avoid them.

1. Designing for tomorrow and not today

In a world where digital innovation and advancement is critical to a brand’s survival, brands need to be designed for new technology. Fluidity and flexibility is key here. The digital landscape requires adaptability. And in order to maintain brand relevance, brands need to anticipate how they will compete in the future market. Stagnant brands simply don’t create powerful brand experiences. Every touchpoint and interaction counts. Designers who want to design a powerful brand with a strong emotional impact, one that will stay relevant over time, and drive business in a sustainable way need to design with the future of the brand in mind. This means taking an adaptable, dynamic, digital, experiential, and always forward thinking approach that aligns with the brand’s vision and aspirations.

2. Playing lookalike

Differentiation in branding is of great importance. Yet many brands take the safe route. And as a result, brands end up looking similar to competitors or adapting to the short-lived design trends of the month. Even though design is supposed to help brands stand out, the design landscape continues to be filled with brands that quite honestly, look and feel the same. And sameness doesn’t move a business forward. Designing a brand requires taking risks. It takes courage. You have to be bold. And we know it’s not always easy. Challenge yourself and your clients to design brands that aren’t afraid to say something different. 

3. Forgetting about guidelines

Your agency or company could build the most prolific visual identity, pick the perfect colors, or create a logo that could change the entire game. But the fact is, a brand can’t come to life if the visual identity isn’t rolled out correctly. Businesses often overlook the importance of brand guidelines because they aren’t easy to create. No one wants to create or read a manual. However, people need a roadmap for keeping the brand consistent and powerful. Brand guidelines give businesses the tools people need to bring the brand to life, keeping it clear, consistent, and recognizable. Brands without brand guidelines often end up inconsistent, valueless, and unable to grow. If you want to make the brand rollout a success, you need guidelines.

4. Overcomplicating it

Simplicity and clarity is key for brand design. Complicated brand design ends up diluting the brand’s overall emotional impact and making the brand less recognizable to the people who matter to its success. However, it’s important that when straying away from overcomplicated you make sure you understand your audience and don’t dumb it down for them. Simple doesn’t mean banging your audiences across the head. Working as a team and eliciting feedback at multiple points of the process can help move the design towards clarity and simplicity.

5. Ignoring Strategy

Tying strategy with design is one of the most important things a brand can do. Use strategy as a guiding map for how the brand should come to life visually. Even though strategists and designers often have different toolboxes, marrying the two skillsets and ways of thinking can help build a more impactful, purposeful brand. Often times, clients want design that has nothing to do with the strategy that’s been developed. Make sure you explain the impact that strategically informed design can create, and demonstrate the power of strategically informed design. By bringing design and strategy together, your brand becomes more valuable and impactful.

Brand Design for Maximum Impact

Design a brand that engages your target audience and generates demand. One that will be able to adapt to digital advances, increased customer experiences, and heed off competition. Use your visual identity to help your brand stand out and highlight what makes you stand out. Keep it simple. Use your strategy to lead you in, and don’t forget to create the guidelines the brand needs for a successful rollout. If you avoid these five mistakes, the brand will be more powerful to its audiences, and more able to move business forward. The brand design will support the brand as it grows and prospers in a competitive design landscape.

Read another post from our design team: Brand Identity: What’s Your Type?

Emotive Brand is a San Francisco brand strategy and design agency.

2016 Design Trends

2016 Design Trends: Observations and Thoughts

“As long as the work is appropriate, distinctive, and (ideally) emotive, you won’t go far wrong. Trends come and go, again and again. If you try to avoid what’s popular today, you’ll probably find yourself creating something that was popular ten or twenty years ago. Stick to the brief, and only show your best ideas to the client.” – David Airey, Graphic Designer

Aware and Informed

Disclaimer: As designers, we take trends seriously. Not to follow, but to ensure we are acutely aware of the trends that are shaping the world we live and design in. Jumping onto a short-lived, ‘trendy’ typeface bandwagon or focusing on micro-trends isn’t what we’re about. We’re focused on customized solutions – and sometimes these solutions align with the trends we see happening, and sometimes they break the rules and go against the grain.

Regardless, at Emotive Brand our design team believes that being informed and aware of what’s happening in the industry is integral to creating informed, relevant, client-centered, strategy-led design. Considering trends – in the past, present, and future – is an important and often valuable exercise.

Driving Business Forward

That said, trends (especially micro-trends) should not drive design. The strategy that’s going to drive business forward has to be the focus. However, a deep knowledge of what’s happening around us can help inform and inspire.

2016 Design Trends

We sat down with the Emotive Brand design team to discuss top trends of 2016.

1. Minimalistic Design

This year, many well-recognized brands have embraced minimalistic design and simplified their identities. Google Materials embraced material design that aims to create order through clear purpose and tangible meaning. MasterCard, in the move to become more digital, simplified, modernized, and optimized their brand identity for the fast-paced digital world their business must compete in. Zendesk’s simple, geometric design mirrors its promise of building software for better customer relationships. McDonald’s rolled out simplified packaging meant to function as a dynamic “mobile billboard.” In a blog that Instagram released explaining their new look, the company noted that the new logo “represents a simpler camera and the rainbow lives on in gradient form.” Instagram wanted to use simpler design to focus more on user’s own photos and videos, without confusing how users were used to navigating the app.

In fact, lots of apps took a turn towards minimalism – cutting the clutter and aiming to create the most instinctual, simplified, and digital-friendly design for their audiences.

For us, this design trend revolves around the idea of simplifying strategy for the people brands are trying to reach. How can design distill and articulate strategy in more tangible, concise, clear, and consistent ways? Brands that are embracing minimalism believe that they can better communicate why they matter if they keep in simple.

2. Socially-driven Design

It’s no secret that social media is playing more and more of a role in informing design today. Especially when it comes to design that is targeted at millennials. In the past, many brands used social media as a tack-on to their branding strategy, but now, for many, social is their strategy.

As a result, there’s a surge we’re seeing in advertising. Advertisers are gathering inspiration from social media and taking cues from what people are already doing socially – what they are already liking and sharing and creating themselves.

We see an increase in videos because of this. For instance, Virgin America’s onboard manual is designed much like a high-quality MTV video. Shell also released a music video for a clean energy campaign. The food and drink industry – leveraging the millennial marketing – is also relying heavily on social media inspiration to drive engagement. Even GrubHub’s subway ads take on the voice of an ironic Facebook post.

Platforms like Instagram have become style drivers for brands looking to target those on social media. HipCamp has won over millennials with its VSCO Cam and Instagram nature shots inspire exploration much like those very social platforms.

3. Nostalgic Design

We’re advancing so fast in so many ways that people today seem to be grasping for the past and holding onto the things that used to be. And many successful brands today are leveraging the power of nostalgia. The past will always have an emotional pull for people.

Now, having moved away from design of the 50s and 60s, there are many brands making reference to the 80s and 90s – think bright colors like fluorescents, pastels, and gradients that inject energy and emotion. Trending TV shows of 2016, such as Stranger Things and Black Mirror and the recent Kodak rebrand are prime examples of this. And these brands can leverage nostalgic design because they are inherently nostalgic brands. They promise to bring people back to what they grew up with, evoking cherished emotions of the past – and their design reflects just that.

4. Personalized Design

People are demanding more customized and personalized experiences from the brands they buy from. And design is making some major shifts as a result. Consider the cutting edge of design today – virtual reality. VR creates a whole customized world for people to explore and make their own. And in many ways, the shift towards personalization represents a greater shift towards customer-centered brand experiences.

For example, the app Flipboard helps users pull different articles to create their own personalized magazine. The app is used by millions of users as a single place to keep up on the news. They can follow topics they personally care about and share the stories, videos, and photos that influence and inspire each individual. Coca Cola, continued its ‘Share a Coke’ campaign, making products personal by adding names and nicknames to their cans and bottles. Nike and Jawbone are also brands that are exploring the vast opportunity of personalized product design. And on a more micro level, many brands are creating their own unique illustrations and icons to represent their own strategy and ideas – giving life to strategy through design.

What do all these trends have in common? Human-centric design.

In the end, all these design trends reflect a focus on people and how brands can better reach and connect with the people who matter to their business. For us at Emotive Brand, when it comes down to it, design has always been human-centric. It’s always been about understanding our client’s needs and helping them emotionally connect and engage with their key audiences in empathetic, emotionally-infused, and inspired ways.

And this doesn’t just apply to B2C brands. B2B brands are also becoming more human-centric, and in many ways, transitioning towards a B2B2C strategy and design. It’s important to remember that human-centric design isn’t going anywhere either. This is what is going to make brands stand out. It’s not about latching onto micro trends or specific type or patterns with logos, but instead, looking at the big picture: how can you better design for the people your brand is trying to reach? For us, this question will never go out of style.

Emotive Brand is a brand strategy and design agency.