The 7 key elements of brand identity design

Lucidpress
Lucidpress
Published in
9 min readJun 21, 2016
Article by Jarom McDonald

In this post, I’ve assembled information that’s scattered across the web to provide an authoritative guide to brand identity design. I’ve boiled it down to 7 elements that you’ll need to include as you create your own brand identity design and work toward the larger goal of building a well-loved brand.

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Before we go over the 7 elements of brand identity design, we need to align on a few key definitions. First of all…

What is a brand?

The word “brand” is used pretty loosely these days. For example, people might use the word “brand” to talk about logos, though a logo is just one part of a brand. It’s a symbol that represents a deeper emotional tie.

Seth Godin has a great definition of brand that addresses this point: “A brand is the set of expectations, memories, stories and relationships that, taken together, account for a consumer’s decision to choose one product or service over another.”

A logo, packaging, typography, and personality all represent a brand, along with customer service, price, product quality, and corporate responsibility, but a brand is a bit more intangible. It’s emotional, visual, historical, and human. It’s an experience that separates different products and services in a world where quality is often comparable or the same.

What is brand identity?

Brand identity is the face of a brand. As discussed in the previous section, a brand is an emotional and even philosophical concept, while brand identity is the visual component of a brand that represents those larger ideas. Brand identity includes logos, typography, colors, packaging, and messaging, and it complements and reinforces the existing reputation of a brand.

Brand identity attracts new customers to a brand while making existing customers feel at home. It’s both outward- and inward-facing.

It’s vital that brand identity be consistent. Because it’s representing and reinforcing the emotions of a brand, the message portrayed by brand identity components needs to be clear, and it needs to be the same no matter where it’s displayed.

To manage brand identity, organizations should invest in a brand management system that helps them stay consistent while still having the flexibility and the speed necessary to succeed in today’s market. Components of this system might include a style guide, brand management software, and employee training.

So what is brand identity design?

Basically, it’s brand identity applied. Brand identity design is the actual process of creating the logo, color palette, typography, etc.

With these definitions in mind, what follows is an overview of the 7 key elements of brand identity design you’ll need to include to have a strong, consistent, and attractive brand.

1. Clear brand purpose and positioning

The first part of establishing a brand identity is determining what your purpose and positioning is. The brand purpose is the big reason for your existence. Brand positioning is the naming of who your product is for and why your product is a better option than the competitors. Defining these will inform your strategy as you create a logo, decide on a color palette, etc. A process called Purpose, Position, and Personality is useful for answering these questions (we’ll talk more about personality in the next section).

According to Arielle Jackson, startup founder and Google veteran, “Your purpose is how you want to change the world for the better.” Jackson also recommends this diagram as a guide for determining your purpose:

Jackson explains the diagram this way: “In one circle, you have cultural tension. This is what is happening in the world that’s relevant to you. In the other circle, is your brand’s best self. This is what your company delivers at its prime,” says Jackson. “The intersection of these two areas is…‘The big ideaL’ — or your purpose.”

For a great example of a succinct, tangible corporate purpose, check out this statement from Apple:

“Apple’s 100,000 employees are dedicated to making the best products on earth, and to leaving the world better than we found it.”

Not too shabby.

Brand positioning is the process of making the purpose actionable. By naming your target customer and differentiating yourself from the competition, you lay the groundwork for your brand to accomplish your purpose.

For more in-depth information on the Purpose, Position, and Personality process, check out this blog post.

2. Thorough market research

A brand’s purpose and positioning can be informed, at least in part, by market and customer research. To understand the cultural tension described in the previous section, research is crucial. For beginners to market research, there is a wealth of content online to help.

One of the best ways to conduct market research is to simply talk to people. Phone interviews allow for detailed discussions and place a helpful emphasis on the human element of research — an element that’s essential if you want to make an emotional appeal to customers.

Beyond phone interviews, online survey tools, like Survey Monkey, are a fast way to gather a lot of information, and government resources can also be a powerful tool.

Good market research can also help you determine who your main customer personas are, a term which I’m using here to indicate a slightly different concept than “target customers,” which was mentioned earlier. Your customer persona goes beyond just defining what problem a customer has and details some of the professional and personal traits of your focus customers. Defining these traits will help you know what kind of a personality your brand should have to be appealing to customers.

3. Likable brand personality

Something I’ve heard several times is the question, “If your brand were a person, what would he/she be like?” It might be a bit cliche at this point, but it’s a smart way to think about brand personality.

And brand personality is an important thing to consider. It will come through in every part of your brand identity design if you get it right, but if a personality isn’t established, customers will get mixed messages and have trouble connecting with your brand.

Once you’ve pictured the kind of person your brand would be and listed off a few attributes they have, it’s helpful to boil down your brand’s personality into a single statement. Here’s what we came up with for Lucidpress:

Lucidpress surprises you with its intelligence, wit, and ability to get the job done.

4. Memorable logo

Which came first — the logo or the brand? It’s difficult to say, because logos and brands are constantly being refined and adjusted, but by and large, a clear brand should come first, followed by a logo that matches, compliments, and enhances that brand.

Your logo is central to your brand identity design. It’s the piece of your brand identity that people will be exposed to the most. It needs to line up with all the other elements of your brand identity, as well as the broader emotional appeal of your brand. For example, take a look at this logo:

What do you think of? I bet you noticed it earlier and instantly thought of nostalgia, magic, laughter, or something similar. The playful script oozes with creativity and fun, and that jives with the overall brand Disney has established.

To increase your chances of having a memorable logo that encourages a strong emotional response, go for a simple look. Take a look at the logos of the world’s top 3 brands (according to Interbrand):

They’re simple and instantly recognizable. Even Coca-Cola’s logo, the most complex of the three, is just a straight line of text in a single font, with no graphical elements surrounding it.

When a logo is simple, it becomes an open canvas customers can fill with positive experiences they have with the brand.

The final thing to consider when designing a logo is all the places a logo could possibly be displayed. A logo needs to be flexible enough to look great on a huge billboard or as a tiny social media icon. Simplicity is helpful here as well.

5. Attractive color palette

Related to logo design is the color palette. This should also be simple, with only 1–3 primary colors (though Google got away with 4). Knowing a bit about the emotions conveyed by certain colors can help you select the right ones.

A lot of color psychology is intuitive, like blue expressing calm and red and yellow expressing passion and energy. Depending on the tint or shade of a color you use, that emotion can be adjusted. A tint is the color mixed with white, making it lighter, and a shade is the color mixed with black, making it darker. A lighter tint of blue conveys tranquility, while a darker shade of blue often conveys trust, an effect that many banks use in their color schemes.

As mentioned earlier, brands should have only a few primary colors, but you can also select secondary colors to be used alongside your primary colors in some of your materials. Selecting a few additional colors helps your brand stay exciting, but still on brand.

6. Professional typography

Stressing about finding just the right font may lead others to designate you a “typography nerd,” but you’ll come out ahead when you pick a font that works in harmony with your logo and colors.

Fonts are powerful. The most famous fonts are recognizable even when taken out of context. You’ll want a single primary typeface to lead your brand identity design, and it should work well with your logo and your color palette. It should also, like your logo and color palette, be simple.

If you’d like to know more, I found this beginner’s guide to typography helpful.

7. On-brand supporting graphics

Since we live in a multimedia world, the final step in creating a brand identity is an extended visual language, with supporting graphics, icons, and photographs. Take a look at Google’s Visual Assets Guidelines to see how they carefully explain their take on icon design. Because of Google’s close attention to their extended visual language, when you see a Google icon, you know it’s a Google icon.

Next steps

There may be redesigns and re-evaluating ahead, but starting off with a strong, confident brand and a unified brand identity will add clarity to everything you do. And though change may be necessary in the future, stay fiercely consistent so that your brand is the one that comes to mind when someone has a problem you can solve.

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About Jarom McDonald

Jarom McDonald works as a content specialist on Lucidpress’s marketing team. Outside of work, Jarom loves watching movies, occasionally watching birds, eating pizza, and driving a Prius (a vehicle he will defend passionately). Follow him on Twitter: @jarom2011.

Originally published at www.lucidpress.com.

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Lucidpress
Lucidpress

The intuitive design & brand management platform that makes it easy to create & share beautifully branded collateral. Issues? Email support@lucidpress.com.