Jon Aston
New Member
Many of you design visual identities for your clients - logo, signage, business cards... The whole package.
Many of you (along with others in the graphics industry... like printers) have also had to work from a business card, or brochure to "replicate" a visual identity. Sometimes, you spend valuable time trying to identify fonts, and - occasionally - when you can't find the exact font - you're forced to substitute something "close". Branding is all about consistency. The same "brand creep" can happen with colours, or when vector images aren't supplied... and it's bad for your customer's image.
In both cases above, there should be an opportunity to sell a style guide... Something that specifies how to (and how not to) use the logo, specifies colours, specifies fonts. If you had a template to work with, it probably wouldn't take too much time to put together. In some cases, you might even want to present a style guide, as a final, unexpected piece of value added - something most of your competitors aren't doing - which would enhance the customer's experience and probably result in additional word of mouth.
If any of that makes sense, then this might prove useful.
Just thinking out loud...
Many of you (along with others in the graphics industry... like printers) have also had to work from a business card, or brochure to "replicate" a visual identity. Sometimes, you spend valuable time trying to identify fonts, and - occasionally - when you can't find the exact font - you're forced to substitute something "close". Branding is all about consistency. The same "brand creep" can happen with colours, or when vector images aren't supplied... and it's bad for your customer's image.
In both cases above, there should be an opportunity to sell a style guide... Something that specifies how to (and how not to) use the logo, specifies colours, specifies fonts. If you had a template to work with, it probably wouldn't take too much time to put together. In some cases, you might even want to present a style guide, as a final, unexpected piece of value added - something most of your competitors aren't doing - which would enhance the customer's experience and probably result in additional word of mouth.
If any of that makes sense, then this might prove useful.
Just thinking out loud...
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