Keeping Your Branding Consistent
Could anyone represent your brand, based on the guidelines you have?

Whether
you are newly established, well established, have acquired an existing company
or are looking to franchise your company, it is essential that you maintain
clear brand guidelines which are easily accessed and understood by those
representing your brand.
Without
clear and concise guidelines, it's easy for company representatives to weaken
the brand identity with off-brand communications such as 'similar' colours or
fonts being used, the logo to be stretched or misplaced on a page, the
wrong tone of voice to be used...
Some
of the elements that should be included in brand guidelines include:
How did your business come about? What's the back story?
Vision, Mission and Values
These give insight into your drivers and brand personality.
Brand Proposition
What can you offer that other brands can't?
Brand Benefits
Whether these be practical or emotional, it's important for this to be understood so that it can be communicated, consistently.
Brand Personality
If your brand were a person, what would they be like?
Tone of Voice
How does your brand 'speak'? This should tie in with brand personality.
Target Market
Who are you trying to attract to your brand?
Logo use
Size/orientation/colours/location on a page and much more!
Typography
Which fonts, weights and sizes should be used for headers and bodies of text?
Brand Colours
What colours represent your brand? Not just 'red' but do you know the CMYK, RGB, Pantone and HEX for each of your brand colours?
If your brand guidelines include all of the above and are well written, they should be easily applied to any area of the business's communications, creating a clear and strong brand identity.
Adhering to strict brand guidelines is how businesses such as McDonald's, Adidas and Apple have managed to grow to the size they are with no one ever having to ask 'Is that McDonald's? It looks like it but the logo doesn't look the right shade of yellow?'. Those golden arches were not accident. We all recognise them from a mile off and that's because of strong and consistent branding.
Branding is far more involved than a logo.
If you were surprised by any of the above, please feel free to get in touch and I'll be more than happy to talk through how I can help clarify things for you.


