Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! Evan Signature
Evan Carmichael Top Header about About Home Profiles articles Tools forums inspirational quotes About facebook Twitter YouTube Blog
Share for a Cause











The 6 Jobs of Your Logo's Icon

Guest post by: Erin Ferree

Article Overview: Many entrepreneurs think that the icon for their logo should be a picture that appeals to them personally. They go into the logo design process looking to create an icon with personal symbolic meaning, because they think that the icon's job is to appeal to them personally as well as to look interesting. This is a case of the icon's job description not being well written. In a perfect world, entrepreneurs love their logo icons-and personally identify with their meaning. But, that's the logo icon's last, and least important, job. First, it must do several more important jobs for your company.

Free Download - 7 Proven Strategies For Going Viral By Erin Ferree
Name: Email:

The 6 Jobs of Your Logo's Icon

The 6 Jobs of Your Logo's Icon Many entrepreneurs think that the icon for their logo should be a picture that appeals to them personally. They go into the logo design process looking to create an icon with personal symbolic meaning, because they think that the icon's job is to appeal to them personally as well as to look interesting.

This is a case of the icon's job description not being well written. In a perfect world, entrepreneurs love their logo icons—and personally identify with their meaning. But, that's the logo icon's last, and least important, job. First, it must do several more important jobs for your company.

What could be more important than appealing to the person running the business? After all, if you love your logo, there's a good chance other people will see it and like it as well—and you want your logo to get compliments, right?

Wrong. At least, partially wrong. The logo icon's main job is to tell your brand story through the visual meaning of the symbols it uses.

Your logo's icon is a drawing or piece of art composed of symbols that have visual meaning. This visual meaning is called symbology, and it can help your logo to communicate with your customer.

There are two major types of symbols: abstract and representational. Abstract symbols are drawings that don't necessarily look like a thing or object. They can be basic shapes such as circles, squares, triangles—even dodecahedrons—and swooshes. Representational symbols look like a thing, object, animal, or person.

An abstract symbol of a circle can be used to symbolize trust, completeness, or to highlight another foreground element. A representational symbol of a leaf can be used to represent nature, growth, health, or eco-friendliness. You can even layer these elements one on top of another—a leaf on a circular background, perhaps—to give your logo icon more visual meaning.

How do you decide which symbolic message your logo should send? There's a good chance that your company wouldn't be best served by a logo that consists of a circle or leaf, but then, how do you decide what your logo should look like?

The message your icon communicates should tell the most important part of your business's brand definition story. Your brand definition consists of who you are, what you do, what makes you different from your competition, and who you work best with. Usually, when you put your thoughts about these 4 elements down on paper, you find that you have some simple but compelling ideas about these areas of your business. And one or two are truly interesting from your customers' point of view.

Those thoughts are the foundation for what you want your logo to say. Just which symbols communicate your story is hard to say without knowing it, but once you have defined your brand and know which portions of it are really compelling for your customers, you can do some symbolic research (and there are plenty of books and websites about symbols) or hire a designer to translate that definition into symbols for you.

You said that the icon has several other jobs. What else does it have to do? Your logo's icon has a handful of other jobs. It has to be:

  • Memorable — it should stick in your customers' minds. Your logo icon will become the face of your business, so you want to make sure it is easy to remember.
  • Unique — so that your logo doesn't look like any of your competitors' logos. You don't want to get confused with them—or sued for copyright infringement.
  • Scalable — so that you can blow it up to the size of a billboard or shrink it down to the size of a postage stamp. This will enable you to use it across all of your marketing materials, regardless of size.
  • Timeless — so that it doesn't wind up looking dated or "cheesy" in a couple of years. This will ensure that you don't have to redesign it just as your customers are getting to know and recognize it.
  • Appealing — so that your customers like it and are pleased when they see it, and so that you can tolerate (notice, I didn't say "love") looking at it for years to come.
If your logo icon can accomplish these 6 jobs—in this order of importance—you'll have a design that will work well for your company and help you connect with your customers.

Related Articles
  So Much Can be in a Logo Design
  How to Get the Logo You Want
  How to insert a contact us form using your Joomla administration panel
  All businesses should strive to create brand presence in their marketplace
  How to Create a Favicon for Your Web Site
  The Science of Logos
  Software Programs for Logo Design
  Get Graphic Design done for your Website
  Personal Branding: Learn From The Best
  5 Things a Great Logo Design Can Do for Your Brand and Business
  Look Big, Win Big: The 5 Cardinal Rules of Logo Design
  The Ultimate Guide to Create Favicons
  How Home Stagers Ruin Their Image Without Even Trying
  The 4 Jobs of Your Logo Font
  The Importance of a Logo Design for a Company
  A Logo Without Your Name... Can Be A Big Branding Pain!
  Marilyn Monroe, the Mona Lisa and Jackson Pollock
  Ideas of Working from Home
  How To Find A Proven Legitimate Online Home Business
  A Logo Isn\'t A Tattoo! Why Your Personal Tastes Have Nothing To Do With Your Logo

Home > Marketing > Erin Ferree > The 6 Jobs of Your Logos Icon >
Article Tags: brand, branding, design, graphic design, icon, identity, logo, small business

About the Author: Erin Ferree
RSS for Erin's articles - Visit Erin's website

Erin Ferree is a branding coach, design genius and strategic thinker. She's been told that her right-brain, left-brain combination of creativity and logic is hard to come by... and that it's what small business owners need to be successful. She loves connecting the dots between passion and profit, mixing strategy and inspiration and shaking things up. She deeply enjoys working with entrepreneurs who want to help more people and look good doing it. Who want all of their branding and marketing to make sense and speak to their ideal clients. And who want an open, honest, inviting brand with integrity - instead of using icky, pushy, sleazy marketing tactics and trickery. She's branded over 450 small businesses in the last 10 years. She's been published in so many books and periodicals that she stopped counting. She's shared stages with some awesome people - like Michele PW, Linda Hollander, Lisa Cherney, Sheri McConnell and Kelly O'neil. In the rare moments when she's not obsessing about branding or design, she can be found hugging her corgi-dog Stanley, going for long walks, cooking improvisationally, or throwing parties so her friends can enjoy them.

Click here to visit Erin's website
Dashed Line

More from Erin Ferree
How To Brand Your Livestream


Related Forum Posts
Re: Publicity re-desingers? Re: Publicity re-desingers? - Thanks a lot for that very kind welcome GT, I’ll be sure to check the site to get a good answer to that and many other questions I have come up with. I’m afraid I don’t quite get what you mean with outsourcing, I believe you mean leaving the whole thing to someone else, if you do, that may not be the best solution for me, I like to oversee everything about the publicity, I was checking on some Logos companies but I haven’t found quite what I’m looking for, since I prefer to have somebody asking me all the time if that is what I want, and with big logo companies it seems they do it all on their own and then ask you to choose. PD: thanks for the quick response
Re: What If Steve Jobs Hadn't Returned To Apple In 1997? Re: What If Steve Jobs Hadn't Returned To Apple In 1997? - Thanks for sharing with us Yinko. Steve Jobs is definitely a visionary. Not only his products are innovative in a technological sense, but he's managed to turn a tech-company's products into a lifestyle.... a lifestyle!! [quote:zfqoq43n]Fast Forward to today. Apple has the sexiest products in the business: iMacs, Macbooks, iPhones, iPods and more.[/quote:zfqoq43n] I think not only tech would be different (music players and phones), but ways we can think of marketing and branding. What Steve Jobs did was of course no easy task for the smaller businesses, but he did start somewhere. What I did not know was that Apple is worth about as much as Google. How do you think Apple accomplish what they did? In terms of strategy wise? If you could advice Steve on one thing, what would it be?
Re: Are you getting an iPad 2? Re: Are you getting an iPad 2? - @GT - we can talk more about it once I get one and I'm happy to answer any questions to see if it might fit your lifestyle. @Yinka - Sorry, no payment from Steve Jobs... I wish!
Re: What are the top videos for entrepreneurs on YouTube? Re: What are the top videos for entrepreneurs on YouTube? - I've seen the Steve Jobs video a few times and it is a great one. Off to watch David's suggestion right now. Thanks guys! I'll try to find one of my own to add to the list.
Re: What Do You Outsource Mostly? Re: What Do You Outsource Mostly? - Jobs that usually require outsourcing are web & graphic design, writing/blogging, programming, marketing/sales, legal services, multimedia and finance.


Recommended Article for You close

  So Much Can be in a Logo Design

Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.

Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva. Over $50,000 raised and counting - Please keep sharing! Learn more.



Featured Article

Bottom Footer



Newsletter

Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Name:
Email:
Popular Articles

Ten Reasons to take Notes during Sales Meetings

Secrets of Successful Business Partnering

Build Corporate Credit for Your Small Business

Suggestions

Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.