A branding exercise
Brent Beshore, on Brands:
Most people think brands are made up of logos and slogans, but here's another way to think about it: "A brand is the range of expected outcomes you can expect from any company or person... What you can count on, rely on, and plan around."
It's a set of expectations people have when they interact with you. I like th... See more
Alara added
A brand is not an object. It’s not something you can simply define in words or pictures, put away and take out to reference every so often. A true brand is a living thing—like a person. A fusion of motivations and beliefs, personality and purpose, appearance and actions, that continually defines and reveals itself through every interaction and poin... See more
Adopt
Natalie Audelo added
A brand is not a logo. A brand is not a corporate identity system. It’s a person’s gut feeling about a product, service, or company. Because it depends on others for its existence, it must become a guarantee of trustworthy behavior. Good branding makes business integral to society and creates opportunity for everyone, from the chief executive to th... See more
Marty Neumier • The Brand Gap: How to Bridge the Distance Between Business Strategy and Design
Mike Renaud and added
A brand is not a logo. A brand is a promise, a story and a shorthand. A brand tells us what to expect the next time we engage with you.
Seth's Blog : A branding exercise
Pablo Rodríguez added
So You Want to Build a Brand? Here's What You Need to Understand. - Inside Intercom
blog.intercom.comblog.intercom.comJonathan Simcoe added
A brand is always answering two questions. The first one internally facing: What do we believe? The second, externally: How do we behave? You must remain authentic to yourself, your core values, and what you stand for. If you’re not, people will sniff you out. But your brand must maintain cultural congruence — remaining relevant to the times, alway... See more
Brian Collins • 101 Design Rules
sari and added