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Monthly Archives: April 2013

Brand X: what your firm could get stuck with…

Horse_Brand_1…if you keep horsing around with the backdated boilerplates, crapshoot colors, inconsistent images, mixed-up messages and scattershot slogans that create chronic confusion about what your firm’s brand really is and how to communicate it consistently to clients, collaborators, even co-workers.

That was a key issue raised at the March meeting of the Boston Society of Architects Marketing/PR Wizards. The focus was proper brand development and implementation for uniformity of image throughout a firm’s marketing collateral, and the challenge of keeping vigil on the firm’s brand identity amid the runaway horserace of social media and electronic design/production tools, the constantly changing marketplace, even in-house personnel and team comings and goings.

I took away from that meeting the necessity to follow the 5 Cs in branding:

  1. Clarity
  2. Cohesion
  3. Consistency
  4. Communication
  5. Collaboration

6321227-background-concept-illustration-of-brand-product-marketingClarity is attained by sifting through the haystack of concepts, catchphrases, clauses, clichés and keywords you’ve bandied about for eons to find the needle of necessity to pinpoint your firm’s core values: who we are, what we do, our mission, our philosophy, our approach, etc.

Once those core values are agreed upon, now comes a bigger hurdle: unifying them into a strong message that captures the firm’s essence, image and brand in a nutshell. This message must guide the creation of marketing materials accordingly, leading you toward…

cfce960406e2590949c5b038276e00d5Cohesion between message and graphics. At the meeting it was mentioned that “there are two parts to your brand and identity, and the whole graphic piece and message should be thought of together.” As form follows function in building, material should follow message in marketing.

Payette’s website is a prime example. The firm evokes its 75-80 year history and honors its roots with an older-looking logo and archival images. Their “collaborative and participatory” process is shown in photos of staff teaming on models, plans, construction sites, etc. Shots of building materials used — brick, exposed wood, concrete, etc. — signify that “we value process as much as the end product.” A picture of a pin-up board they use to encourage constant collaboration and idea-sharing emphasizes the firm’s “innovative process.” Images of their office displays of brand words like “Integrity” drive home their message.

Broncobuster3Consistency is another big hurdle if a firm’s employees buck its brand standards (if any exist to begin with) and use “random cowboy” fonts, titles, templates, logos, palettes, signatures, stationery, etc., in its outgoing marketing materials and correspondence.

This certainly doesn’t promote the firm as a cohesive team — especially since this inconsistency’s main cause is poor communication and enforcement of brand guidelines in the firm as a whole, particularly to newbies who might be using an old letterhead or studio report template without being aware of it. Brand standard setting and up-front communication of it to all firm members (discussed below) is key to averting a bucking bronco of a brand.

HMFH Architects, Inc., sets a great example of branding consistency by perpetuating its green, blue, orange and purple color scheme throughout its business cards, office signage, origami candy holders, website dropdown menus, etc., as well as some of its school building designs.

Perkins + Will has simplified its logo to fit easily into lots of collateral across its 22 international offices. All individual office websites share the same logo, menu and home page. This presents the firm as one cohesive company committed to interoffice interaction and consistency of quality throughout the world.

Style Guide bene.be

From “Making a Style Guide,” www.bene.be

GiraffeProjectStandardsManualByReidParhamWiki

From the Giraffe Project Standards Manual by Reid Parham

Communication with co-workers about brand standards, as mentioned above, must precede communication of the brand to the public. This is where the style guide comes in — which must have clarity in its own right.

“I wrote it in a fit of frustration,” remarked a meeting attendee. “It’s hard to follow, so no one follows it.” The solution, in Thoreau’s lingo: “Simplify, simplify.”

The style guide should be:

  • created by a team, including a project administrator and coordinator, who know the firm’s fonts and colors cold;
  • presented as a hierarchy of headings, subheadings and texts, and hues, shades and tints, within coherent schemes that bring out the brand;
  • made easy for the entire firm to read, learn and follow — no pedantic or awkward language, complex sentences or the like;
  • made accessible to all through the company intranet, a printed manual to keep at your workstation, or a findable file that’s not like looking for a needle in a haystack.

InDesign TemplateFor template consistency, a firm using InDesign might consider training its entire staff in that software to familiarize everyone with the firm’s template style, design/branding components and collateral production process. Elizabeth Brown (who attended the meeting) does just that through Soft-Teach.com, a customized computer training program offering on-site instruction right in a firm’s office.

It is also important to give every new employee a formal orientation to the firm’s branding approach and style right away, so s/he’ll know it right off the bat and not end up using a letterhead, masthead or subhead from 5 or 10 years ago.

CollaborationCollaboration is central to brand communication and implementation, in terms of arriving at an agreed-upon image that reflects the firm as a team, receives input from all concerned, and is ultimately approved and consistently implemented by everyone. To facilitate this process, Payette and HMFH have pin-up boards where employees post their branding ideas for open discussion, like so:
  Commitment to client collaborationWhole-building approach to energy efficiencyFrom concept to constrution, we manifest your missionTools of the trade We bring value to your visionBreaking new ground to improve conditionsyellow post it note with tack isolated on white Yellow sticky noteDesire to challenge the status quoWe design with respect for the client and reverence for the environment Energy modeling Architectural expression of our client's missionEngineering for energy efficiency  Harmonizing architecture and environment
c121c90a0bcf22c8_1000-w422-h562-b0-p0--modern-home-officeThis method engages the firm at every level so every person has a voice. Sharing ideas through Twitter, Facebook, e-mail, your blog or your intranet can add to the collaborative process — particularly if you’re going paperless. And, for visual concept postings for the paper-repelled, there’s always Pinterest. But cowboy chaos would reign supreme without weekly or monthly staff meetings to rein in the randomness, share the scoops from all sides, arrive at a branding consensus, and collectively craft a mission message and visual vocabulary that fits your firm to a T — not an X.
— Todd Larson
Thank you for visiting. I welcome your comments!

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Posted on April 8, 2013 by toddlarson. Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Architecture, Blog, brand, branding, Business, collaboration, communication, design, digital, image, InDesign, internet, logo, Marketing, message, mission, Photoshop, research, technology, trademark, web optimization, website, Writing | Leave a comment

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