All logos look the same.

Or how designers lost in the competition with marketing strategists by giving up with the long-lasting design solutions.

Inga Ciumac
UX Collective
Published in
6 min readSep 2, 2020

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Currently, we are facing such a graphic design phase when a lot of brands use to have very similar logos. More exactly, a lot of brands switched from having proper logos to just having logotypes (logos without a symbol) and with no exception all use sans serif geometric fonts.

I can understand the designers point of view on this matter. For them it is basically a win over that old marketing strategy where you should always design a very unique logo with a symbol in order to be recognizable. Sometimes this is just an impossible mission — all good basic shapes are already taken, even apples. That’s why logos such as Uber or the new rebranded Revolut one, are more than enough for a brand to be successful.

Some famous brands which are easily recognizable juts by their symbols: Apple, Dropbox, Nike, Target, Twitter, Maersk, Amazon, Adidas

In the old era of advertising logos weren’t meant to be featured together

They were designed in the full complexity and used as a central element in the communication.

However, let’s consider some examples of logos usage today.

There are visuals which might contain more logos on them. These can be sponsors logos, event organizers, media partners and so on. It’s not about having a problem on how to place the main logo in the visual, its’ more likely about that situations when more that three logos should stay in a close proximity to each other and how they impact the overall look of this visual.

Once I was in a situation when I had to add more that 10 logos on a visual for an event. All those being sponsors who payed for this event in order to be promoted. Some places where this visual should appear were really small and with limited space, like some 400x400 px web banners. The problem was that some logos being too complex had a limited visibly if shrieked. And I was in the situation to decide shall I keep the visual at all or just to make a banner full of sponsors logos, of all possible shapes and colors which looked grotesque together despite of the effort to align them nicely.

Another common practice for more logos being featured together is this section on each website which shows who is using their service, like in this example from Intercom:

Logos featured on Intercom website

Being unique also means being an outsider

So, what is the point I am trying to make with previously mentioned examples?

While arranging these logos string each designer is dreaming of an even pattern where the visual balance between all logos is easily achieved. The idea is that the more logos differ from each other, the more harder is to align them optically. There is no such an aligner tool to deal with that. The only good tool designers can count on is their eyes.

Even harder — there were times when some logos did not support grayscale and should be used in full color — real nightmare for a designer who wants to preserve a color palette of the visual.

Today being different for a logo is no more a strong point but rather a shame considering how often logos are paired together with other logos instead of having their own solo lives.

So, voila — problem solved: all logos nowadays are just a word, in sans serif, probably made from a bold grotesque typeface. Easy to align, all black and white, looking great together, almost like a big family.

If I would go further, I would expect all brands to decide on capitalization or no of the first letter, because for now it is only thing they seems to not have an agreement about. Also those logotypes which have a dot at the end, what does this dot add to this characterless but well unified logos? The same thing with a small tweak in the main character like Casper or Fluidly have, is this really adding to uniqueness while maintaining similarity with other logos?

Logo crisis

What are other reasons why all logos look similar today?

It is really hard to come up with a totally new visual element today. Like it was mentioned before all good, simple and recognizable shapes were taken. The apple is taken by Apple, the bird shape is taken by Twitter, a more specific bird shape such as dove is taken by..guess whom 😇 and so on.

Logo symbols from left to right: Twitter, Dove, Turkish Airlines

To fight this crisis designers even invented dynamical identities, to change the focus from logo as a main brand element to logo as a part of a visual system. In this case the logotype together with other elements such as type, color palette, and a predefined graphical rule will generate some visuals in a unique and recognizable manner — and all these will help a brand to stand out even if there are nothing more to say by the logo itself.

Whitney dynamic identity. Source: BrandNew

I think that the problem here is, actually, how much time you as a designer have to come up with a logo idea. Because if you’ll take a look at all famous logos with symbols there is always an a-ha moment, a history, a heritage, a something which you as a designer, or almost as a detective should find and reveal. Sometimes it can take a few seconds and in other cases it can take much longer.

Today we have confidence in data more than in ideas

It’s almost a cliche but I have to say that we live in a fast developing society and each decision is money and data driven now. There is no company willing to wait for a perfectly unique logo and overpay for it. Because at the end of the day, even if it’s unique, it still might seem not good enough just because it can not be aligned well with other logos in a logo string and it might end up looking odd. The shift is toward collaborations of all kinds and logos aren’t an exception to this rule.

And there is definitely something interesting happening within marketing strategies now which allows brands to compete even without having a visual uniqueness. We leave in the era where we are not buying goods for their functions anymore. We are buying goods for their emotional and signed value more that ever. We are buying design more that ever. And even so, all designs, all brands, all logos look the same. Everything is pale pink, with palm leaves and sans serif.

Those paradoxical marketing strategies on how to make people to buy are linked to totally different approaches that's’ why in some way design doesn’t matter anymore even if its on the top of the funnel and we are delusively buying it more and more.

The clear thing is that while designers were fighting for simplifying logos by creating these unified trends (in order to simplify their lives of course) they and especially brand studios shifted the focus from themselves. Now, design main value is to be able to adapt easily to the fast-changing environments. Unfortunate the solutions which are the most adaptive to the changes and easy to scale are those which tend to unify everything and to diminish design ideas which are harder to produce or to multiply.

There is no more such a thing as a long-lasting purpose for advertising. Everything is reactive to something. Responses should come immediately. And that one thing which precisely added to this drama is all those logotypes in sans serif.

The UX Collective donates US$1 for each article published in our platform. This story contributed to Bay Area Black Designers: a professional development community for Black people who are digital designers and researchers in the San Francisco Bay Area. By joining together in community, members share inspiration, connection, peer mentorship, professional development, resources, feedback, support, and resilience. Silence against systemic racism is not an option. Build the design community you believe in.

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