Conceptstore Brand & Design » corpoarte identity

Every £100 a design alert business spends on design increases turnover by £225.

July 22, 20099:58 am

Professional design is an investment into your business and like any other investment its intended to make you a return.

Sure it maybe a risk but your self employed, you’ve already taken one of the biggest risks of your life. We thought that would be the only risk we take but guess what, it was only the first of many in order to succeed.

“How can design return my investment?”

Heres a real life example.
For the past year, every one on one meeting I’ve attended, I’ve taken with me a corporate brochure professionally designed by myself and digitally printed by one of my suppliers. Its high end stuff, A3 folded to A4, 300gsm + matt laminate.

I leave this with the client and after they give it a brief once over they add it to their quote request. “How much for a batch of these as well?”

Businesses that see design as integral don’t need to compete on price.

“You’re a designer, of course it works for you.”

It that case think past my example to your business. What would a professional logo, website and corporate materials do for you? An image of trust and quality helps to bring in and secure deals. It builds a relationship with the potential client before you’ve even met them.

“Never judge a book by its cover” yet “first impressions are the biggest”.

Turnover growth is more likely for businesses that increase their investment in design.

The point I’m making is if you make the investment, be it a calculated risk, you will reap the rewards. It doesn’t have to be expensive, you can start off small and see the results for yourself.

Rapidly growing businesses are twice as likely as the UK average to have increased investment in design.

Facts taken from the design council.

REJ Web Design – Now the number 1 website.

July 21, 20093:46 pm

Web design fro renewable energy jobs

Late last year an old client of ours came back for a new commission of work. With a wealth of experience he’s been knee deep in the recruitment industry for years and acquired a firm grip of the next trends in the world of recruitment.

After initial research and development we started the project back in January this year. We created the brand imagery and web design within a few weeks and then went onto develop the site. A month later after ironing out all the creases the site was finally ready for launch.

Within 6 months of conception RenewableEnergyJobs along with Green Leader (the renewable energy blog) is now the number 1 recruitment site in the renewable energy sector.

A big pat on the back for the owner Sam Newell, who marketed the site like a madman and saw the project through from concept to completetion. Overall, a great team effort from Sam and ourselves made the site possible.

A job Well done.

Five steps to defining your brand!

March 31, 20084:17 pm

I could have called this blog ” 5 steps to a successful brand” but it would not be entirely true. For a successful brand the steps would go beyond this blog into a bespoke method which would lie upon your own contributions as a business. Instead this blog focuses on a general building for the basis of your brand. It’s short and sweet because I know you’re busy smile

Step 1.) Who are you?

Thinking always in business terms (not “My name is Peter and I like fishing “). Who are you as a business?
- What do you provide & why?
- What makes you different?
- Why do you do it differently?
- Are you a sole trader, LTD, charity?
- Do you have staff and offices, if so how many?

Everything about your business should contribute to your brand. You need to catorgorise yourself and then un-catorgorise yourself showing your worth in the marketplace but also your distinction. Check out your competitors to see what they are doing, (not to copy them) but how you differ (are you actually any different).
This plays a huge part in creating your brand, it what defines and separates you as a business to compile your unique company values.

Step 2.) What you were and what you will become?

Your past, present and future show great insight to a business, not just who you are but how you became what you are and where you’re going next. It’s a sign of strength, longevity and future contribution to your industry. It also provides interesting press release content.

Example:
The Three mobile phone network.

  • Past: They were a HIGHTECH revolutionary mobile phone company specialising in VIDEO calling and hoping to capitalise on BUSINESS users for conference calls. (With very bad customer support)
  • Present: An ever growing mobile phone company winning customers with CHEAP bulk voice minutes and MIDRANGE phones for the PUBLIC. (With very bad customer support)
  • Future: Fast pushing into mobile INTERNET, changing the way tariffs are created and setting trends for other phone companies. (With bad customer support)
  • Step 3.) Who are they? – Your target audience.


    Define who you are selling to and reflect your brand towards them. You must appeal to them with your own niche defined in step 1. Make them apart of your brand.

    E.g. Tescos – Every little helps

    Step 4.) Personification

    People relate to people, its human nature and how we judge each other, in fact that’s how we judge everything, by personification.
    Personify your business with character. What characteristics does your business have?

    It maybe one, two or none from the list but personifying your business shows character and builds a public perception of confidence and expectation.

    E.g. Nike the Greek goddess of victory – Dynamic and confident appealing to athletes
    Ecademy – Connecting Business People – Professional, business focused with a friendly approach
    Apple Mac & Pc’s – Apple Macs advertising campaigns personify computers as a means to
    creating a relationship to the potential buyer

    Step 5.) Bar of excellence

    An important part of defining a brand is to stick to it. It’s all well to say this is who we are, more importantly you need to consistently show who you are. With steps 1-4 you should have a basis to your business brand, a guide to who you are and what you will achieve. Use this as a benchmark for all work so you can uphold and build a reputation to become a successful brand.

    Further steps for defining a brand include brand-image and corporate identity as a way of graphically communicating your brand to others. First of all define who you are strategically then move on to graphic communication.

    If you do this at least once a year you will yourself see how your own brand has defined and changed over the years.

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