In creating your logo and brand identity, never overlook the importance
of choosing the right colour. When a customer looks at a logo,
his/her mind goes through a sequence of visual perception. The
brain first reads shape, then colour, then content. So theoretically,
the colour in your logo is more recognized and potentially more
powerful than the company name or tagline.
In terms of branding, the ultimate goal for any business owner
should be to own a colour, that is, to brand your company so that
whenever a person sees a particular hue, they think of your company.
Owning a colour means facilitating recognition and building brand
equity.
This concept is nothing new. Car makers have been doing it since
vehicles began mass marketing. Silver cars were associated with
Mercedes, Black for BMW and Red were Ferrari.
Companies today are attempting the same thing. Consider the colour
brown. Almost without thinking, UPS comes to mind. Kurt Kuehn,
Senior Vice President of worldwide sales & marketing at UPS,
knows how important brown is to the company’s identity.
After doing months of market research on people’s perception
about them, Kuehn said in a speech in 2004, “We found that
UPS was strongly identified with the colour brown…brown
could be a bridge to associate new attributes like agile, worldly,
business savvy and forward-thinking.”
And their new campaign was born. “What Can Brown Do For
You?”
When your colour is strong enough to use it in your tagline, you
know you’ve got it made in the shade.
Owning a colour takes time, and in reality, few businesses are
able to do it on a global scale. But small businesses can still
own a colour within their market if owners choose the right one
for their logo and stick with it.