Brands are constantly growing, changing, and responding to evolving markets. Keeping up to speed involves updating strategies to meet the needs of clients or consumers. These changes extend to (and often inform) a shift in their identity, including their visual identity. This will be rolled out in the form of a re-brand or brand refresh. We often hear “X company has re-branded” but it’s usually more of a brand re-fresh. In this blog, we explore the difference between the two and look at some of our favourites from 2023.
So, firstly, let’s take a look at the differences…
rebrand
A rebrand is a significant change to a brand’s identity. It looks at changing not only visual elements like the logo, supporting graphics and colour palettes but in many cases a complete overhaul of the company’s core values, messaging and positioning in the market.
transformation
- Logo – involves a complete redesign of the logo or maybe even the company name
- Identity – looks at new colour schemes, typography, and other visual elements
- Messaging – the company may develop or re-assess its core values, mission and vision
- Positioning – making fundamental changes to align with new objectives, the market or audiences
strategy
A rebrand is usually driven by significant strategic shifts within the company, such as entering new markets and changing target demographics.
perception
It’s about creating a noticeable difference in how the brand is perceived by existing and potential clients or customers and presenting a transformed identity that breaks away from the previous perception.
launch
Rebrands are usually launched with strategic campaigns to announce the changes to the public. For bigger brands, this could include things like press releases, social media campaigns, and events.
refresh
A brand refresh is a smaller and more subtle update existing brand identity, often to modernise the brand while retaining its essence.
evolve
- Logo – minor changes to the logo to make it stand out a little more. It could be tweaked to the shape of the font, adding a slight gradient or adjustments to the scaling of the brand mark
- Identity – modifications to elements such as imagery, graphics, colours, and typography. All elements will be looked at to bring them in line with current design trends or consumer preferences.
- Messaging – for a brand re-fresh this is not a complete overhaul, but a project may involve refining messaging or taglines for example.
- Positioning – adjusting the brand’s positioning slightly brings it in line with the current industry and market landscape.
consistency
It’s about enhancing, rather than reinventing the wheel. The most important thing to remember when taking on a brand re-fresh is to stay consistent with the original identity. To evolve the brand while ensuring that it remains recognisable.
implementation
A brand refresh can be implemented gradually over time, allowing for a smoother transition and minimal disruption Brand re-freshes are often rolled out in phases rather than one big launch. Gradually implementing the brand will allow for any teething issues to be ironed out during the first phase of the process for example.
summary
To summarise, a rebrand is a full transformation of a brand’s identity, with significant changes in visual elements, messaging, and strategic direction. Whereas a brand refresh is more subtle. It’s an update or modernisation of the existing brand identity. The decision between the two is often led by strategy, goals, market dynamics, and the level of change the company would like to see.
Now we know the difference, let’s take a look at some re-branding and re-freshes.
rebrands and refreshes from 2023 so far
1 – Flaunt Digital (of course it’s number 1!)
Our brand re-fresh is now a whole year old! This upgrade to our visual identity came about after some serious growth within the company. We went from 8 – 32 employees in the space of 8 years, moved to a fabulous new office space and we were gaining and pitching for more well-known clients. We wanted to show off who we were and stand out in a crowded space.
To stay true to our core values and show our growth through modernisation. We wanted to communicate who we were in 2023 as opposed to where we started in 2015 – more grown up, confident and bold. With very subtle updates to:
- Logo – we updated the logo using a similar but bolder and more legible font, which felt more confident and direct.
- Identity – we updated the hero typography across the board to match the logo but kept all body copy fonts the same. We used our hero font as the lowercase font in contrast to the CAPS used in the logo. Using the lowercase felt conversational and helped to communicate our approachable yet confident personality. We updated our hero colour purple to a deeper hue and introduced a contrasting neon pink which gave the brand a stylish yet fun vibe. To celebrate each of our services we gave each of them their neon colour which is used across external and internal documents to differentiate.
- Messaging – we evolved our messaging to align with the company we were growing into, of course with our routes and values at the core of everything. This process was quite natural our tone of voice was being looked at with our website so all copy was being looked at and updated with our new bold and confident tone of voice.
- Positioning – the identity refresh positioned us within a competitive digital industry as a big, bold, confident brand that knows its stuff. It helps us to communicate that we are experts and we are the best at what we do.
2 – Meta
Last month Meta announced a Facebook brand re-fresh. With a re-drawn logo with the “f”
sitting on an electric blue for. They created an elevated colour palette consisting of a range of blue hues, with a focus on accessibility.
“The goal of our work was to expand upon our foundation and create the defining mark of our brand that anchors the identity system across Facebook. We wanted to ensure that the refreshed logo felt familiar, yet dynamic, polished and elegant in execution. These subtle, but significant changes allowed us to achieve optical balance with a sense of forward movement.” – Dave N, Director of Design, Facebook
Quote and images courtesy of Meta/Facebook
3 – NOKIA
The NOKIA rebrand is a pretty momentous shift, coming to fruition because of a major change to strategy and capturing who they are as a business in the current day “with renewed energy and commitment as pioneers of digital transformation” as they move into the B2B tech space. The bold and modern transformation sees shapes within the logo being used throughout brand photography showing the people they work alongside and connect.
Logo: Old (left) vs new (right)
4 – Pepsi
My favourite… now that’s a whole other blog PEPSI vs Coca-Cola anyway back to it. PEPSI have given us a super fun rebrand as they celebrate 124 years it’s the first logo update in 14 years. A re-designed logo that nods to a previous logo they used throughout the 70s 80s and 90s celebrating it’s but with a leap toward the future.
Now you know the difference and have been inspired by some of our faves, what do you think of your current brand identity? Could it be time for something new, re-brand or refresh? Get in touch with our creative experts and we’ll let you know what we think!