After Hillary Clinton's logo broke the Internet, Moving Brands considered a new, logo-less approach in a five-day design sprint.
When Hillary Clinton announced her bid for the 2016 presidential election, the Internet freaked out—mostly over her campaign logo.
Rumored to be designed by Pentagram’s Michael Bierut, the logo was
called everything from an ode to the hospital sign to an Easter egg
revealing Clinton’s true, right-leaning agenda.
We challenged Moving Brands—a
global creative agency with AAA clients like Sony, Google, HP, and
Netflix—to rethink the Clinton’s approach in an impossible project.
While a new brand might be built over the course of months, even years
spent going back and forth with a client, we gave them just five days to
remake Clinton's brand in a small-team design sprint between their
London and San Francisco offices. Despite the constraints, they managed
to create an evocative conversation piece—a political campaign without a
logo—that offers a fascinating peek into the branding process.
Step One: Get To Know Your Client
To get started, Moving Brands brought together a few designers, a
copywriter, a brand and communications expert, and a project manager.
They were supported by whomever else was available each day.
Usually, the agency's designers would meet with a client to get a
deep, nuanced perspective on their work. They’d have several
conversations with various members of the company, conduct interviews,
and hold workshops. That would inform everything to come.
"The biggest difference was that we didn't have any client input nor
feedback so we have to really research and study what Hillary has been
saying publicly and read various articles to understand her story,"
explains creative director Aki Shelton.
"We love collaborating with our clients and most of the time, many of
the answers are in our conversation with them—we’re just there to help
identify and define them."
Step Two: Research and Form A Point Of View
The designers ran several internal polls and interviews (and did a
lot of Googling) to form what they call a "point of view," or, in
essence, what would become Clinton’s branded take on the world. This
point of view encompassed everything from her views on debt, abortion,
and education.
Step Three: Define The Brand Story, "Make It Real"
With a Hillary Clinton persona in mind, the team built the brand
story. In this case, it was a first-person letter from Clinton herself.
The letter proposed that we unite on the causes that we all care about,
it imagined the world we would want, and it suggested that citizens come
together to make that world a reality. "Make it real" became the
punchline of the story—the unifying thread of the entire brand.
But is "make it real" really unique enough to be a brand, let alone help Clinton stand out?
"I would normally agree [that it’s too cliche], but we’re talking
about politics, where the concept of reality is shockingly rare," copy
director Michael Meyer
says. "We all have coworkers and family members with wildly different
points of view on political issues, but we’re able to live, work, and
talk together ... the media often portrays America as completely
polarized, but in our experience, that’s just not the case. Hillary is
the most centrist of all of the candidates, and we believe that her
brand should reflect that."
Step Four: Decide On A Name
Any recognizable brand—whether it’s a company or a product—needs the
right name. But in the case of Hillary Clinton, Moving Brands decided
that name shouldn’t be "Hillary Clinton." Instead, it should just be
"Hillary."
"Everyone in the studio was referring to her as Hillary, which at
first seemed inconsequential until we started talking about how much of a
differentiator it was. It’s a huge and rare advantage to be on a first
name basis with America," Meyer explains. "Additionally, it helps to
separate her from the baggage of previous Clinton administrations.
Hillary Clinton was First Lady—Hillary is the Senator/Secretary of
State/Presidential Candidate. Once we got to 'make it real,' using her
first name became a no-brainer to be more relatable, more
approachable—more real."
Steps Five and Beyond: The Visual Brand
With the brand’s name and story intact, the designers turned their
attention to all that visual stuff that most laypeople would call "the
brand," like the typography, imagery, colors, and, of course, the logo.
The new campaign’s boldest decision was to ditch the stereotypical
red, white, and blue of the American flag, which, while traditional (in
fact, the team came across some pins that FDR had used in 1932 that
looked "exactly the same" as what we use today), seemed too tired for a
progressive candidate. Instead, they opted for an electric red and
blue—a contemporary remake halfway between an American flag and a 1980s
seafoam and pink color palette.
"It was also how we [tacitly] addressed the fact that Hillary has a
good chance of being the first female president," Meyer explains.
"Historically, that’s significant, but Hillary does not play the gender
card. The palette is unisex, but warm and optimistic."
Imagery of the brand was carefully curated. Photos had to have just
the right tone: "real but not gritty, posed but not preconceived."
Airbrushing, even for the 67-year-old candidate herself, wouldn’t be in
line with the "make it real" tagline playing itself out in photography.
Ditching The Logo
Ultimately, the team decided that the photo-driven visual branding,
anchored by Hillary herself, would be more powerful than any one
campaign logo.
"There’s no symbol in the world that could ever have as much equity
as Hillary’s name and face. She’s an icon in her own right," Meyer
explains. "All a brand needs is a consistent visual design element that
makes it instantly recognizable in any application.
So to unify the visual brand, the team created what they call an
H-Frame system. Yes, it’s built from the "H" in Hillary, and it
leverages the brands electric blue and red colors to frame any images
and text in the campaign.
"We didn't want this to be called a logo. It's not just about the one
symbol to represent Hillary's brand. We created a system and voice to
represent Hillary's brand instead," Shelton says. "Brand is about story,
aligned touch points, and how you connect with your audience. We saw
all the conversations on the Internet where everyone was criticizing the
existing logo (symbol), and we thought that was totally the wrong
conversation. We should have asked, 'What is her story? Why should
everyone care?' rather than, 'Why an H and an arrow?’"
Gran parte de las dificultades por las que atraviesa el mundo se debe a que los ignorantes están completamente seguros, y los inteligentes llenos de dudas.
Suscribirse a:
Enviar comentarios (Atom)
CARACTERÍSTICAS DEL POPULISTA
En este vídeo podrás identificar al político populista con ejemplos de la vida real en la realidad peruana que por desgracia no ha tocado vi...
-
Widow's incredible moment of forgiveness: Sobbing woman went to court so she could HUG the woman who killed her husband in horror c...
-
12-dic-2012, 02:56 Como ya conté antes, tuve deudas por tres años sin pagar y en diferentes bancos. Llegue a perdida, que es lo peor para ...
-
RICHARD FELONI AND SKYE GOULD Does your job fit your personality ? The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) personality test, wh...
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario