Mazda celebrates turning 90, looks back at logos
#62
My argument is that it does not matter what you name your company or what logo you make or choose to represent your company or what your mission statement is. If your service are top notch, your product is excellent, that name and that logo will stand for it, whatever they may be.
#63
What you don't seem to get is that the two things are not mutually exclusive. they have to go together. But your insistence that the effort companies put into representing themselves with a mark that embodies their brand is futile and silly is just uniformed, unrealistic and narrow minded. It flies in the face of not just one company's business view, not just America's business view but the GLOBAL business view.
#64
What you don't seem to get is that the two things are not mutually exclusive. they have to go together. But your insistence that the effort companies put into representing themselves with a mark that embodies their brand is futile and silly is just uniformed, unrealistic and narrow minded. It flies in the face of not just one company's business view, not just America's business view but the GLOBAL business view.
What I am saying is from my own experience and observations. I am not a sheep that will say ba ba ba because others are saying ba ba ba.
#65
Even though they are not mutually exclusive, my insistence is that the work, the services you provide will define your business, not the logo. Once people get to appreciate your work, they will recognize you with the logo that you have then, whatever it may be. It could be very intricate, complex, and meaningful logo or it could be as simple as your brand name/corp name such as TOYOTA or AT&T. Spending time and effort in designing a logo such as what Mazda did not once but many times and what Toyota did was a time waste.
Eg. The BMW logo IIRC is from the days it made airplanes, and represents the props of an airplane.
But after they started making and dominating the world of cars, did they change the logo to a car? No.
They stuck with whatever it was when they became famous.
Has Mercedes moved away from it's Tri-star logo? Nope. That is what they had when they became famous.
The star did not make them famous. It is what people remembered the company by when they were happy and satisfied with their products. I am not even sure what the star stands for or why Mr. Daimler chose that to represent his company. Do you?
but on the other hand, TOYOTA led an effort to develop a logo ages after they became famous.
Most people still know toyota by TOYOTA.
MAZDA did that number of times, but what stands apart is the MAZDA logo. That is still what makes them recognizable.
VW. Their logo is simple and been there for ages, in good times or bad.
Last edited by chikoo; 12-05-10 at 07:21 AM.
#67
I appreciate that. And you must understand that I have 25 years experience doing those same things on an international level. So I kind of have an informed perspective on the subject.
#68
My problem (lol) is that I have been on both sides of the fence.
MNCs push logos as brand recognition. No doubt about that. To them, everything is about brand/logo recognition when developing a market overseas.
My viewpoint is that spending too much time in developing a logo or redesigning logos every few years in an effort to improve market image is not the right approach. Evolving a logo is a good approach though utilizing the latest advances in designing tools. Redesigning a logo? Nah. A company is pretty much stuck with it, good or bad when it first hit the market.
Often times designers get carried away and try to design logo with some hidden meaning, such as the new Toyota logo.
It does not matter to the consumer what it means. They will associate that logo with whatever experience they have with the product or service offered by the company.
Last edited by chikoo; 12-05-10 at 02:16 PM.
#69
Pole Position
Toyota in its visual id has both logo and logotype.
Its TOYOTA logotype is much more prominent and people associate with it a lot more than with their actual logo or symbol. Thats why their logo is taking a back seat and its not so popular like lets say logo of Mercedes-Benz which btw has totally opposite situation compared to Toyota. MB symbol is more recognized than their typeface.
So when you say Toyota's logo is not so important and people don't care you are right but I am sure every time you think or mention Toyota you are thinking of that bold sanserif font
Its TOYOTA logotype is much more prominent and people associate with it a lot more than with their actual logo or symbol. Thats why their logo is taking a back seat and its not so popular like lets say logo of Mercedes-Benz which btw has totally opposite situation compared to Toyota. MB symbol is more recognized than their typeface.
So when you say Toyota's logo is not so important and people don't care you are right but I am sure every time you think or mention Toyota you are thinking of that bold sanserif font
Last edited by Vladi; 12-05-10 at 02:49 PM.
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