Tip: When designing a logo, carefully consider the merits of text-only, and whether a pictorial symbol is likely to add value.

Good recognition

Words clearly denote meaning, as they require hardly little mental interpretation, even compared to iconic symbols. Our brains are used to picking out and interpreting strong words, as they do so hundreds of times every day.

Good descriptiveness

When the whole logo is a meaningful word, the whole logo carries meaning. This is very economical, with a high ratio of visual activity to value.

Good presence

Standalone text naturally fills all the space it occupies. Also, remember fonts are designed with visually consistent weight and contrast, meaning much of the work to make your design visually consistent has already been done for you.

Powerful for new brands

These logotypes have a lot to offer new brands, mainly for their high recognition factor.

Excellent logo from www.everythingadmin.co.uk/

A great example of a text-based logo from a new brand. Says it simply, and with quality.

Established brands can fall back on iconic symbols (e.g. McDonalds' golden arches / Halifax's 'X' / Blue Cross-Blue Shield's emblem / British Airways' ribbon), as they have invested a lot of time and money behind putting those icons in place.

New brands can not have that much time and money invested from day one, so it is hard to make a symbol carry much value for the consumer. In these situations the natural meaning in words can be very helpful. A brand identity can always be redesigned at a later date, introducing a new icon (e.g. BT-Cellnet's herald).

What's wrong with symbols?

There's nothing wrong with symbols as logos. The McDonald's M, Nike's swoosh and Apple's apple are all powerful icons, which can stand alone. But they only have meaning because of our long experience with those brands.

For new brands, or re-designed brands that don't have high existing visibility in their markets, symbolic logos can be weaker than word-based logos, because they do not have the natural characteristics described above.

On the other hand, symbols can be powerful when they are iconic, i.e. they make use of established signs that represent something the viewer already knows and understands.

Iconic symbols are effective cognitive shortcuts: such as scales representing justice, house representing the home and family, umbrella representing protection etc.

Examples

Many of the most established brands use either a text-based logotype alone, or a text logo and symbol logo that can be used independently (e.g. Nike and Apple).

All logos are the trademarks and copyright of their respective owners, and are represented here for purposes of education.

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Articles + tutorials in Basics of Web Design

Basics Index
List of articles in Basics section
The Simple Shall Inherit the World Wide Web
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Conventions
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The Golden Rule of web design
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How to Design for the Web
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How to make a web site
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Layout - the basic rules
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Logical Order
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No-one looks at the screen
Why nobody enjoys looking at a screen, what that means for web sites, and how we can design sites to mitigate for it.
Factors Influencing the Web Browsing Experience
Looks at various other factors that influence us when we browse the web, and what designers can do to address them.
People are Impatient
We are all impatient when using web sites, for good reasons. Web sites be designed with this in mind will be more successful.
Readability
How to make your web pages easier to read.
Scanning
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Search Engine Optimisation Basics
Learn the basic principles and purpose of Search Engine Optmisation (SEO).
Simplicity
Why simple design is better.
The Sphere of Design
Following on from the design spectrum, a different model for visualising the balance of using your pixels.
Text-based Logos
Explains why text-based logos (logotypes) are so effective. You don't necessarily need a graphical logo.
The Brain's Strengths
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Trusting the User
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Why Most Web Sites Suck
We don't have bad web because it's difficult to create effective web sites, but because the people who make them are not properly equipped.
Why the web is hostile and how we cope
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Accessibility
Introduction to accessibility on the web, i.e. ensuring that everyone can get your content, regardless of disability