Miller Enterprises - Web Site & Print Design

This blog is authored by Terri Miller owner of Miller Enterprises Design Inc. - Web Site & Print Designs. It focuses on web and design related information and tackles the latest issues involving good web design, business marketing, general computer issues and a personal rant or two about customer service.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Color in the Marketplace: Brand Image and Identity

An Excerpt from Color: Messages and Meanings, A Pantone® Color Resource
by Leatrice Eiseman

While it is a given that a successful brand logo is a happy marriage of shapes, symbols and colors, it is truly the colors that evoke the emotional message. Many leading brands are so linked to specific hues that they are primarily recognized by their color or colors. Think Coke red, American Express blue, Kodak yellow and red, British Petroleum (BP) yellow and green, DeWalt black and yellow.

Color is a powerful means of instant communication, capable of evoking strong emotions and spurring desired actions or reactions. Color: Messages and Meanings, A PANTONE Color Resource teaches you how to effectively use color in your marketing, advertising and design.

Learn about color in the marketplace, creating moods with color combinations and future color trends. Order your copy today.


When a color and design "signature" is established, it becomes the brand identifier that reinforces the image in the marketplace across many levels of communication. This should include print and collateral materials, websites, packaging, point of purchase displays, signage, as well as the product itself, creating what is termed a "total brand experience."

Consumers need to have that brand experience wherever they shop or seek information about the brand, as it also helps establish that they will receive the same quality and service across many platforms. So it's not just about image.

There are five essential steps in making a color choice for brand image/identity. They are:

"Shop" the competition.
You don't want to spend precious time and effort creating the perfect image only to find that somebody got there before you did. If your color ID is too similar, your product can be confused with a competitor's offering and this would defeat the brand image intention. In a crowded marketplace, differentiating your brand is vital to the success of the product/message.

Do you homework.
Study the brand's background. What are the product or service goals? What are the company's intrinsic values? This helps create a pathway to the colors that will best identify and communicate their goals. For example, because of the inevitable connection to blue as being steadfast, constant and dependable (see Chapter 1 of Color: Messages and Meanings, A Pantone Color Resource), the blue family is a popular choice for the financial world. The real challenge is to utilize a blue that has not been overused. Another solution would be to arrange the hues in unique new combinations that will help to reinforce the dominant blue presence.

Know the target audience.
Explore market research regarding consumers' perception of the product and color preferences. Many companies are now using mall intercepts and/or lifestyle research where consumers are literally accompanied in the course of a normal day so that their lifestyle and buying habits can be observed. On the other hand, some companies do not believe in market research and will rely solely on the designers' or colorists' choices. No matter what research exists (or does not), in the end, it is your intuitive and educated input that should always be included and presented.

Always keep the psychology of color a major priority when choosing appropriate brand image hues.
A key element in color choice is its emotional meaning. Be certain that the information is current, credible and reliable, as this will form the basis of your rationale for your selections. When refreshing any component of a brand image, color trends are important but it is best to combine the "new" or skewed colors with more familiar brand image colors.

It's important to note that as much as 95% of consumers' decision-making is dictated by the subconscious.
As far as color is concerned, most decision-making is intuitive and emotional, so the appropriateness and first impression of color is critical. Approximately 5% of decision-making is rational. As a result, most consumers do not make purchasing decisions based solely on logic, but on perception. Color plays a major role in creating those perceptions.

Read more about color and its powerful role in marketing, advertising and design in Color: Messages and Meanings, A PANTONE® Color Resource.

Excerpt from Color: Messages and Meanings, A PANTONE ® Color Resource reprinted with permission from the publisher, Hand Books Press, and the author, Leatrice Eiseman.


About the author: Leatrice Eiseman, author of Color: Messages and Meanings, A PANTONE ® Color Resource, is an internationally renowned color expert, color trend forecaster, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute ® and founder of the Eiseman Center for Color Information and Training. Her educational background in psychology, business and design gives her a unique perspective in guiding numerous companies to meaningful and successful color choices. The author of seven books on color, she is a frequent guest on TV. She makes presentations to a variety of industries and schools on the emotional impact of color, consumer response research and color trends. Lee has received numerous awards, among them: Fortune magazine named her one of the top 10 decision-makers in business and Home Furnishings Now honored her as #13 in the top 100 style arbiters internationally.

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