TGJ 3O1 - 3 Types of Logos

TGJ 3O1 - 3 Types of Logos

TGJ 3O1 - 3 Types of Logos

Glyphs (Symbol)

A glyph, or symbol, icon, pictograph, etc., is a graphic representation of your company, such as logos for Shell, Apple, and American Greetings (the rose). Glyphs are not generally used for logos, but as communication devices, such as the recycle logo, all Olympic event icons, and instructional devices, like a broken wine glass on a box to signify the contents in the box are fragile.

Glyphs, by themselves, are the least used types of logos, but, if done correctly, can provide the most impact and establish a sophisticated, intellectual corporate identity. Creating a glyph for a logo requires experience and talent and, if done by a non-professional, might look amateurish, unattractive and may even take away from your company's credibility. BEWARE!!!!

Alpha-Glyphs

An alpha-glyph is similar to a glyph, but uses a letter or letters from the name of a company in a graphical way to convey what the company does. Sometimes a letter designed in a particular style may be sufficient.

Many auto makers use these types of logos, such as Honda, Accura, Mazda, and Hyundai. One of the most popular and recognized logos in the history of the 20th century is this type of logo: IBM. Other examples of this type include GM, Adobe Systems, Moen, and America On-Line.

This type of logo is the second least-used logo, and, as with a glyph, if done correctly, can greatly raise the image of your company. However, it also shares a glyph's downfall: if done haphazardly, alpha-glyphs can appear unprofessional and might provoke laughter rather than sales.

Alphanumeric(Word mark)

This type of mark is the most widely-used logo and we are bombarded with them wherever we go on practically whatever we see. An alphanumeric logo is the name of your company or brand spelled out, literally, but the treatment of the typography is usually unique unto the name itself and can therefore be trademarked and be treated as a logo.

To name a mere fraction of all the examples that exist in the world: Kellogg's, FedEx, Microsoft, Sony, Ford, and the list goes on and on.

This is the "safe" logo and the easiest to create (by an amateur's standards). A designer, though, will spend as much time tweaking an alphanumeric logo as he or she will with a glyph or alphaglyph. Letter-spacing, color, font choice, word relationships and other factors play into the creation of an alphanumeric logo.

Combination

There may come a point in time where two or more agencies are creating marketing materials for you, which is always an alarming situation for consistency's sake. The glorious gift and unfortunate side-effect of creativity is that no two designers will create the same-looking piece, even if both were given the same copy, images and parameters. Therefore, if no standards are established for your logos and marketing communications, much wasted time and money will be spent in order to get those two competing agencies to see "eye to eye."

This is why thick books have been created for large companies that outline their logo standards for everything from business cards and letterheads, to packaging, brochures, catalogs and signage. Briefly, these identity standard booklets preserve the logo in its original beautiful form, by citing examples of proper usage and "illegal" usage, such as incorrect color, improper spacing or placement, or inconsistent size of the company name with respect to the glyph or alphaglyph. These standards will hopefully safeguard the use of the logo by itself or in a layout, thereby improving consistency, credibility, and outside perception.