Branding Guide
The idea of "branding" covers a lot of ground these days but for the moment think of branding as visually linking your professional materials together so that your name, title and contact info are presented the same way on all your materials. This visual identity can be created with "type treatments," logos, and perhaps, images. The trick to creating an effective visual identity that will brand your materials is 1) finding a look and feel that's in synch with the work in your portfolio and 2) using it consistently. That can be as simple or as complicated as you want to make it.
TYPE TREATMENT: Create a type treatment for your name by finding several fonts
that you like- nothing too off-the-wall. Try out each font with your
name and title (P.A., Actor, Designer, Writer, etc) if you choose to use
a title. Then try them out at different sizes and in different colors. Print them out so you can see what they look like on paper.
LIVE WITH IT: Tape your type treatments to
the wall or the fridge and keep an eye on them for a few weeks. Some
designs will begin to look crappy after a while and can be eliminated. Eventually one will emerge as superior. Then find a second font that is
perhaps a plainer version of your "brand" font to use for your contact
information.
LOGOS: The ideal logo is unique and
totally synced up with your artistic (or whatever) sensibility. But
frankly, creating a great logo for oneself is a daunting task. Most
students haven't clearly defined their artistic sensibilities nor do
they have the advanced design skills that are essential to the task. Graphic designers, on the other hand, are trained to create intuitive
and striking visual identities. If a simple and professional-looking
type treatment of your own design doesn't do it for you, get a designer. (Before beginning work on a logo with a designer, be ready to
articulate who you are as an artist, what your ideas are for the logo,
and have examples that will help the designer know where to begin).
BRAND IT: Brand all your materials
together by using your type treatment/logo on your website, print book,
DVD cover, business cards and all materials that will represent your
professional life. Your type treatment or logo should be sized up or
down to fit your different pieces. A basic branding strategy will add a
consistent visual identity to all your professional materials- that is
recognizably yours.
CAUTIONS: 1) Print small quantities.
Things change. 2) It's easy to create a goofy looking logo. Don't. 3)
People have been trying to devise interesting logos from their initials
since the alphabet was invented. No one has succeeded.