Having the right logo can capture customers and influence buyers. Here’s what you need to know about creating one.
Julie Bawden-Davis
Writer/Author/Publisher/Speaker, Garden Guides Press
APRIL 15, 2013When Cindy Hounsell founded the Washington D.C.-based Women’s Institute for a Secure Retirement (WISER) in 1996, she needed an eye-catching logo to brand the nonprofit business and appeal to her target market. She hired a graphic designer to help create a visual representation of her vision.“Given that my market is women planning retirement, I needed a logo that would make clients feel like things would work out financially and they’d become wiser in the process,” says Hounsell, who still gets compliments on the logo.
“Showing a woman under a tree reading works well on various levels,” she says. “The logo communicates she has the leisure time to read, the book suggests education, and the large tree shelters her, indicating that it’s possible to build up a retirement nest egg so she can spend her days relaxing.”
Such effective company packaging through a well-crafted logo is a powerful sales tool for the small-business owner, helping a company stand out in a crowded marketplace and building name recognition, says Mary A. Pettigrew, principal of ampersand graphic design, inc.
, whose tagline, “communications with a conscience,” evolved from the fact that many of ampersand’s clients are from the not-for-profit world.”Logos are so important that large companies spend $30,000 to $100,000 or more creating them,” Pettigrew says. “Entrepreneurs certainly don’t have to spend that much, but they do need an effective logo. The reality is that in the last decade, communications have become extremely colorful and eye-catching, and if you don’t create an attractive logo, potential customers will pass you by.”
Keep the following tips in mind when creating a powerful company logo that builds your brand.
Good taglines tend to run three to seven words and succinctly sum up the company’s services and attributes, while also augmenting the logo itself. Think Nike’s “Just Do It” and YP’s (formerly Yellow Pages’) “Let Your Fingers Do the Walking.”

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Take Your Time
While you probably don’t have the hours or resources to conduct multiple focus groups to research your logo like large companies do, it is in your best interest to devote some time to the development phase. “Chances are you’ve thought a lot about your mission statement and who your customers are,” Pettigrew says. “Use that information to come up with a logo that subliminally portrays your mission statement.” To do this, she suggests coming up with words you want to associate with your business. “Think of feelings you want to portray, like strong, secure, fast and reliable,” she says. “A good designer can take such intangibles and use them to create a logo.” RELATED: How to Get Customers to Remember Your BrandDevelop a Tagline
In conjunction with your logo, devise a tagline that sums up your services, which can also be incorporated into a logo. “For instance, your tagline might mention critical deliverables, such as the fact that your company is trustworthy and offers security, which is something you want to communicate in the logo,” she says.