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    Simon Manchipp, one of three creative directors and partners at London-based studio SomeOne, said on Twitter yesterday:

    “Logos are dead. Yet we have been featured in the new book Logo Design Love as an example of how to do Logos.

    “They are a hangover from old-school thinking about branding. There is no desire by the public for a new logo. They are simply an old-fashioned approach to differentiating products or services.”

    Upon questioning, Manchipp explicitly meant, “…that symbols invented to accompany brand names are a waste of time, money and effort.”

    I asked David Law, Manchipp’s partner at SomeOne (and the man who kindly submitted SomeOne’s designs for inclusion in my book), what he thought of his colleague’s statement:

    “It’s something we have been debating internally for quite a while.

    “When you look at brands like O2, it’s success lies in the richness and depth of it’s brand world (bubbles, blue grad etc.). This forms a flexible branded platform that is instantly recognisable — you could remove the logo and still know the brand. The logo in itself is not the ‘hero’.

    “In the past, brands like IBM and FedEx traded on the logo as the ‘hero’. We see it even today.

    “So while we all acknowledge that the logo is not about to disappear — and that it is still an important part of any brand toolkit — there is a case for applying more emphasis on brand worlds.

    "

    logodesignlove.com ‘logos are dead’

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