THE BLOG

13
Sep
3 STEPS TO CREATING, LAUNCHING & MARKETING A NEW PRODUCT/SERVICE BRAND.

3 STEPS TO CREATING, LAUNCHING & MARKETING A NEW PRODUCT/SERVICE BRAND.

You spot an opportunity, a gap in the market, an extension to what you currently offer – a way to serve more people or provide greater service to those you already serve.

You want to create, launch and market a new product or service brand in addition to your current offerings but aren’t quite sure where or how to start?

This is our simple guide into how to best get going.

It’s a 3-step process we have used in the past to help our own clients and in true loft fashion – it is short, fast and to the point.

1. FIND THE VALUE-ADD

It is absolutely critical is to start with your customers first.

Your new service or product is likely to be related in someway to what you are currently doing or offering. It is essential to know from the outset – both the theoretical, but more importantly the practical advantages that your new product or service is likely to offer your customers.

A technology company that offers ‘more flexible working’ sounds good to a business owner – in theory.

The ability to download,edit,re-upload documents to a shared workspace, anywhere in the world from the phone of one of your staff-members paints a much more vivid picture of additional value to that business owner and potential customer.

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Understanding the real human ‘value-adds’ and beginning to paint this picture in your materials is important and as you go forward, you will find even more practical benefits to your solutions. It is important to know and list what they are as you begin creating your new product/service brand.

2. PRIORITISE ACTIVITIES

Most will say that you need a brand first, then a website, then some marketing materials, etc… We advocate a slightly different approach – we believe that you should break these down. Consider all of the individual elements that form these channels rather than the channels themselves.

Break them down – the logo, the tagline, customer benefits, team bios, contact details, important features, ‘how-it-works,’ etc.

Maybe, you only really need to start with one or two of these elements rather than all of them.

Your agency should be tasked with considering the whole brand from the outset but the scope of the first project may (and this will depend on the size of your organisation) be the release of a simple flyer with some pictograms telling the story and a call-to-action to your first 5000 prospects.

You must consider the best ways to tell the stories that matter to customers. Build on the positive benefits discovered in the first part – the value-adds.

Many will want to go straight to logos, websites, e-newsletter systems, etc.

We think this is fine – and sensible most of the time – but we would say it is even more important to start with content. It will take you a little off the beaten path but one image which captivates customers could be worth so much more than a costly branding exercise.

If you are an established company – you may be able to piggy-back off the main company brand for a short period. Most established organisations will have guidelines which will give ideas for sub-brands. At this stage we want to engage customers and help you get your first real sales on the board and some cash in the bank. Pictograms, visual systems, eye-catching images, short videos will all help you paint a better picture of what your new offering can do for people.

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All start-ups (and these new initiatives are start-ups in principle,) will have very limited marketing budgets and (at this point,) no revenue as of-yet. So we suggest that you really prioritise and maximise your budgets to give you the biggest bang for your buck. We really believe in building momentum and these initial stages are so critical that you can move fast, launch quickly and start obtaining some happy customers.

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Write out 10-12 activities that you would like to do, prioritise those that are most likely to get you going and start. The chances are that items 4-12, will change in nature or content once you begin doing things anyway. You will establish quick wins that you will want to build on and this will likely change the rest of the list.

3. ACTION

As stated in the previous list, and this wouldn’t be a loft list, if it didn’t contain the word ‘ACTION’ somewhere.

Launch!

Get it out there in all its raw and imperfect glory.

Talk to customers, sell your first products or services and then build from there.

As stated, it is only by doing that you will be adequately informed where to go next, that you will have something to build on. At the beginning – there isn’t really a right or wrong way – a more optimal way will become apparent through action.

This will be as true for the operational efficiency of your product/service as it will for your marketing efforts.

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Don’t forget to be bold, focus on the result over the method and have fun. By acting this way, it will unlock a whole new raft of unseen creative ideas which will set your brand apart and take it to another dimension.

Benedetto

BB

Benedetto is the founder of the loft, a design and branding agency based in Glasgow.

The loft helps its clients build more effective brand communications and operates in a diverse range of sectors, specialising in technology, packaging design and professional services. The company is proud to include Petroleum Experts, The Wood Group, BenRiach Whisky, The University of West of Scotland and Glasgow City Marketing Bureau amongst its clients.

The loft offers people-centred brand solutions created using imaginative thought processes and delivered with a consistently high-quality and bespoke client service.

The loft is looking beyond traditional creative services and has begun to produce more integrated brand journeys for its clients – tying together disciplines such as digital, social media and customer experience – in addition to sales & marketing to help companies attract and retain customers & staff. Essentially, building a stronger bond between the person and the brand.

The loft was setup with assistance by PSYBT in 2012 and received Growth Funding the following year. Benedetto is the regional ambassador for the Princes Trust in Glasgow and also provides support to other charities including Young Enterprise Scotland, SMART STEMs and MCR Pathways.

09
Sep

#LOVEDETAIL

At the loft, we just love great details.

We love those tiny gems that transform a design from something that is good into something that is great. In this post, we share some of the strongest details we’ve worked on in the last couple of years. Each one – helping to build even stronger and more engaging designs that resonate with people.

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INTRODUCING STEVEN, GREGG AND STUART

Whilst working with Seric Systems and Springboard Marketing a few years back – we created a new internal piece of branding. A very strong process-driven, geometric poster, elegantly placing a huge amount of information onto a very small space in a very impactful way. The poster looked good but we had doubts whether anybody would actually refer to it. The idea to put Stuart, Steven and Greg on the poster with carefully-selected messages helped take this piece up another level.

 

2

IN CHAOS COMES ORDER

Whilst creating individual sub-brands for Altia Solutions, we made abstract data sets with colours to demonstrate ‘working with data.’ They were already looking good – when we decided we should give them a final flourish – we hid patterns within the grids. Each pattern symbolises the true function of the product – Transforming DATA, Cleaning DATA & Linking DATA for The Toolkit, Toolbar & Insight.

 

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PIN MARKS THE SPOT

In the creation of any brand exercise – it is of the utmost importance that the final mark has as many visual cues as possible to symbolise the strength and attributes of the organisation. ‘Strategic Positioning’ for Beeks FX VPS is a critical part of their offering. To add a small creative flourish to an already-strong brand. We manipulated the centre of the ‘b’ in ‘beeks’ to look like a small map-pin. A delightful touch that add weight to a brand that is already brimming with symbolic reference.

 

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PERSONALITY ENHANCED

The Illustrations of the Fridge Angels team were borne out of meeting a tight website deadline. In the last hours before website publish, we required shots of the team but with no time to get them together in a consistent format.

A couple of smartphone pics later, some handy illustration skills and one of our designers working at the speed of light – we had three beautifully, bold illustrations of the new Fridge Angels team helping to bring a brand that is already full of personality to life that little bit further.

6NASHIRA

We already knew that the Bridge2Business brand was going to be a special one – a brand based on star constellations. What more does an entrepreneur need on their voyage than the stars to guide them on their path?

We had a strong logo but wanted to give it that little bit more meaning and found Nashira meaning ‘Lady Luck’. This made a good brand even better and the story was widely used in their launch. Nashira was the star of their brand launch in the Planetarium of the Glasgow Science Centre…

 

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IN & OUT THE CYCLE

As an extension to the Financial Investigators Toolkit brand, Altia had a new bureau service. We designed a logo which neatly depicted the style of the process – a motion cycle of the the Tookit – neatly showing what the software could do. We also had all of the different customer benefits on-site too. However, we needed something that would make it more obvious for customers. A simple system was created – bank statement in, through the ‘Xaltia Data Services’ cycle and Excel documents out. So simple your granny would get it.

 

 

7

DESIGN-WITH-SOUL

The words that summarise our entire existence.

Somehow they had to find their way onto a business card, already jammed with clever features – quadruplex card, letter-pressed characters and a foil printed logo.

Insanely thick and beautifully finished, the blind-pressing of ‘DESIGN WITH SOUL’ turn a great business card into something epic!

 

BB

Benedetto is the founder of the loft, a design and branding agency based in Glasgow.

The loft helps its clients build more effective brand communications and operates in a diverse range of sectors, specialising in technology, packaging design and professional services. The company is proud to include Petroleum Experts, The Wood Group, BenRiach Whisky, The University of West of Scotland and Glasgow City Marketing Bureau amongst its clients.

The loft offers people-centred brand solutions created using imaginative thought processes and delivered with a consistently high-quality and bespoke client service.

The loft is looking beyond traditional creative services and has begun to produce more integrated brand journeys for its clients – tying together disciplines such as digital, social media and customer experience – in addition to sales & marketing to help companies attract and retain customers & staff. Essentially, building a stronger bond between the person and the brand.

The loft was setup with assistance by PSYBT in 2012 and received Growth Funding the following year. Benedetto is the regional ambassador for the Princes Trust in Glasgow and also provides support to other charities including Young Enterprise Scotland, SMART STEMs and MCR Pathways.

05
Sep
HAPPY FACES

HAPPY FACES

“We start with happy faces and work backwards…”

This was the answer I gave to a young business person who asked me recently how the loft was so busy and why we are working on so many new projects at the moment.

It is devastatingly simple when you think about it, so simple I have missed it myself, a few times in the past.

“Nobody cares how much you know, until they know how much you care.”

We picture happy clients, we visualise them giving out their business cards, showing off their websites, sharing their info-graphics on social media. We make storyboarding one of the most important parts of our creative process. We don’t start with typography or graphics or technology or what others are doing.

We take a positive scenario and work backwards.

I know this approach sets us apart from many other agencies and many other service providers.

In the loft, we leave our egos at the door, we practice and sometimes obsess about ‘context.’

How can we make our solutions work for the client? What do we need to do to achieve an effective result for them? How can we make them happy? Delighted even?

The client provides the framework and it’s our job to shine within that framework. This regularly takes us off the beaten path but it does help the people we work with, to shine.

It allows them to pass their business cards to others with absolute confidence, to provoke a person to go to the ‘contact page’ on their website or to tempt a person to pick the bottle off the shelf.

We are relentlessly focussed on those details because they are the things that matter. They are going to help our clients and by helping our clients, we know they’ll come back again and again, and sometimes refer new people too.

The method changes, but the result always remains – happy clients.

 

Richard Seymour’s, ‘How Beauty Feels’ in my favourite TED talk, he discusses creating things that are just wonderful for people – our ethos is the same.

Most people don’t remember what Steve jobs said about the technical spec of the new I-Phone in 2007, but they do remember him calling a local Starbucks and using the new device to order ‘4,000 lattes to go!’

 

This focus allows us to deliver solutions quicker, we are able to maximise client budgets, it allows us to concentrate on what’s important. The process also gives us endless scope for creative solutions.

Thankfully, we have a team of exceptional designers and suppliers who can mould their considerable talents around those bespoke requirements, talented people who have the humility to understand that the best way they can be the stars is by shaping their skills to the benefit of those that they serve.

Our approach is effective but it does require people with open minds, good intuition and exceptional basic skills. Thankfully we have just those people.

Some (crazily I believe) ask if it can be tiresome hearing how good you are all the time?

It doesn’t.

People using the word ‘love’ when talking about things you have done for them or seeing their materials shine on social media is a tremendously uplifting experience. And one that generates its own momentum to keep on going.

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The Advert we created for Petroleum Experts, found its way onto this very large 3-Dimensional, glass paperweight, something they gave to their clients for their 25th anniversary.

Or how about working with a client who in 25 years, having never worked with a creative agency, loving their design so much that they re-produce it in glass to give to their clients on their own 25th Anniversary Dinner.

That last moment is one that happened recently when Hamid Guedroudj and James Woodrow of Petroleum Experts pulled me into their office and presented me with a blue box and inside was one of the biggest paperweights I have ever seen – and one with the design that we co-created with them. A bit of a favourite moment amongst many.

When you start with happy faces and things like this happen you cannot help but have a happy face yourself.

Benedetto

BB

Benedetto is the founder of the loft, a design and branding agency based in Glasgow.

The loft helps its clients build more effective brand communications and operates in a diverse range of sectors, specialising in technology, packaging design and professional services. The company is proud to include Petroleum Experts, The Wood Group, BenRiach Whisky, The University of West of Scotland and Glasgow City Marketing Bureau amongst its clients.

The loft offers people-centred brand solutions created using imaginative thought processes and delivered with a consistently high-quality and bespoke client service.

The loft is looking beyond traditional creative services and has begun to produce more integrated brand journeys for its clients – tying together disciplines such as digital, social media and customer experience – in addition to sales & marketing to help companies attract and retain customers & staff. Essentially, building a stronger bond between the person and the brand.

The loft was setup with assistance by PSYBT in 2012 and received Growth Funding the following year. Benedetto is the regional ambassador for the Princes Trust in Glasgow and also provides support to other charities including Young Enterprise Scotland, SMART STEMs and MCR Pathways.

18
Aug

‘DESIGN-ING WITH SOUL’

It’s been a busy time recently and as we get busier and busier with new projects and more successful outcomes – some have been asking about the way we work in the loft and how a small agency which focusses almost exclusively on design manages to grow in the days of more ‘digital solutions.’

So I thought I’d share 10 ideas of the ways we work in the loft – working this way in the last year has fuelled our growth, brought client wins and an awful lot of nice things being said about our work.

They are more about attitudes than the actual mechanics of design but they are our 10 gems about… ‘designing with soul’

1.       ACTION

There is literally no problem that can’t be solved with positive action. This idea is our guiding principle in the studio. A high energy and productive studio brimming with ideas will always have enough momentum to create great solutions and hone solutions to perfection. Every time we think we are hitting a creative brick wall or are torn between two solutions that don’t seem quite right – we develop them both and throw in another 3 for good measure. This loose-ness and care-free abandon removes the creative shackles and almost always produces great solutions.

Action means you have momentum. In design terms at least, it is better to be 80% down the wrong road than to not have started. We find that some people fail 5 times and still find the right solution before others have barely even started to get going so we put the word ‘ACTION!’ at the heart of our way of working.

2.       MAKE TOMORROW HAPPEN TODAY

This principle has as much to do about mentality as it does about practice. Making tomorrow happen today or ‘beginning with the end in mind’ means having faith in ourselves to deliver an outstanding solution to our design challenge, one that makes our client happy as well as ourselves. It means keeping faith in our work throughout the entire process, regardless whether progress is fast or slow.

It means favouring results over methods.

We avoid spending huge amounts of time changing our minds, running into creative cul-de-sacs, when we already have viable design solutions which can be completed with just a little refinement and honing. We contextualise our design solutions, standing where the client stands as soon as possible to help us gain better insights and achieve superior results.

Also, getting to a solution quicker is to the benefit of everybody and we use any time left to create stronger details. When speaking of time, it is just another resource, and when in short supply, we are amazed at how much more creative we become. We work fast in the loft, we road-test ideas quickly, we learn quickly, we fail quickly, this concentration of knowledge and energy always leads to better thought-through design solutions that are usually created in double-quick time. You can also feel the energy and immediacy in the work. Doubling the amount of time on a creative project seldom gives you a solution which is twice as good.

3.       GIVE THE CLIENT WHAT THEY WANT

This may seem far and away like the most obvious principle, but it is amazing the amount of time that studios fall foul of this – ourselves included. We are all guilty of giving the client what we think they want and not what they actually want. The reason this principle is so important is that so much time can be saved going down blind allies – we save as much as 30/40% of branding or graphical solutions by asking the right questions and really listening to what a client wants at the beginning.

More importantly, the more bespoke and personal we make a design solution the more valuable we know our service becomes. The greater the challenge, the narrower the window of design constraints, the greater the opportunity for us to really test our creative mettles. We know that the client is not always right and they should be challenged at times, neither are we alway right. We always look to educate and inform, particularly at the beginning of a process. However, we believe once a designer has their parameters, the difference between the amateurs and the pros is that the true pros always deliver regardless of how limited a brief may be! We love being pushed into tight corners as it allows us to come up with even more imaginative solutions.

4.       START WITH WORDS

Every single project we do begins with words, not images and absolutely not images of competitors work, or benchmarking. A brand, a piece of graphical work, a piece of digital work should arouse various thoughts/feelings in the people engages with it. Those words/thoughts/feelings or even stories are always the starting point for any project for us. They provide a much greater scope for imaginative thoughts and ideas. A canvas with much greater potential. We risk cutting off too much of what we can create if we limit our imaginations at the very first hurdle.

Interestingly most projects we work on start with various messages or a set of words which will be imperfect themselves, as we hone our graphical solutions, we become more able to hone the words themselves. Imagine a see-saw between words and images. As we progress into our designs – the images counter the message and vice versa with both becoming accurate.

5.       INSPIRATION IS EVERYTHING

Inspirations are absolutely everything to us. We see it as our duty to seek out the interesting – to find those abstract shapes, patterns, marks, textures, lines colours and understand why they arouse certain emotions in us. In the studio, we always begin with mood-boards – those inspiration images are everything to us.

The beauty we find in those mood-boards is pivotal to successful design solutions. When our work runs off-course, it is nearly always because we haven’t found or remained true to the beauty of those initial inspirations. Occasionally, finding the true beauty in that inspiration is where the real work in a project is – understanding if it’s the negative space in a composition, the symmetry of a shape, a particular arrangement of colour or the drama of a certain pose – these are all things that we examine when working with our inspirations. Once we raise our awareness of why something works, we take that knowledge and apply it to every technical element of the entire project.

6.       BUILD FROM THE BOTTOM UP!

This is a really important principle. We all have sky high standards, want to do our best and create something outstanding. We never try to do this in one go. The simplest, most effective design solutions that we have created, usually come from thousands of sketches and ideas that have been communicated, mulled over, rejected, re-brought in, analysed, mixed with others, etc…

Having read Jonathan Ive’s book and analysing all of the beautiful, simple and minimal Apple products; we know they are products that are not borne of a designer having one big idea but the manifestations of thousands, if not tens of thousands of thoughts, ideas and decisions made and culminated into beautiful pieces of design. This is why we see it as of the utmost importance that we put our ideas down quickly – very quickly. Then build from the bottom-up, each time, doing just enough to get us to the next stage. Every studio will be different but we work with…

words>inspirations>concept work>development work>final solution.

This involve testing out lots and lots of potential solutions along the way. We don’t perfect our initial concepts in one go, we build from the bottom up in levels, the difference is that we keep building new levels of excellence into our solutions – more honed proportions, even more eye-catching details, greater refinements.

Individual taste of our designers can plays a part in this – sometimes a desire to deduce a design to its simplest core components, sometimes it is to add greater sub-stories into a solution or sometimes just exploring a particular theme in greater depth.

Two quick tips with this principle…

We see it as incredibly important to be positive and constructive, especially during the early stages – we only see the good in our own work, we build on the good and ignore what isn’t working 100%. We see too many designers draw a couple of sketches and try and take them to a close in one go – a bit like a boxer trying to knock out the other fighter with one big punch. It seldom happens. We only see the good – the inspirational, the beautiful, the interesting – this gives us energy and encouragement to drive forward and build in the next stage. We are always looking to create, grow and build on the positive and ignore the negative. The perfectionist part or the deductive part of design for us comes only after a very lengthy creative part, usually at the end when we have a number of solutions to choose from, we never try to close with our first or even our third sketches.

One other little tip that we use in the studio is that we do 30 second sketches, sometimes even 15 second sketches. Nothing cuts through the logical barriers we put in front of ourselves by having to sketch an idea in 15 seconds. It is a wonderful process; we are constantly amazed at the quality and richness of ideas that can be generated from this simple step. It also helps us to become more intuitive as designers. Intuition alongside imagination are mental muscles that we believe every designer has an interest in developing.

7.       PROCRASTINATION IS BAD!

Everybody will design differently but we are very much advocates of a high tempo, high-energy, inspiration-led design process. As mentioned, many of the most beautiful forms of minimalist designs did not come from a single idea that was perfected as a sketch but as the results of fast thinking, fast generation of ideas and decisiveness by the designer or design leader managing the process. We never treat a thought, idea, sketch or even development as precious; they are simply the building block to a ‘next-stage.’ As stated, we tend to have a lot of ‘next-stages’ which leads to better and better design solution. We make up our minds quickly and seldom change them. We see decisiveness as so important as a designer, we believe we can make just about any visual idea work with a truly committed decision and lots of persistence. In the loft, we make our minds up quickly, intuitively, and then we persist, persist, persist with a certain path or idea, almost to the point that it hurts. We see a truly great design as usually just a slight tweak away, and many of our greatest efforts only clicked at the very last moments. However, on the odd occasion when we haven’t been able to make an idea work, when we have taken a design so far down a wrong road, it is only by pushing it so far in a mistaken direction that we have gained absolute clarity about where we have fell short and why another concept may work better. The type of clarity you can’t get if you don’t travel along the path in the first place.

8.       THE ANSWER LIES INSIDE

As we progress with a project, the greater is the temptation to start looking around for other ideas or inspiration. The head-shifting Meerkat syndrome. We believe this has fatal consequences in the quality of our solutions – we lose the original purity of thought or inspiration by looking at others. Occasionally clients will ask for benchmarking activities and it is something that we look at like other studios. However, we believe designers should not be looking at other designs for inspirations unless they are very much in-line with the inspiration/idea/theme/story being explored throughout their own projects. We believe great design is nearly always about purity of expression. We believe that the answer to any problems with a piece of visual design can be found by looking more closely at our own inspirations, ideas, themes and stories, getting to know them better and faithfully exploring them for more creative solutions not lumping elements from other designs onto our own.

9.       ONCE WE’RE DONE, TEAR IT UP AND START AGAIN

To ensure that our designs have real purity – we take them apart and put them back together again. We reduce them to their core components on the wall or on our art-boards, we hone them, analyse them and ensure that there is a real consistency there piece-by-piece. Every piece of design, when reduced to its core components should have a common language running through them that is in line with original inspirations. We print our logos big in the studio then cut them into individual parts to ensure that the radiuses are all consistent, that the relationship between lines are correct, to ensure that every individual part is as consistent as it should be. We look at them in the mirror, we turn them upside down, we look at them big and small, we look at them as black and whites and as negatives. Every part of the process allows us to learn something more and be creative in a further way. This is the rigour and technical discipline that is necessary to create outstanding solutions.

10.   WE DON’T LET IT OWN US…

In the studio, or during work times, a designer must really give their all but we believe it’s so important to have a great life outside of it. Design is a joyful activity. We never live for the work, we instead treat it as work. We believe professional designers must own their projects not the other way around, we know if we are overly precious, it owns us and not the other way around. If a designer is overly precious about their work – they will not take risks with it and he/she has to take risks. They will become tired of it quicker and this lack of enthusiasm will be reflected in the final solution.

We believe a designer needs balance. So much of what we do is about inspiration. If a designer is inspired – they will batter through their work at twice the speed anyway and this immediacy also enhances the final solution. We see inspiration as a little bit like a sand egg-timer. The more inspired an environment feels – the more the designers will work but the less it will feel like work. They will be in the zone, expressing themselves in their love of what they do. The less inspired they feel – the more turgid, ponderous the work will become, the hours become longer and this is then reflected in the final solutions. But worst, it becomes part of the work/life balance.

We have no time for this image of the miserable creative who puts his entire life on the line for their work allowing all other areas of their lives to suffer. We are professional designers, we must love what we do and to love it means not to suffocate ourselves with our love of what we do or our ambitions of what we want to achieve. Yes there will be times when you will have to work harder and longer but on the most part 7-8 hours a day is more than sufficient.

Proposal logos Sextant + constellation

Even a huge amount of work goes into design proposals that eventually become rejected. We have a dustbin of work never used, that would be the envy of many…

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Every project begins with words suggesting thoughts and feelings that should be aroused when you engage with the design solution.

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Rooting out the true inspiration for The Woman’s Enterprise Info-graphic was pivotal in getting this design right.

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Starting with a wide-open imagination and building in phases allows you to quickly build great solutions.

nashira

Real exploration of the story behind the design allowed us to use Nashira to take the Bridge2Business brand to new heights…

photo

Nothing cuts through the fuzzy thinking more than 15-30-60 second sketches

Loft Logo

Our own logo required absolute persistence with the concept. Only an 11th hour tweak to stagger the lines created the dynamic imbalance allowing the entire composition to come together.

Big, small, upside down, colour, no-colour, every project is a step into the unknown and learning as much about your design will help you reach a great final solution.

Big, small, upside down, colour, no-colour, every project is a step into the unknown and learning as much about your design will help you reach a great final solution.

Commerce

It is so important to enjoy what you do…

Leven 1

Love your clients and what they stand for!

Loft Love

Be proud of what you do…

FA-photo-for-website

And always celebrate the journey…

These 10 ideas only work for us at our energetic, inspired and productive best and this only happens if we are happy outside of our work going in and that means owning our work and not letting it own us. This is so important as many in the creative industries fall into this trap.

On a final and more positive note, many have spoke of the demise of design and communication as part of todays creative landscape and it is true that the majority of agencies growing in this area are digital companies but there are newer, more exciting opportunities for the type of designers who will find the above information interesting.

Alongside areas in new digital mediums, communication is becoming more and more prominent for companies/individuals who need to engage with ever more distracted and busier customers, staff, shareholders, board members, etc than ever before. In the last year, I have spoken to clients who are looking for what we do to illustrate their business plans, to present investment information to funders, to present information in a court of law.

For those that can provide delightful solutions to complex communication problems, there are likely to be no limits in what we can do. I hope you’ve enjoyed glimpsing into the loft studio as much as I have enjoyed sharing it.

Benedetto

BB

Benedetto is a designer and founder of the loft – a specialist design studio based in Glasgow.

The loft takes the true essence of what organisations do and with his team brings those stories to life with a coherence, simplicity and delightfulness that helps companies to create outstanding brand communications.

‘Design with Soul’ is more than a company tag-line to Benedetto, it is a way of life.

His journey has taken him from a career in car design through to his current role. He is honoured to manage a great team, work with great clients and have a lot of fun mixing with so many great people in business.

03
Aug
FUN FOR EVERYONE

FUN FOR EVERYONE

When I was just a young boy dreaming to be a car designer, my real love was for Italian cars and I can vividly remember a glorious design phase in the mid-nineties where Fiat, Alfa Romeo, Maserati and Ferrari released a collection of absolutely beautiful cars – Alfa Romeo GTV, Spider, Fiat Coupe, the first Bravo, The Ferrari 355, 456GT.

It was this glorious phases of ‘carrozzeria’ genius that led me to wanting to be a car designer.

However, there was one tale that is important for this post. Fiat, at that time were led by a car-mad CEO – Paulo Cantarella and when the company released The 1993 Fiat Punto, it was the first car in production which had the tail lights mounted high-up on the rear 3/4’s of the pillars of the car. It was such an elegant, futuristic-looking solution and it dramatically transformed the proportions of the car.

However, it wasn’t until I read the design story in Autocar months later that I seen the version pre-‘pillar-mounted tail-lights’ and how much more effective the new solution was.

What’s interesting is where the idea came from?

They were drawn on by the then CEO of the entire ‘FIAT Auto’ company – Paulo Cantarella.

Cantarella realised that safe, lukewarm design would not have the desired effect for the company at that time. He was right, the Fiat Punto became an extraordinary sales success in the nineties.

MaseratiAndPunto

Not only that, he also sketched the beautiful boomerang tail-lights of the 1997 Maserati 3200GT.

Such was Cantarella’s creativity with tail-lights, it led legendary designer Giorgetto Giugiaro to laughingly say that “the next time we present a model to Paulo, we shall present it without tail lights and leave him to sketch them on himself.”

As I fast-forward 20 years – I am proud to say that our studio has carried on a spirit of openness, collaboration and ‘fun-for-everyone’ to get involved in the creative process. As with most great design and brand solutions – our work will generally be full to the brim with ideas and creative thoughts all tied together in the most elegant and appropriate way possible.

However, the source of these ideas don’t always come from us – yes it is our job to come up with the ideas and the subsequent technical part is one that can only be done by a professional. Cantarella may have provided the basic concept but it was Giugiaro, his designers and engineers that still had to make the final solution production-ready and feasible. However, it is our job is to professionally develop great ideas, regardless of where they come from.

As a company, we thoroughly enjoy working with others and getting as many people involved in the creative process as possible.

Here are 5 of our best creative solutions that have came directly from unexpected sources.

BRIDGE2BUSINESS BRAND

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In early 2014, on seeing a wall full of inspirations, ideas and images – Young Enterprise Scotland CEO – Geoff Leask’s eyes were led to a series of images of maritime tails with images of the stars – straight away he shouted ‘Celestial Navigation.’ Celestial Navigation became the theme for the entire brand – an entrepreneur is if nothing else a voyager – and this theme underpinned the entire brand and communications. So much so that it was launched in the Planetarium of the Glasgow Science Centre.

ALTIA SOLUTIONS CHRISTMAS CAMPAIGN

Altia-Christmas-Mailer

Later on that year, as part of a Christmas Campaign with Altia Solutions. We were using a lot of images and delving quite deeply into the Christmas theme. We were thinking of their software as a gift to their customers – financial investigators – suddenly in the middle of the boardroom – Ian Watson, the Managing Director of the company declares…

’There is no time like the present, there is no present like time.’

A lovely way to close the design of the Christmas postcard campaigns and one that neatly depicts the main benefit of their software solutions to their customers.

FRIDGE ANGELS STAFF ILLUSTRATIONS

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Sometimes, working to tight deadlines bring wonderful solutions. There was just no time to get everybody’s photographs professionally taken for the new Fridge Angels website in early 2014. It was Company Owner’s John McGrath’s request – can’t we just make cartoons of everybody that spawned this lovely little part of the Fridge Angels website. One that instantly lifts the site up a notch or two.

CONSILIUM ART-DIRECTED PHOTOGRAPHY

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Whether they were just hungry or had a greater level of intuition into Art-Directed Photography for professional services than we did – it was the collective decision of the boys from Consilium – David, John and Raymond to shoot the main image for their website in the kitchen of one of their clients – despite the difficulties of squeezing more than 10 of us into a kitchen during the lunch-time rush – the photos do a great job of getting their message across – ‘Getting to know the people behind the numbers.’

LOFT LOGO

Loft logo copy 2

The creative process is a fun one and one where anybody can chip in. We have countless further examples of great ideas that have came a variety of people. The loft’s own logo went through one final and unexpected phase, when my mum of all people, declared it ‘rubbish’ and ‘boring’ when seeing it the night before we were ready to launch the new brand and website. The final logo with the dynamic spacing and line thicknesses all came from that ‘eleventh hour- last minute update.’ I still laugh when I see the one that it replaced.

I hope you have enjoyed reading this as much I have had recalling some of the fun moments from the past couple of years.

BB

Benedetto is a designer and founder of the loft – a specialist design and branding studio based in Glasgow.

The loft takes the true essence of what organisations do and with his team brings those stories to life with a coherence, simplicity and delightfulness that helps companies to create outstanding brand communications.

‘Design with Soul’ is more than a company tag-line to Benedetto, it is a way of life.

His journey has taken him from a career in car design through to his current role. He is honoured to manage a great team, work with great clients and have a lot of fun mixing with so many great people in business.

12
Jul
A Golden Age for Designers

A Golden Age for Designers

As I write this post, I don’t think there has ever been a better time to be a designer.

I am Benedetto Bordone and I run The Loft, a design and branding studio based in the heart of Glasgow. Like most of my peers, I have witnessed the down-sizing of the creative budget, the commoditisation of basic services and as a designer’s designer (I started my career as a 3D designer and not a graphic designer,) the reducing importance that design seems to be given at agency level in contrast to digital/development/marketing.

However, I remain more optimistic than ever about the future of design and this is why…

– Noise. We are bombarded every single day with more people trying to get our attention – whether it is via digital channels – E-Mail, Social Media, Search Engines or more traditional media outlets such as newspapers, radio or the television. Everybody wants our attention. The beauty about this for a creative is that although there may be no shortage of people offering commoditised services to make the noise – it is only those that are capable of making sounds worth listening too that people truly engage with. Those that can make the complex – simple, those that can make the intricate – beautiful, those that can make poetry from prose. The more commoditised and sub-standard communications on the market, the more the good stuff shines like a beacon. Why are we all so drawn to certain brands? Because there is a purity about the way they communicate and only the best know how to get this across. The more savvy clients in this smaller and joined-up world know this and are more than willing to pay for it.

– New Channels. Digital has already created an entire new ball-game and range of tools for designers to express themselves – Websites, E-Mail Campaigns, Social Media Content, apps, etc have all provided new opportunities. However, there are incredible cross-over opportunities on the horizon with new technologies such as 3D Printing, Augmented Reality, Artifical Intelligence – companies are going to soon be able to create a whole raft of products that bring their brands to life in ways that just weren’t possible before. The modern-day Polymath is going to be more and more critical in bridging the gap between technologies to communicate messages to new people in new ways. Going way beyond the company website, business card, company brochure, etc. There is an incredible range of opportunities here for those designers that wish to look just a little left-or-right of centre.

– Storytelling. A picture speaks a thousand words and most people don’t have time for a thousand words. Metaphorically speaking – give them a good paragraph and they may read the full text. Only the most skilled creatives can write that great paragraph. In the last 18 months we have had so many things land on our desks that sit squarely outside what you would expect for a design and branding agency. We have been asked to illustrate complex business plans, we have been asked to graphically create memorable sales systems, to bring life and make effective – flow charts and operational procedures. International legal firms have even discussed with us how we can use graphics and info-graphics to more effectively communicate their cases in court. For the open and prepared mind, there is a raft of new opportunities out there.

– Leadership. Designers can be the new leaders. For the designer that can be both creative yet commercially literate – there are huge opportunities. Brands now communicate over a huge number of different channels, almost relentlessly. The communications must be on-message, be true to the values of the organisation, be authentic and be worth seeing or being listened too as well as being relentlessly consistent. This is an incredibly important job and work that great designers, with their heightened intuitive faculties, are better equipped than anybody else to do. Sir Jonathan Ive is now “one of two of the most important people at the world’s most valuable company – Apple.” His presence extends way beyond that of the designs of the products; he is the ‘guardian of the brand’ and what it means to people. Many may not consider themselves in this way and Sir Jonathan Ive may be a man with very special abilities, however the opportunities are there for every creative and this role is going to become more widely available in the future.

Every industry or sector must go through periods of renewal and creative services, it seems ours is following that course, but for the designer that has a commitment to excellence, a positive attitude and retains a very open mind. If they unwaveringly focus on the people they are serving and concentrate a little more on the result and a little less on the method. I think they will eventually come to see that today we do indeed stand on the precipice of a golden age for design.

“Let us not look back in anger, nor forward in fear, but around us in awareness.”
Benedetto

BB

Benedetto is a designer and founder of the loft – a specialist design and branding studio based in Glasgow.

The loft takes the true essence of what organisations do and with his team brings those stories to life with a coherence, simplicity and delightfulness that helps companies to create outstanding brand communications.

‘Design with Soul’ is more than a company tag-line to Benedetto, it is a way of life.

His journey has taken him from a career in car design through to his current role. He is honoured to manage a great team, work with great clients and have a lot of fun mixing with so many great people in business.

23
May

Al Pacino, an embodiment of soul

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A slightly different tack this week. I had the great pleasure of seeing and hearing legendary actor Al Pacino speak at The Clyde Auditorium on Tuesday night. A truly magnificent evening – there were some clips from his incredible back catalogue of films, he sung, he danced, he took questions from the audience and to finish – he simultaneously acted out various scenes from some of his theatre work – acting out the parts of everybody in the scene. A remarkable feat – at one stage when he said ‘You will all be with me after tonight. Soon you will realise that there will not be a tomorrow, and there will not be a yesterday, there will only be today and right now,’ nobody was sure whether he was acting anymore or repeating a mantra of his perspective of life to the audience. Either way, it definitely felt special.

At 75 years old, he both looks and sounds great, he has boundless levels of energy and what was most impressive was despite all that he has achieved he was still hungry for more, much more and to take risks. Not so much for ego or money but for the love of his craft, for getting himself uncomfortable.

Ironically as I get the pleasure to meet and hear from ever more people that are truly outstanding at what they do, the more similar they all seem to be. There is obviously an art in acting, but there is also a science and discipline too. Some of the great entrepreneurs I have heard speak have turned what they do almost into an art form.

I think there are lessons for all of us – the most important of which is doing something we love.

We talk a lot about soul and spirit in our studio, we want to breathe life into everything we do – I seen many similarities with the journey we go on with our work to that an actor does with their work.

Seeing Al Pacino on Tuesday night was a very special and an educational moment. I seen first hand, an incredible life lived and a person with so much more to give.

But more importantly, on giving yourself up to something that is bigger than yourself.

The very essence of soul.

18
May

7 Tips to building an effective professional services website

Your website is obviously a very important part of your brand, it is sometimes the first part of your organisation that a potential client will see, it can also be used to keep current clients notified of various things that are happening within your company.

However the discipline involved in creating a website for a professional services brand and that of say a clothing company is totally different, one is the marketing and sales of a product to the mass-market. Whereas, a professional services website is about building relationships and promoting reputation. They have to be just a bit more personal and sensitive to the needs of the recipient than a traditional website.

We have built a few websites for professional service firms in our time. We have collated these seven tips to help those of you who are considering the design and build of your next website or are looking to gently refresh what you currently have.

Here are 7 of our tips for effective building an effective professional services website.

1. START THE OTHER WAY AROUND

What do we mean by this?

Many professional service firms will build their website by considering traditional website layouts and structures and then build the content to fit. We suggest that you do the opposite – create your content first – work out what is special about your organisation, the content that you want to share. This will include – team profiles, services, methodologies, news items and may include – culture, research areas, etc. Write every title down – we use post-it notes in the studio to get information down quickly.

Then you can prioritise which content that you want to bring to life with professional photography, copywriting or even video. By starting with content, you can build a more suitable and bespoke web-structure and menu system. Also by prioritising which content to embellish – you will also have a series of images, videos or articles to share on Social Media channels such as LinkedIn, YouTube or Twitter – which is obviously a critical part of your entire digital presence.

Post-it Notes are good for 'Brain-bursts' where you just want to get everything down on paper.

Post-it Notes are good for ‘Brain-bursts’ where you just want to get everything down on paper.

2. PEOPLE, PEOPLE, PEOPLE

Professional services are all about people and relationships – your website should be a natural extension of this. Really consider your audience, this usually means – great images of the people in the firm with personal stories that tell a story of who they are, anecdotes that build this human story, avoiding overly technical language that confuses.

The simple act of creating a simple clean layout with just the right amount of information that a client needs to know is a simple and effective way to build your reputation online – particularly as the majority of your competitors may have heavy, technical web-pages that confuses and bewilders.

Inviting, warm and friendly poses makes any firm look that little bit more inviting.

Inviting, warm and friendly poses makes any firm look that little bit more inviting.

3. TESTIMONIAL SHEET

Not really a website one, but definitely one that will enhance any digital presence – The Client Testimonial Sheet.

Many professional service firms are wary about publishing testimonials, especially on their website, in fear of having their clients poached. We tend to believe that showing others that you do a good job is more than worth the risk. As a design company, our client portfolio and we are incredibly proud of ours, it is obviously critical but the most significant improvement to our Business Development Processes has actually been the introduction of a ‘client and testimonial sheet.’

This 4-page document now has more than 20 testimonials in addition to the logos of the various clients we have helped. We always send it to people that are making fresh enquiries – 20+ testimonials from a wide range of clients gives you instant credibility. We are of the opinion that you cannot have too many of these. Have them on your website but also a simple doc or PDF file to send to new people that you are trying to do business with will obviously increase your success rate with new business enquiries.

We don't believe you can really have enough testimonials.

We don’t believe you can really have enough testimonials.

4. BESPOKE REQUIREMENTS

Let’s be honest, most organisations will have services that are similar if not completely identical to their competitors. Whether it is advising on selling a business, providing an insurance specification or creating a will – we nearly all do the same things on paper. However, the way that you carry out each service will determine your value. Everybody in professional services will know that you may carry out the same service a number of times but the clients needs are always completely different – being able to talk about these differences, your ability to adapt your process and method to those bespoke requirements and the clients obvious satisfaction in going deeper into their requirements will all demonstrate greater values and help you to stand out compared to others.

Not so much what you do but the way that you do it.

Turning a basic info-graphic  into a game with a score-card and cartoon versions of the main characters transformed this project into something of much greater value.

Turning a basic info-graphic into a game with a score-card and cartoon versions of the main characters transformed this project into something of much greater value.

5. TELL A STORY

As a follow-up to the last tip. Your website should have a basic message, theme or a range of ideas that differentiate you in the marketplace. 95% of professional service firms rightly say that client-service is at the heart of their offering – this is a good message – but when everybody says the same thing, you must go further. How do you serve those clients better than everybody else? Are you faster? More dynamic? More precise? More specialised Knowledge? More useful Partnerships? Obsessed about the detail? Pick a couple of ideas, try not to be all things to everybody, and tell a few stories either with your web-copy or images that helps to emphasise and bring these ideas to life.

Having accountants shot in this kitchen of a well-known restaurant tells a great story about really getting to know the number behind a business.

Having accountants shot in this kitchen of a well-known restaurant tells a great story about really getting to know the number behind a business.

6. MAKE CONTACT EASY

A very, very simple one but something which can unfortunately be neglected at times. It is YOUR duty to ensure that the person looking at your content can reach you easily. This means contact details in all the right places – on the home-sliders, on the menu, an easily-accessible contact-page, a good quality enquiry form, social media links or numbers directly to partners. You decide what that line between ‘accessible’ and ‘desperate’ is but it should never be a chore to contact any organisation. Otherwise you don’t deserve the business.

7. CONTEXT

Professional services are all about reputation and relationships. The majority of your clients will have come through referral from other satisfied clients. Having the best website in the world is unlikely to reverse the fortunes of those that provide poor or disappointing service. Unlike in basic consumer marketing – your website has to be pretty stunning to be an effective game-changer.

A great website will help you to get your message across to new clients, solidify your reputation with new and existing clients, help you to share your expertise particularly with social media. Your website.

Once again, and similar to our last guide on building an effective brand. This is not a comprehensive guide to building an effective website but an ‘off-the-cuff’ guide that we hope helps just a little.

Thanks,

Benedetto

BB

Benedetto is a designer and founder of the loft – a specialist design and branding studio based in Glasgow.

The loft takes the true essence of what organisations do and with his team brings those stories to life with a coherence, simplicity and delightfulness that helps companies to create outstanding brand communications.

‘Design with Soul’ is more than a company tag-line to Benedetto, it is a way of life.

His journey has taken him from a career in car design through to his current role. He is honoured to manage a great team, work with great clients and have a lot of fun mixing with so many great people in business.

09
May

7 tips for effective branding

Creating a brand for your company is one of the most fun, exciting and commercially shrewd things you can do as a Chief-Exec or Marketing Director. A new brand with the right meaning is an absolute statement of intent to everybody who comes into contact with your organisation – new customers or clients, your existing customers or clients, your staff, your suppliers, even your board – it is a magnificent way to get on the front foot as a business.

Lots of people are thinking about it, some are about to embark on it and to some it may never have crossed their minds.

Here are 7 of our tips for effective building an effective brand.

1. BRAND NOT LOGO

You want a brand, not a logo. A brand has so much more value and will serve your organisation in a much greater way.

You may ask what is the difference?

A logo is a new mark or shape to represent what you do. A brand goes much further – it captures the very essence of who you are, how you do what you do. The very spirit of your company, product or service.

Both a brand and a logo will have similar outputs but there is so much more thought and intellectual value that goes into a brand which is why it will serve you in a much greater way.

2. YOU’RE SPECIAL

You really are and this is what you want to get across with a new brand. What’s special or unique about your company? What stories can you tell? How are you different or how do you make a difference?

This is a lot less about what you do, a lot more about how you do it.

3. MULTIPLE IDEAS

We say that brands are ‘ideas manifest in form.’ You want to strongly get those ideas across with your branding project.

Believe it or not, people will love your company for lots of different reasons and they may not be the same things that you think they do. Your brand should represent not one single big idea, but a lot of different ideas about what makes you great.

It is an understanding of all of these ideas that will help you to create a richer, better-thought-through and more personalised brand.

4. FORGET COMPETITIVE BENCHMARKING

Well at the beginning at least.

Competitive benchmarking is one of the staple activities of our industry – to see ‘what the competitors are doing’ – it is the comfort blanket that designers retreat too when they are feeling a little timid with their work. This exercise will always guarantee a safer solution, most logo projects for example, will start by cherry-grabbing visual cues from competitors, these are other people’s work – a colour here, a shape there, that nice font that you see. At the loft, we see those activities as recycling of other people’s ideas.

We want to bring YOUR ideas to life, not those of somebody else.

That doesn’t mean that we never do competitive benchmarking – we do – or that we never incorporate other bits of other people’s designs – we do but only after we have a firm grasping of our own ideas.

And competitive benchmarking does a have a part to play sometimes it is useful to know the dress code before turning up to the ball – fashion brands, legal brands, retail brands, etc will all have their own styles which are useful to know. However, for us it is definitely an ‘end-of-project after-thought’ as opposed to a mission critical part of the process.

5. GET EVERYBODY INVOLVED

There will be sceptics, there always is in every creative process but we always find that everybody in an organisation has an opinion and everybody enjoys having their opinion heard. We have been amazed in the past about how involved everybody likes to get in branding projects. Everybody from the office tea lady to the Finance Director likes to have their say and a lot of the time, their judgment is more than sound. It is their company after all.

We always say that something should be so simple to understand that ‘your granny will get it.’ The feedback from lots of different people in an organisation tends to minimise our chances of making a howler or putting out something that just doesn’t work in the real world.

Finally, previous experience tells me that people really appreciate to have their opinion heard – even if a different direction is eventually taken – they like to be considered in the first place.

6. STORIES

Everybody will have their favourite stories they use when talking about their company – a little like your favourite stories about your kids. We have favourite stories about our organisations – especially if you are in sales. The design of your brand should capture some of these stories in its form. We build visual themes into our designs that help to add real meaning to the brands that we create.

Your brand should say what you would like it to say when you’re not in the room to say it and a great brand will make you smile as you tell others about it.

7. UNDERPIN EVERYTHING

We are not the brand police – we don’t believe in stifling individual expression but consistency enhances brands so you want to present as consistently as possible. The research and intellectual rigour that goes into creating a new brand should not be wasted with just the final design. Your branding project should be an exploration into who you are and what you stand for. Throughout the process you will have made decisions about message, tone, formality, values, etc and these will be expressed in colour, typography, photography/copywriting styles. You will want to ensure that you get as much use out of each of these characteristics as possible.

Creating a brand is a path of exploration and an incredibly interesting exercise.

This isn’t a definitive list set in stone but some helpful advice from our past experience in creating brands for lots of different organisations. We hope you find it helpful and you know where to find us if there is some way we can help out?

Thanks,

Benedetto

BB

Benedetto is a designer and founder of the loft – a specialist design and branding studio based in Glasgow.

The loft takes the true essence of what organisations do and with his team brings those stories to life with a coherence, simplicity and delightfulness that helps companies to create outstanding brand communications.

‘Design with Soul’ is more than a company tag-line to Benedetto, it is a way of life.

His journey has taken him from a career in car design through to his current role. He is honoured to manage a great team, work with great clients and have a lot of fun mixing with so many great people in business.

07
May

Bring your ideas to life with us…

Home-Page-Idea1-2

We are looking for new designers to come and join our team.

If you have a great imagination and a desire to spend your days bringing beautiful ideas to life then please check out our job advertisement below…

https://theloft.co/bring-your-ideas-to-life-with-us/