DOWNLOAD YOUR FREE REBRAND PROJECT PLANNER
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Assign tasks to team members and outline timelines to help rebrand project operate smoothly
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Input finer details and dates to this shareable planner to ensure rebrand team have full visibility of where the project is up to and where the next steps are
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Keep track of everything from audience discovery to web development in one master project planner
WHAT IS REBRANDING?
Rebranding is the process of changing a company’s image by creating a new name, logo, visual identity or strategy – so it can forge a differentiated brand that consumers, employees, stakeholders and investors will associate with this newly-rebranded company.
There’s no shortage of brands who have refreshed, revitalised and re-jigged themselves in ways that got people buzzing about them all over again. Here’s a few of our favourites…
In 2019, Dunkin’ dropped the Donuts from its name, and everything from its logo and packaging to its physical stores and advertising reflect the shortened moniker.
Why it works:
Simply put, it showed the brand was willing to get with the times. A lot of its customers were familiar with the new name from a previous tagline: “America Runs on Dunkin'”, and the Donuts aspect of the company was becoming increasingly obsolete as the brand continued to focus more on coffee.
Secondly, it shows that their name still carries weight. Their customers still happily identified it with the brand they know and love. If you’re planning on changing the name of your business entirely, or even just part of it, make sure the new name has something your audience can logically link to a brand they’ve already connected with.
Amidst huge debts and growing distaste among its child-friendly audience (kids are pretty fickle, after all), the toy titan needed some serious rebuilding. So that’s what they did, adding digital channels to connect with kids and parents alike, and gaining cultural clout once again through its films and other entertainment ventures.
Why it works:
Because it proves that even the biggest brands can still get lost in the shuffle if their strategy’s off. Nobody is exempt from disinterested audiences.
Originally a file-storage and file-sharing web service, the company rebranded in 2017 with a new tack. Since then Dropbox has made it its mission to connect teams and businesses together by offering a full suite of APIs, tools and integrations to facilitate greater collaboration.
Why it works:
Because it shows how effective and powerful conceptual design can be in a rebrand. To go along with its new approach, Dropbox redesigned their old logo. Rather than an opening box that shouts “store your stuff here”, the cleaner, simpler and more conceptually open logo was a really effective reflection of the wide, more collaborative scope it now caters towards.
In December 2020, Burger King did away with their very 2000s logo. Logically, the new one is a reflection of the 20s, right? Well, not quite. The burger brand actually went in the opposite direction, unveiling a new logo that harked back to their 1969 – 1999 logo. It was a cleaner look than the busier 2000s-era emblem, but it was more than just a mere rehash…
Why it works:
Burger King’s out with the old, in with the even older had plenty of positives going for it. As well as a more refined appearance, the rebrand also saw a new monogram design, a colour palette based around natural earth tones, adaptable typography, and digital assets that combined the retro with the modern in ways that really clicked. Design is hugely powerful, and Burger King’s well-done rebrand emphasises that point perfectly.
HOW TO PLAN YOUR REBRAND
- Someone with seniority to approve ideas and provide additional resources
- Someone who will determine what gets delivered and when
- A selection of creatives who’ll be responsible for the designing, writing, and development aspects of the rebrand
- A committee of stakeholders who can spot issues or offer alternative suggestions
CREATING YOUR REBRAND STRATEGY
LAUNCHING THE REBRAND
Rebranding is the process of changing a company’s image by creating a new name, logo, visual identity or strategy – so it can forge a differentiated brand that consumers, employees, stakeholders and investors will associate with this newly-rebranded company.
There’s no shortage of brands who have refreshed, revitalised and re-jigged themselves in ways that got people buzzing about them all over again. Here’s a few of our favourites…
In 2019, Dunkin’ dropped the Donuts from its name, and everything from its logo and packaging to its physical stores and advertising reflect the shortened moniker.
Why it works:
Simply put, it showed the brand was willing to get with the times. A lot of its customers were familiar with the new name from a previous tagline: “America Runs on Dunkin'”, and the Donuts aspect of the company was becoming increasingly obsolete as the brand continued to focus more on coffee.
Secondly, it shows that their name still carries weight. Their customers still happily identified it with the brand they know and love. If you’re planning on changing the name of your business entirely, or even just part of it, make sure the new name has something your audience can logically link to a brand they’ve already connected with.
Lego
Amidst huge debts and growing distaste among its child-friendly audience (kids are pretty fickle, after all), the toy titan needed some serious rebuilding. So that’s what they did, adding digital channels to connect with kids and parents alike, and gaining cultural clout once again through its films and other entertainment ventures.
Why it works:
Because it proves that even the biggest brands can still get lost in the shuffle if their strategy’s off. Nobody is exempt from disinterested audiences.
Dropbox
Originally a file-storage and file-sharing web service, the company rebranded in 2017 with a new tack. Since then Dropbox has made it its mission to connect teams and businesses together by offering a full suite of APIs, tools and integrations to facilitate greater collaboration.
Why it works:
Because it shows how effective and powerful conceptual design can be in a rebrand. To go along with its new approach, Dropbox redesigned their old logo. Rather than an opening box that shouts “store your stuff here”, the cleaner, simpler and more conceptually open logo was a really effective reflection of the wide, more collaborative scope it now caters towards.
Burger King
In December 2020, Burger King did away with their very 2000s logo. Logically, the new one is a reflection of the 20s, right? Well, not quite. The burger brand actually went in the opposite direction, unveiling a new logo that harked back to their 1969 – 1999 logo. It was a cleaner look than the busier 2000s-era emblem, but it was more than just a mere rehash…
Why it works:
Burger King’s out with the old, in with the even older had plenty of positives going for it. As well as a more refined appearance, the rebrand also saw a new monogram design, a colour palette based around natural earth tones, adaptable typography, and digital assets that combined the retro with the modern in ways that really clicked. Design is hugely powerful, and Burger King’s well-done rebrand emphasises that point perfectly.