The Good, The Bad, The Logo (April 2010 Newsletter)
Friday, April 2nd, 2010[This little gem is the e-mail newsletter our subscribers just received. Want a slice of this for yourself? Sign up now.]
Logos, you might think, are easy to find these days. There are a million contest websites, services that sell logos for the cost of dinner and plenty of well-intentioned relatives that like to monkey around with graphics programs.
That makes bad logos easy to find. Good logos are completely different. They follow a few simple but important guidelines:
- They’re unique. This means that good logos are completely original and contain no clipart. Clipart looks cheesy, and it can’t always legally be used in a logo. Logos also shouldn’t copy the latest trend.
- They fit. In other words, they should reflect your organization and effectively communicate your message. They should reinforce who you are.
- They’re simple. When you shrink a logo, it should still look like a logo. It shouldn’t look like a complicated blob that makes no sense. (I often think about the way state seals look when they’re reduced to letterhead size: usually like fuzzy circles.)
- They have a strong concept. They can be abstract, but they should still mean something. There too many nonprofit logos that are an inexplicable squiggly line. What does a squiggly line mean?
- They can be scaled up. If you want to print your logo on a poster, you should be able to. It should be smooth with no jagged edges. The secret here is a vector graphic, which scales up as well as it scales down.
- They’re effective without color. Think about your logo as it goes through a fax machine, or what it looks like if you have a black and white printer. None of it should disappear.
You’re better off using a consistent font to represent your organization than a bad logo. Make the right choice in logos, and you should have an image that supports your organization for years to come.



Use lots of clipart. Ooph. Steer clear of crummy clipart. Go for real pictures, even freebie stock photography, rather than goofy cartoon drawings. Check out the 
