Applying the principles of psychology to design
Marketers are increasingly tapping into the power of psychology to improve the impact of design and give their brands the cutting edge.
Marketers are increasingly tapping into the power of psychology to improve the impact of design and give their brands the cutting edge.
Instagram has introduced a “new look”, with a redesign of its logo created in a bid to unify its family of apps (including Boomerang and Layout) into a “simpler, more consistent” design.
The Premier League has revamped its brand and visual identity in a bid to shed its corporate image and focus on the people behind the sport instead, as well as create a more attractive proposition to sell to sponsors.
Despite being ridiculed, Coca-Cola has made the right branding move by using its red circle logo as a visual code on the cans of all its product variants, but with fizzy drinks declining it’s no more than delaying the inevitable.
People’s view of their personal finances improves in April but hides a general flatness to consumer confidence that is taken a while to shift.
The rules of content marketing are evolving faster than ever – here’s why.
Unilever is aiming to grow its brands through innovation that “scale and build categories”, rather than simply delivering “new news”.
Sainsbury’s reported higher than expected profit growth and increased optimism for its Nectar loyalty proposition, which it says is strengthening its retail media offer.