5 Surprise Truths from Professional Branding
5 Surprise Truths from Professional Branding
Branding from scratch is daunting; many people stare at a blank screen, trying to conjure up a proper logo, colors, and "atmosphere," but what's missing is often not talent, but a clear "guide map."
We took a lesson from a video of a professional designer creating a fictional coffee brand called "Melt London," in which his process is systematic, strategic and full of steps that go against the feelings we imagined. Here are 5 of the most surprising lessons from that process.
1. Everything starts with strategy, not logo.
Before choosing any font or color, the designer laid the foundation with a comprehensive brand strategy, considered the most important part of the entire process. This strategy defines everything: business goals, mission, vision, and, most importantly, the target audience.
Good design does not depend on what looks beautiful, but on what works for the target customer. Every design decision is measured from this foundation to ensure that the results are consistent with the needs of the market in the first place.
2. The real value comes from customization, not choice.
The most worldly part is creating a literal logo (Wordmark). Instead of wasting time figuring out the "perfect font," the designer starts by downloading 10 basic fonts, then using the elimination process to the right ones, and using a tool to modify the shapes of those letters by hand, thoroughly.
This is where the true value of the designer lies. This customization creates a unique asset, which cannot be easily copied simply by downloading the same font file. Unexpectedly occurring extras, such as the heart shape that appears in the space of the letter 'M' during customization, become the main component of the entire brand.
3. Logo is not a single image, but a "Logo Series" (Logo Suite)
A common misconception is to think of a logo as a single slide, but the professional approach is to create a "logo set," an adaptable logo system and works in any context. This logo set may consist of Primary Wordmark, Stacked Wordmark, Badge, and Icon.
The reasoning is simple and follows the practical principle: the main logo is not always readable in any situation; a comprehensive set of logos thus helps make the brand recognizable everywhere, from large badges to small digital spaces like Favicon or application icons.
4. The first idea is just the beginning.
Professional design is not a smooth path and immediately leads to perfect results, but a process of exploration, improvement, and sometimes having to ditch the original idea and start over. Designers recommend "Always create copies when customizing Wordmark" because you may want to go back and edit.
He also reveals that even experts have a false idea in the beginning. (False Starts) The beautiful final icon stems not from a single intelligence, but from the creation of a variety of patterns and the push for design to advance even further. The reminder that "here's why you shouldn't make the first choice" reflects that continuous improvement is more important than the pursuit of perfection from the beginning.
5.AI is the ultimate creative assistant.
Instead of viewing AI as a threat, this designer implemented AI seamlessly integrated into the process. He used ChatGPT to create commands (Prompts) and used Midjourney to transform those commands into a quality, brand-compliant photo style.
In addition to stills, he used Midjourney to create custom-made Mockups for presenting brands on coffee mugs, signage, and phone screens, which elevated the presentation from a typical stock image. Using this modern AI allows branding to be consistent, quality, and able to create moving images quickly.
Priority summary
Watching a professional work unravel the mystery of creativity. Building a successful brand identity is not a matter of sudden "moments of excitement," but it is built on a clear process, strategic thinking, repeated improvements, and intelligent use of modern tools.
The end result of the work is not just a logo, but an exhaustive Brand Guidelines document, a "new identity guide" that helps brands stay consistent in the long run. Understanding these principles will make you feel more creative and able to think and build brands strategically.
# Brand Logo # Get produced, build a brand # businessclass # Subjects of little people # tiktok marketing





































































































