Posts Tagged ‘corporate branding’

branding agency Melbourne

Our very own Derek Carroll (Truly Deeply Creative Director and tech-guru) was interviewed for a feature on businesses adopting the benefits of cloud technology in a recent feature in The Age newspaper. At Truly Deeply we’ve had our head in the cloud from the early days – but always keeping our feet on the ground (as they say).

Update: Here’s the copy from the online article:

Businesses are looking up

By Karla Dondio
MyCareer

The benefits of cloud technology are manifold, as firms are finding, writes Karla Dondio.

There has been a lot of buzz around cloud technology for some time, with more and more businesses getting on board. With a reputation for revolutionising the internet, exactly how are companies benefiting from its applications?

Cloud technology uses a network of computers to give users fast and ubiquitous access to software and data in real time. This means businesses using cloud applications have the ability to collaborate online with stakeholders at any time.

Derek Carroll, from creative branding agency Truly Deeply, uses cloud applications on a day-to-day basis in his role as creative director. Carroll likes the idea that cloud applications allow you “to pick and choose [the services] you want according to your business model and your clients”.

A quick rundown of some of the cloud services he uses demonstrates their extensive capabilities: Google Business for email, calendaring and contact management; Harvest for time management and estimations; Basecamp for project management; Highrise for new business management; CrashPlan for file back up; Dropbox for file sharing; and Mailchimp for electronic newsletters.

“The key benefit in utilising these solutions is the access and the simplicity. They do what they do very well and they don’t pretend to be everything to everyone.”

Another advantage of using cloud applications is that businesses can manage projects online and therefore provide access to external stakeholders. For example, project-management tools enable clients to log in so they can stay abreast of project milestones, as well as offer feedback.

“They assist us in making the communication with the client easier. You spend less time fretting about getting this to work and you can focus on where the real game is, which is the client relationship.”

For new businesses, the opportunity to work remotely by integrating cloud applications has revolutionised workplace practices.

Michael Raoss, who has worked in the creative industry for more than two decades, is account director at Plural, a boutique design agency. Plural plans to establish a studio space for the business in the near future, however cloud services have enabled Raoss, the designer and the programmer to all work remotely in the interim. Without cloud technology, Raoss insists that it would have been impossible for them to operate. It has also offered a huge cost saving to the business, with low overheads and no infrastructure costs.

“By far the biggest benefit is that most of our data is stored on multiple servers backed up to a cloud device. It also saves a huge amount of money for us as most of the software we lease costs about $100 a month,” he says.

Raoss uses a range of cloud applications in his workday: Harvest, Xero, Trello and Dropbox. He says he can keep track of every aspect of the business in one desktop window.

“My designer and programmer tend to work late hours, so as soon as I start at 8am, I can see where everything is at. It’s instant.”

Raoss doesn’t see any drawbacks to using cloud applications other than getting to know your way around them, which he says isn’t that difficult.

Carroll believes the applications can be limiting if you want more from them than they offer, but he adds that if something is free, businesses tend to put up with a few niggles.

So is cloud technology the way of the future?

“We love it and reap the benefits of it as a business,” Carroll says. “But it’s not going to change the essential fact that what we do as a business is relationships. I still have to do that one-on-one sitting down talking with someone.”

Published: 11 May 2013

retail brand agency

The challenging future of department stores in Australia.

April 2013
Peter Singline & David Ansett

There is much written about the challenging future of department stores in Australia. Both David Jones and Myer are household names with a rich heritage in retailing, but for many years their relevance in an ever-changing retail landscape is being questioned. In more recent years, the impact of the GFC, combined with enhanced competition from online players and strong international fashion retailers opening stores in Australia, means Myer and David Jones are facing significant head winds.

But it is a phenomenon that is not limited to Australia. Around the world the department store concept is being challenged. In March the Financial Review quoted the chief executive of Paris based department store Galeries Lafayette as saying that he was convinced that the department store format faces extinction. What is instead being proclaimed as the future for Galeries Lafayette is to position itself as a ‘multi-specialist lifestyle retailer’. Their aim is to build a house of brands under one roof that offers the best of French and international premium and luxury goods.

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eat, branding agency

Typographic Furniture for Type Nuts & Bold Brand Statements

We love this range of typo-lounge-furniture from French design company TABISSO. The range which is aptly named ‘Typographia’ offers lounge chairs that incorporate all the letters of the alphabet and numbers 0 to 9. The range also includes 25 floor lamps shaped as different punctuation marks. The upholstery, which can be leather or fabric is available in a range of fabric colours allowing a match to existing corporate and brand identity designs.

Apart from the perfect foil for type lovers, this furniture provides a great visual tool for brands looking to communicate their message in a cut through manner. This bold furniture is perfect for weaving brand statements into hotel rooms and lobbies, restaurants, transport hubs, corporate brand environments such as foyers and reception areas, property development branding, and retail brands looking to add an extra dimension to their stores.

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Bicyled1

A Bold reason for Being
There’s a reoccurring theme been playing out in recent posts, which is the recognition of brands who have clarity around their higher purpose – a reason for being that goes beyond the commercial transaction they have with client and customer. The concept of a higher purpose is one we typically associate with not-for-profit brands such as The Livestrong Foundation we wrote about yesterday, but that perspective ignores the impact the same mindset can have on any brand in any category.

Lola Madrid are an ad agency based in Spain. They are a professional services firm in a super competitive environment who have got their head around the concept of a higher purpose. In their case it is a project called ‘Bicycled’ where they set-put to create the perfect, sustainable cycle.

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not for profit brand agency

Livestrong’s Bold Re-branding Strategy
In the competitive world of not-for-profit, the rules of brand apply just as they do in the corporate universe. As cycling’s black sheep Lance Armstrong continues to discover his personal brand, tarnished by drug cheating, continues to be cut-loose from the organisations who previously leveraged it so enthusiastically. The most recent, most graphic and I’m sure most heart rending for Armstrong has been the re-branding of his own Livestrong Foundation, which has seen his name removed from the brand.

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greater purpose

Big Brand and Big Heart?
US Mega-retailer Walmart, seen by many small town business owners as an enemy to community and local business in general is working overtime to turn the tide of public sentiment. Store for Good is a program Walmart is developing in order to connect consumers with products that do good for other people, for themselves, or for our environment, and hoping to be seen as a good citizen on the way through.  Plans for the Store for Good program include a range of eco-friendly products and healthier food options.

The latest feather in the cap of the Store for Good program is a new initiative called Empowering Women Together, launched last week in time for International Women’s Day.

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online marketing strategy

Proving the Digital Experts Wrong
Much has been written over the last few years about the role of digital marketing and social media for business, yet the subject remains one viewed by most executives with skepticism bordering on derision. Like any other new channel to market, there are plenty of myths and equal measures of hype surround the subject, with an as-yet poorly defined roadmap for how companies might navigate the medium for commercial benefit. This conundrum becomes less clear again when applied to the B2B categories and professional services firms in particular. Our own experience four years ago was consistently sage advice from the experts that social media simply wouldn’t work as a driver of new business inquiries for a professional services firm in our field of brand strategy and design. There was a firm view expressed to us that the nature of the projects we worked-on, and the investment required which is typically in the tens of thousands of dollars meant that there was little benefit in investigation the resources and budget required to implement an ongoing social media strategy. Thankfully we had a firm belief that this commonly held view was incorrect, and our experience with social media as a business acquisition tool has proven to be a positive one in every sense of the word.

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Non intentional illusion in livery design

Recently on a trip to Portsea I came across some site-specific livery design. In fact, it was so specific it almost blended into its background, as though it was not there. However unintentional this effect was, it made me think of more deliberate and successful illusions created in branding and design. The visual tricks that designers create to make people take a second look.

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power of packaging efficient packaging

As a brand designer I’m often on the look out for more efficient, creative and resourceful ways to package my daily necessities (coffee, beer, food, ie all the good things in life). This is a personal and professional fascination of mine, and I think it’s something worth looking at, not only from a current design perspective, but also from a historical anthropological one. In the interest of word limit I am going to concentrate on the more contemporary understanding of convenient packaging, and perhaps take a historical look at the subject in my next entry on the topic. Read the rest of this entry »

Stephen Walter

In an age of Google Maps and GPS, it’s not unreasonable to ask the question “Have all the maps been made?” This was the question posed to us by Hervé Senot at a recent Centre for Everything* workshop. Hervé took us through some unusual examples of mapping; some historical, some homemade or collaborative, and all of which gave an insight beyond geographical location. I’ve always had a soft spot for maps from an aesthetic perspective, but it’s their storytelling ability that has recently tickled my imagination.

The following images include some of Hervé’s slides, as well as some great story-telling maps I’ve found on my online travels.

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