Define your company’s singular style with a brand kit.

See how establishing a visual identity can add consistency to your branding and efficiency to your team’s workflow.

Two business cards next to a flyer and covered notebook

Artwork by Supernova Design.

A recognisable brand starts with cohesive visual elements.


From your business card to your web page, each piece of content you create for your company will be more effective if it reflects your brand identity. Creating a comprehensive brand kit will ensure that your marketing consistently represents your brand, building familiarity and trust with your audience along the way. And by taking the time to establish this type of brand style guide, you’re also giving your team what they need to turn around beautiful, impactful creative work with less hassle.
 

 

What is a brand kit?


A brand kit is the be-all and end-all documentation for what your brand is and what it isn’t. It clearly lays out the brand colours and typefaces to use and to avoid, which fonts to use for your tagline and how the design might differ between seasonal campaigns and year-long efforts. It’s the source of truth for your creative team to refer to when they create any visual content. Once all the do’s and don’ts are compiled in a handy PDF and the brand assets needed to design projects are shared, any team member — or any creative partner or freelancer — can dive right into creating on-brand work for your company.
 

 

What should your brand kit contain?


While the content of branding kits varies and it can be expansive or simplistic depending on the company, here are some of the main brand guidelines you’ll want to include:

 

Fonts and typefaces.

How words show up in your brand’s marketing materials is an important visual cue to your customers. Selecting the right typography and keeping it consistent across your brand is a crucial step in unifying your content and customer communications. A typeface is a style of type and its bold, italic or condensed versions are all fonts. You can create your own typeface and its corresponding customised fonts or select from many options available in libraries like Adobe Fonts. Making a choice and giving your creative team rules helps ensure that your materials feel unique while remaining on-brand.

Comparison of typefaces next to each other

In your brand kit, you’ll also want to show examples of proper and improper uses of fonts and typefaces. Do you use bolds and italics? Does your font have thin or heavy variations? Is either off-limits? And which of these is correct for a headline versus body copy? By building a clear roadmap for text, you’ll be able to unleash your creative team on work without worrying about an off-brand asset coming through at the approval stage.

 

Logos and logo treatments.

Whether you have a logo or a wordmark treatment of your company name, setting ground rules for how a designer or creative partner can use them is important. You won’t see Target’s red bullseye coloured purple or Apple’s apple lying on its side — it’s inconsistent and, therefore, detrimental to the familiar brand experience you want to build.

Your brand kit is the place where you can explain the rules for your logo and what should never be done. Does the logo always have to be in your brand’s colour? What are the rules when used on a colourful background versus a white background? Are there other variations of the logo (a symbol and the company name versus just the symbol) and how do those vary? From digital assets to business cards, t-shirts and beyond, try and sort out all the ways you plan to use your logo and create rules for those uses.

Paper logo on top of a shirt to show branded concept

Artwork by Tomás Salazar.

3D artistic rendering of pants

Colour palette and uses.

Your brand kit should establish your primary brand colours and any secondary colours your team and partners can use. Colour consistency is incredibly important for brand recognition and, whether consciously or subconsciously, an asset that doesn’t jibe with your brand colours will confuse your audience. As with your logo, think about the ways in which you may use colour across digital and physical marketing materials and start to build your brand kit rules from there. You can always add to those rules later, but the goal is to prevent seeing first drafts of creative assets that need a full-colour re-work.

Side view of person wearing a branded tote over shoulder and colour pallete floating to right

Artwork by Tomás Salazar

How a good brand kit pays for itself.


Within your company, brand kits add efficiency by streamlining creative workflows. They give everyone a common visual language to work with and rules to keep assets from veering off course. By providing the answers before questions can even be asked, you’re cutting down on wasted time while setting up your team for better work.

Externally, brand kits help you to achieve consistency to boost brand visibility. And that brand consistency will help you to stand out in a competitive marketplace. Confusion is a killer. Beyond its many efficiency benefits, consistent branding can increase revenue by up to 23 per cent. Even big, well-known brands have overperformed revenue goals by 28 per cent with the help of consistent branding.
 

If you're looking for a tech solution that gives you all the tools you need to craft a brand kit, consider Adobe Creative Cloud for teams. Make a logo in Adobe Illustrator, create web design assets and fine-tune imagery in Photoshop and tie it all together with beautiful graphic design in InDesign. Plus, with Creative Cloud Libraries, your team can share branding assets across apps and devices — and stay in sync.

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