Consistency, Identity, Recognition
Marked Communications | 30-05-2025
Starting a new business is exhilarating and a bit intimidating. But before you start printing business cards, posting on the ‘gram, or designing your site, let’s discuss brand guidelines.
Think of them as your business’s instruction manual for looking sharp, sounding smart, and staying consistent. A brand without guidelines is like a band without a drummer: totally offbeat and all over the place.
So, what exactly should go into your brand guidelines? Grab a chai (or coffee), and let’s break it down.
Brand guidelines (or brand style guides) are a playbook for how your brand must look, sound, and feel everywhere, online and off. They keep your team, designers, writers, marketers (and even future-you) on the same page, ensuring a consistent identity that people know immediately.
That is to say: No more 5 loose logos hanging around. No more 7 fonts used in one brochure. No more “Can we just wing it?”
Begin with the heart.
People buy stories, not products. Your brand story is not when you were started. It’s the why for what you do.
Add:
Example:
“At Pawfect Snacks, we think your furry friend deserves healthy treats made with love (and real ingredients you can actually pronounce). We began in 2023 after our golden retriever turned out to have better taste in snacks than we did.”
Your logo is your brand’s face. You don’t want 10 different versions floating around.
Put in:
Pro tip:
Add downloadable logo files (in PNG, JPG, SVG) to your guideline set for seamless sharing.
Your colours evoke emotions. Are you playful and bubbly? Soothing and natural? High-end and dramatic?
Define:
Example:
Primary: Forest Green (#1B4332)
Secondary: Light Beige (#FFF8E1), Warm Brown (#7D5A50)
Choose colours like you’re collecting an Instagram feed for life.
Fonts are personality-filled. And no, you absolutely can’t use Comic Sans. Ever.
Include:
Keep it simple:
Two fonts are great. Three, max. More than that? You’re writing a ransom note, not a brochure.
A picture says a thousand words—so make sure they’re saying the right ones.
Define:
Tip:
Make a Pinterest moodboard and share it with your team. It’s like a cheat sheet for visual vibes.
Your voice is your brand’s personality in words. Are you funny and quirky? Professional and calm? Chatty and warm?
Define:
Example:
Often overlooked, but totally crucial. This is the “dry” section, but this is what makes you professional AF.
Add:
Consistency tip:
Ensure that your name and handle are precisely the same everywhere. Baffled customers aren’t loyal customers.
Occasionally the simplest way to say what your brand is… is to say what it *isn’t*.
Use:
Use pictures here!
Images are processed quicker than text. Demonstrate, don’t tell.
For sale? Whether it is soap or software, packaging is important.
Add:
Even if digital product:
Demonstrate how your app or service UI should appear. Consistent buttons and banners, please!
Roll it up with some examples of your brand in action.
Show:
This makes it easy for your team to know how to implement all those nice rules.
Developing brand guidelines may seem like homework, but believe us, it’s worth it. Once you have this set up, it’ll save hours of confusion, back-and-forths, design catastrophes, and off-brand mayhem.
And it makes hiring new staff, agencies, freelancers, and partners a cinch. No guessing, no messing.
One final tip
Store your brand guide in a sharable format (PDF + Google Drive folder) and review and update it every year.
Because your business will expand, and your guidelines should expand with you.
Checklist Time
1. Brand story (mission, vision, values)
2. Logo usage rules
3. Colour palette with hex codes
4. Fonts & type hierarchy
5. Imagery style
6. Brand voice & tone
7. Business info (name, tagline, handles)
8. Do’s and Don’ts
9. Packaging or product rules
10. Brand in real-life examples
——
Struggling to build your brand guidelines from the ground up? Do not worry, even top brands began with a Google Doc and a dream. Just ensure yours did not resemble one created hastily at lunchtime.
Do you want to start your project now?