Email this article
| Add This Article To: | |||
Random titles:
- How To Design Unique Logo
- From Logo to Legend In 10 Simple Steps
- I Hate My Logo What You Should Get For Your Money and Why
- Is the location of your logo designer really important
- Accounting Logos Salient Features of Accounting Logo Design
- Logo design Creating The Right Perception
- Logo Design Options are Endless
- Creditable Graphic Design
- Get Set Company Logo Design
- Features of Networking Logo Design
Most Popular articles:
- An Introductory Guide for Clients and Designers
- Top 10 Design Tips You Do Not Learn in Graphic Design Schoo
- Too Many Cooks Spoil the Logo
- Logo limbo
- Guest article from LogoBlast
- Why Small Businesses Need Both a Logo and an Identity System
- Logo Design and Corporate Image
Discount free and offshore logo design the realities and potential drawbacks
How can it be that some logo design companies offer logo design for under a hundred bucks? With unlimited revisions? And, what they claim is a full money back guarantee. In essence, free logo design. Or how about those $25 dollar logo design contests? Why do some companies pay thousands for their new brand, when they could have a great new logo for $25? Why do successful companie avoid these method like the plague? Is there something that they know that we all should know? Is there really that much difference between the logo that you'll get at a $30 do it yourself logo design site than the one you'll get working with a professional design shop (not neccessarily The Logo Fact but it would be nice). Turns out there' a world of difference. And as our Mama always told us - "If its sounds too good to be true, it probably isn't". And Mama is seldom wrong...
Free and discount logo design - obtain little value at great risk...
Logo design can be expensive. It requires a lot of time from well-trained and talented logo designers. Someone who’s going to pour their heart into a logo design creation, and then turn this creation (and all reproduction rights to it) over to you. This will require a potentially exhaustive process, hours and hours of studio time (not to mention the years of experience and training), to get it right. Market research. Technical prowess. Something like this should cost $100s of dollars, if not $1000s. How can it be that some logo design companies offer logo design for under a hundred bucks? With unlimited revisions? And, what they claim is a full money back guarantee. In essence, free logo design. Or how about them $100 contests? Sound too good to be true? Probably is.
Discount logo design - how saving a few bucks can cost you in the long run...
The story starts out something like this – you’ve spent about a hundred bucks on a logo design for your new company. After days of Googling – you found a discount priced designer on the Internet. Or maybe the service was advertised via a junk e-mail that others refer to as ‘SPAM’ (but, hey, they never discovered your source of discount graphics).
Sure, there were some reputable studios that you bumped into - their work was top notch– but they wanted double (or more) than your cheapo design house. You were promised unlimited revisions. Money back guarantee. Maybe they’d even throw in a free coffee mug. Oh sure, there were a few wrinkles with your discount designer - you’re not sure were the company is (there’s no phone number listed and all communication was by form or e-mail) but does that really matter? After all, this is the Internet, and e-mail is the medium of choice. But despite a few communication hiccups – hey, they can happen to anybody – the project went pretty smoothly. The logos initially presented weren’t what you had envisioned (or even asked for), but the designer had made some decent points about why the logo was perfect for you. And he had to be right, after all – he WAS a designer, no? At least, that’s what the web site said. And now, you have all the file formats they told you that you’d need.
Why knowing the 'heritage' of your new logo is crucial...
What could possibly go wrong? You’ve ended up with a great icon that is about to be embroidered onto staff shirts. Your letterhead, business card and envelopes are coming back from the printer. You’ve spent another few thousand on a web site – but that’s okay, the central visual is a 3D version of your logo, animated in Flash, complete with interactive buttons, music and a kick-ass navigation system. The flash logo movie was expensive, but well worth it – you’ve duplicated it as a standalone screensaver that can be shipped out to new and established clients alike. You’re ready to make your big company launch.
Then the postman arrives. Bearing a certified letter from some formal sounding company who’s cleanly laid out (where did they get their logo?) letterhead announces that they are a rather large legal firm. Slash M. and Trash M. They’ve enclosed some photocopies of something that looks vaguely like your new logo. In fact, it’s exactly like your new logo. The accompanying letter is frank and to the point. The logo that you’re about to launch on thousands of dollars worth of collateral material belongs to someone else. And the lawyer has sought, and has been successful, in getting a ‘cease and desist’ order against you. Quite frankly, you’re not allowed to use anything with your new logo on it. Nadda. No shirts, letterheads, nothing. You have 48 hours to take down your new web site. And anything that you’ve sold that features the logo, has to be accounted for. You see, the real owner of the mark gets all the profits. And when that’s all finished – the original owner is threatening to sue you for damages – apparently they feel that your business is not a good reflection of their company. They claim that you’ve damaged their good name, and want some serious money to make them go away.
Of course, you’re gonna fight this. You’ll get right on the phone to your $200 a hour lawyer, hoping that he’ll set these guys straight. That doesn’t go quite according to plan. He tells you that the cease and desist is legit. They’ve do own the mark after all. He mutters something about trademark and copyright. Looks like Slash M. and Trash M. have you dead to rights. At the very best, you’ll have to destroy ALL the material bearing your new logo. They’ll probably take an offer on the damages – they probably don’t want a legal battle anymore than you do – so that’s only going to cost you a few grand. But don’t you worry – your lawyer tells you and sue ‘em for everything they’re worth (or at least all the out of pocket expenses their knockoff logo is going to cost you). You’ll go after the punks that sold you this bootleg, rip-off, knocked-off copycat logo. Just tell him where to send the notice. Or a phone number. You have neither. Turns out the company is outside
The recovery from a corporate identity crisis? Start over...
Ahm. Nothing. The company is more than likely a shell from another company (companies that use spam, either through e-mail or search engines, are notorious for hiding their true identity) and you’re stuck with a painful, and quite expensive lesson. But how realistic is this? Very. At The Logo Factory, we’ve been around since 1996 (a lifetime in Internet years) and our artwork has been copied dozens of times. We've had to intervene in design ownership disputes (one company even had their logo copied by their own T-shirt printer, and the resultant shirts offered for sale). We’ve even had our name, ahm, appropriated (The Logo Factory is a registered logo design trademark, in the
Source: http://www.thelogofactory.com/


