20 Dec Free branding? Why not?

Thousands of very, very small companies out there will give you a logo at no cost, a tagline at no cost, a free domain name and a free Web site. I guess the next big thing will be that they also write you a fat check. Who are these enterprises, and how are they doing this?
The Internet has removed overhead costs and linked very talented people to handle the real issues in real time without the fancy decorum and the big-time fanfare.
Enter the street fighter, a savvy marketer with some teeth and a friendly smile. The freelance nations have far too many operators on the marketing and branding circuit that all are chipping away the armor of the giant branding companies who until now sold more on their posh addresses and furniture than raw talent.
Million-dollar logos with a spin similar to thousands of others, million-dollar slogans, confusing sentences as branding miracles – suddenly, such services are available for free as an incentive to get a new client for print and related packaging services.
Recently, logos have seriously slipped in power, impact and originality. Outside the famous and overly used examples of Coca-Cola, Nike, Mercedes, most customers can’t visualize a logo of a major corporation. AT&T or GM, for example. Many companies have simply resorted to a word marks, the use of a simple typeface and nothing more. Like Microsoft or Rolex.
Of the millions of logos in use today a very large number are almost identical copies of others.
Losing distinction
Before the Web, corporations big or small easily got away with that, as no one bothered to check a logo of an American company for similarities in Korea or India or vice versa. Today with a simple search, hundreds of countries are all lined up with their spinning logos. The similarities are far too obvious and hurt the image by not offering any creative distinction. On the Web, logos have lost their power.
All enterprising design logo shops are offering free logos, hoping to get new clients. Nothing wrong here. Design exercises took months and millions to justify a circle over a triangle, accompanied by psychological studies and fanfare to select a color. For example “blue” is for the sky, therefore, it is open versus “green” for grass, which is flat? There were further national studies to find a matching tagline.
This is now done in a few-hour turnaround. Is this any different than the fully air-conditioned room with a raised floor, called the data center, to house a large cabinet-sized computer system with a power no greater than a fancy electronic gadget now on your desk?
If all these services become so easily accessible and so massively applied to everything big and small, then where lies the distinction, the differentiation and the uniqueness? Furthermore, what is the future of such services including the gatekeepers of image and identity? It is dark.
If branding is really supposed to be a logo, a distinct color and a tagline then it is now available for free, all as a small introductory service from print shops all over the world. Look for free logos and creative branding on the Web; the quality and the services are at par with any top major agency, minus the fanfare.
The issue here is that e-commerce has taken the punch from the design side and opened some new frontiers. Web site performance is more important than the logos or colors, the search engine positioning is more important than the tagline and the domain name is more important than the entire Web site itself.
New frontiers
Corporate branding is now divided into two distinct areas: Acquire a name identity that will work on global e-commerce and design a real Web site that will deliver the message. All the other things in between, which took months and years of expensive teams to mull over, are now replaced by quick creative services. The magic is now in the cheapest and the fasted deliveries of creative ideas and the boardroom-style branding think-tanks are being booted out.
Corporate image and the naming of products and services are still the most critical issues for any serious player. The fact that most of these services are not capital intense any longer, the issues of distinction will always remain on the forefront.
Customer hungry corporations are putting more emphasis on correct global name identities as a key to play in this new name-economy and ride the fast tide of cyber branding, almost for free. Why not?
The opinions expressed herein or statements made in the above column are solely those of the author, & do not necessarily reflect the views of Wisconsin Technology Network, LLC. (WTN). WTN, LLC accepts no legal liability or responsibility for any claims made or opinions expressed herein.