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Will America Care About AOL's New Logo?

Will America Care About AOL's New Logo?

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Fresh off a week that included an announcement of 2,500 layoffs, AOL, the company formerly known as America Online, revealed its new logo, brand identity -- and preferred spelling -- on Sunday.

On December 9, when AOL is finally spun off from Time Warner – ending one of the media industry’s most troubled corporate marriages – it will officially change its name to “Aol.” and its logo to, well, one (or all) of these:

AOL chief Tim Armstrong also produced a video to mark the occasion, which you can view here.

My “favorite” (if you can call it that) is the one that appears to have been inspired by Balloon Boy.

I asked a few of my design industry friends what they thought about the new look. All of them were confused. Like Alice Cho, Print magazine’s art director:

“To be honest, I don't get it. I'm confused by the title case and I don't feel that the mixture of upper and lower case better communicates the ‘Commitment to Stimulating Content, Openness and Inclusion.’ I wonder if the image accompanying the Aol. mark will be constantly changing, depending on the context. Or will these 6 images be applied everywhere? I'm curious to see this applied across the board and see how the changing imagery works in various applications.”

If it confuses an art director, imagine how the consumers with whom Aol. hopes to reconnect will react. My guess: they won’t notice/care, as long as it doesn’t affect their instant messenger program.

And if it does, they’ll simply switch to Gchat.

Comments

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Good points, Larry. I still think the craziest example of overwrought brand tinkering is "SyFy."

It still baffles me why AOL went to letters for their name when they had the perfect name for an internet company;
America Online. Can you think of better name than that to describe what your business is?

Same holds true for Home Shoppong Network. Did switching to HSN give them an edge over their competitors? I think not.

Comments

In the gucci wallet, Mr. Ford was arguably the most influential fashion designer of his generation, re-imagining gucci replica chic with unsubtle sex appeal. Under his guidance, the houses of Gucci and, later, Yves Saint Laurent flourished, with Mr. Ford overseeing every creative aspect — fashion, advertising, even store design — and making the labels a can’t-live-without. But after a rancorous spat with his bosses, he left gucci and joined the ranks of the once powerful, now unemployed.

Good points, Larry. I still think the craziest example of overwrought brand tinkering is "SyFy."

It still baffles me why AOL went to letters for their name when they had the perfect name for an internet company;
America Online. Can you think of better name than that to describe what your business is?

Same holds true for Home Shoppong Network. Did switching to HSN give them an edge over their competitors? I think not.