Septiembre 10, 2019

Frame of Mind

Established in 1937, Volkswagen needs little introduction as its one of the most well-known car brands in the world — for both good and not so good reasons. The former includes the design and production of the Beetle, the VW Van, and the Golf, while the latter includes its origin as the “People’s Car” under the Nazi regime and the recent diesel emission fraud. Still, it is one of the world’s most successful volume carmakers, with facilities in 14 countries and over 195,000 employees producing vehicles for customers in more than 150 nations. As Volkswagen looks both to the future and to create some distance between the diesel scandal, the company is putting its focus on pure electric cars, starting with the ID.3, officially launched yesterday at the International Motor Show (IAA) in Frankfurt, where they also introduced a new logo and identity designed in-house.

Jochen Sengpiehl, Chief Marketing Officer of Volkswagen, explains: “We have created a new holistic global brand experience on all channels and across all touch points. As a general principle, the aim in future will not be to show a perfect advertising world. In our presentation, we want to become more human and more lively, to adopt the customer’s perspective to a greater extent and to tell authentic stories.”

volkswagen_2019_logo_before_after

BEFORE / AFTER

The symbol and trademark will be the new logo. This will be more modern, clearer and simpler. The logo will be reduced to its essential elements and presented with a new design that is flat and two-dimensional. It will allow more flexible use and will be outstandingly recognizable in digital media. To date, the logo has been blue and white. A new blue tone is now being added, allowing additional color variants. As the digital application with simple, user-friendly interfaces has become extremely important, the logo will be positioned flexibly with the new “moving frame” in the future.

volkswagen_2019_logo_explanation

Logo qualities, I guess. (Why didn’t they put “Contrasting on the other side for a symmetric layout?)

volkswagen_2019_logo_colors

Logo qualities, I guess. (Why didn’t they put “Contrasting on the other side for a symmetric layout?)

The VW logo is a classic, there is no doubt about that, but under growing layers of chrome over the past 20 years it had become increasingly more difficult to see what made the logo good other than its legacy or even remember that the chrome effects didn’t come into play until the late 1990s, obscuring the same flat design, that was previously already “reduced to its essential elements”, being touted today. This is a semi-long way of saying that the move away from the faux dimensionality and chrome effects that have permeated cars for so long is most welcome for VW.

Even though it retains the stacked “VW” structure — which would have been brand suicide if they had introduced something completely different — the new logo comes across as shockingly different. I mean, it’s clearly the “same” but the move to thin lines really transforms the look of the logo. Unfortunately, it isn’t quite the best possible manifestation. I can’t help but compare this to the Lufthansa icon redesign, which came across as being so precisely and crisply executed that it was hard to disagree with it but, here, there is a very distracting small disparity of line thicknesses between the circle (thin), the letters (less thin but not evidently thicker), and the gap between the letters (almost as thin as the circle stroke but not quite), that it’s hard to fully get on board with the evolution, which is sad because I really wanted this to be great.

The new logo is not bad, really. It actually has a little bit of an awkward, imperfect design undercurrent that’s somewhat interesting and I’ll take it over any of the old chrome versions but I feel like it could have been such a big runaway success if the execution had been more refined.

 

volkswagen_2019_various_applications

Various applications.

The “moving frame” device is actually pretty good and begins to support the thinness of the new logo — although, a little infuriatingly, it introduces a third level of thinness in all the lines at play. It’s a good visual device that might become as important, if not more, than the logo itself to signal that you are looking at a VW ad (or brand impression of any other sort). The video of the moving frame does a really good job in presenting it as a unifying theme across applications and the one thing I do love about this new evolution is the use of the frame as a line or border of actual light in physical spaces — I think that’s a great jump from a white line in print and digital to a physical manifestation in dealerships and showrooms.

Instead of a brand claim, Volkswagen will have a sound logo for the first time. This will make also make the Volkswagen brand distinctive in acoustic terms, both in the vehicle and in communications. For several decades, Volkswagen has used a male voice to present its vehicles and for advertising purposes. The brand is now to become female. On almost all markets, a woman with a warm, pleasant and confident voice will speak for Volkswagen

volkswagen_2019_dealership_01
volkswagen_2019_dealership_02
volkswagen_2019_dealership_03

Going back again to the Lufthansa design, I feel like they nailed down perfectly what their brand world is through typography, color, and materials that all made sense whether they were applied on paper, digitally, or in the plane cabin. Looking at the images above, there is a hint of cohesiveness in the use of blues, but it isn’t a convincing “This is the new Volkswagen” brand. Maybe it’s unfair to want it to feel that way at launch but even the typeface used throughout in bold and light pairings doesn’t quite feel like a solid brand element — like, the type could change at any point and it wouldn’t make a big difference.

volkswagen_2019_car_badge_01
volkswagen_2019_car_badge_02

In the end, the true impact of the logo evolution will be determined by the evolution of the company and the adoption of their new electric cars by consumers… if that goes well, no one will complain about the new logo — but, if these new cars are a bust, this poor new logo is going to suffer the fall as part of the turning point. But let’s be optimistic. As it stands, the new logo is a clear signal of a new era for Volkswagen, regardless of its execution merits. It reads as a lighter, nimbler manifestation of the brand that aims to move past its recent negative associations and build positive new ones.

PUBLISHED BY:  UNDER CONSIDERATION Brand New

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