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The logo is dead - long live the logo!
A logo's job is to represent the essence of its
brands character to introduce it if we
dont know it, or to remind us of it if we do.
As a photograph is to a person, a logo is to a brand.
Visual logos are proven, effective and ubiquitous
which is where they have started to run into rapidly
diminishing returns.
I call the problem overmessaging. Each
of us now encounters a staggering 30,000 commercial
messages every single day, and the vast majority of
them are visual. This means that for the next few years
at least, sonic logos by which I mean short sonic
mnemonics that are the exact audio counterparts of the
visual logo are going to be worth considering
simply because they are relatively rare and can thus
act as powerful differentiators. However theres
more to sonic logos than curiosity value alone: used
wisely, they work exceptionally well. They also have
a surprisingly long pedigree.
Sonic logos have actually been around for hundreds
of years: street calling used to be the main way tradesmen
advertised their services, as wonderfully romanticised
in the film Oliver. Its not so long since that
practice died: I can remember the rag-and-bone
mans mournful shout of anyoldiron?
from my childhood in London. The modern-day equivalent
is the ice cream van: just watch the cathartic effect
of its chimes on surrounding buildings on a hot summers
day to see the potency of sonic logos deployed in the
right place at the right time. Most ice cream chimes
are generic, but in Sweden the Hemglass ice cream tune
is a universally known and loved sonic brand.
As soon as the advertising industry got sound to
play with, it saw the potential of memorable music/voice
combinations and the jingle and tagline were born.
The dividing line between jingle or a tagline an a sonic
logo is blurred. In general, jingles and taglines come
and go with campaigns and rarely live for more than
a few years. Even the most memorable usually get retired.
For hands that do dishes
; Its
the real thing; these and many more once-mighty
jingles or taglines are now languishing in retirement
homes, though the brands are still very much with us
today.
Some taglines are so strong that they have become
sonic logos. One in particular has outlasted entire
generations of customers: Tony the tiger has been
saying theyre gr-r-r-r-reat! since
1951. This is probably the longest-running sonic logo
in the world, and it has now outlived its voice-over
artist. Thurl Ravenscroft was famous for many Disney
voices but Tony was his greatest legacy. He voiced the
tiger for 54 years until his death in 2005, when Lee
Marshall was appointed to carry the tradition forward.
Over the years, some sonic logos have even been
registered as trademarks or service marks: the roar
of the MGM lion and the old NBC three-tone chime are
two examples.
These examples notwithstanding, it wasnt until
the 1990s that sonic logos started to be taken really
seriously and their use considered by many major brands.
The sea change came with Intel. Its four-note sonic
logo, composed by Austrian musician Walter Werzowa,
has become one of the best-known sounds in the world,
and has spearheaded Intels extraordinary success
as a brand given that this is a product nobody
ever sees and nobody ever buys.
Today, sonic logos are more in play then ever before.
UK insurance giant Direct Line has a sprightly bugle
call, which speaks volumes about urgency, assistance
and playfulness in just three seconds. Apple has its
comforting, uplifting start-up sound, engineered in
1991 by Jim Reekes and still shipping 16 years later.
(It is inexplicable that the mighty Microsoft has never
seen the value of a single start-up sound; the sound
of Windows has changed with every successive version
of the software, so that now there is no sound of Windows.
They may be learning through: huge amounts of time
and money were invested in a language of sounds
for the Xbox 360.) Lufthansa has invested in a corporate
sound, comprising four rising tones that are aimed to
convey feelings of taking off and wellbeing. Siemens
has recently added a seventh element to its branding:
sound has now joined logo, claim, typeface, colours,
layout and style as one of the basic building blocks
of the Siemens brand. The company has created both an
audio signature (aka a sonic logo) and also
some mood sound as part of its new palette. Even
political parties are joining in: Waless Plaid
Cymru has a short sonic logo to welcome you in peace
and harmony to its website.
The evidence is that more and more major brands
are creating a sonic logo as a matter of course. With
the continuing rise of mobile devices (along with custom
ring tones and downloaded digital sound) I believe we
have not yet scratched the surface of the sonic logo.
Is it time your brand found its voice before
your competitors find theirs?
Author: Julian Treasure
Julian Treasure is author of the groundbreaking book
Sound Business (http://www.soundbusiness.biz
) and Chairman of The Sound Agency (http://www.thesoundagency.com),
an applied sound consultancy with clients such as BP,
Honda, Tesco and Unilever. He lives in London with his
Italian wife, children's book author Swan Treasure.
Keywords : sonic logo, brand sound, sound business,
sound, julian treasure
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