Publishers Lunch
The quest for a new Penguin Random House
logo and brand identity has led not to one mark, but to 250. Neither the
CEO Markus Dohle acknowledges in an
internal video for staff that accompanied the brand launch the enduring
curiosity around how the new mark would look: "When I did the Town Hall in
July [2013], it was the most asked question around the world: 'What is the new
company going to look like?' And behind that question, I think, is, 'What is
the company going to feel like, for us?'"
He adds, "And the more I thought about
it the more I realized that, it's really fitting because we, as Penguin Random
House, we are the merchants of words." The new system was developed along
with design agency Pentagram, and the firm's Michael Beirut appears alongside Dohle
in the company video.
"We first wanted to create a brand
narrative," Dohle says in the video. "We wanted to define our
company's story" and "we tried to involve as many stakeholders as
possible" in that process. In the official release, Dohle explains:
"Presenting our new Penguin Random House wordmark side by side with each
of our publishing imprint and brand symbols powerfully communicates what makes
our company so special: our collective expertise and global scale coupled with
our local publishing teams giving diverse and important voices a platform and
audience. This fundamental understanding of our heritage and of the company we
are building together for the future informs the design of the brand identity,
and how we will visually represent who we are."
And at Shelf Awareness:
Penguin Random House Introduces New Brand Identity
Design agency Pentagram helped develop the brand identity, which replaces the interim logo introduced July 1, 2013, when Penguin Group and Random House merged.
Penguin Random House CEO Markus Dohle commented: "Presenting our new Penguin Random House wordmark side by side with each of our publishing imprint and brand symbols powerfully communicates what makes our company so special: our collective expertise and global scale coupled with our local publishing teams giving diverse and important voices a platform and audience. This fundamental understanding of our heritage and of the company we are building together for the future informs the design of the brand identity, and how we will visually represent who we are."
And at The Bookseller
No comments:
Post a Comment