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Reblanding: 360-degree brand update-updates

Reblanding: 360-degree brand update-updates

A photo of a chicken dinner from Cracker Barrel, sitting on a red gingham tablecloth with a plate of biscuits and a glass of tea in the background. The white dinner plate features a piece of fried chicken smothered in gravy, with a spoon above it dripping gravy onto it. Clockwise from the left are a pile of green beans, a pile of corn, and and a serving of mashed potatoes with yet more gravy on it.
Pictured: Another Cracker Barrel-related mistake.

Recently, Cracker Barrel became a source of controversy and not just rustic wooden gee-gaws and heart disease when they hupped and changed their logo, I guess in pursuit of a trendier market for their gravy-fronted cuisine. They paid nearly $700 million to drop the old rocking chair guy in pursuit of an all-text logo that looked, at the risk of slipping into marketing jargon, bad.

Old Rockin’ Chair Guy notwithstanding, the Kountry Kitchen logo reimagining was an interesting choice to accompany their recent Kountry Kohl’s renovations that no one has been clamoring for, and as you might imagine, people disliked it very, very, very much. And in the wake of that $700-million, agency-firing mistake, they changed to logo back all quick-like and made their apologies.

So, that brief national nightmare is over, but Cracker Barrel is merely the most recent examples of brands that have chosen to eff around with their visual identity and find out their market is torches-and-pitchforks attached to that orange with a straw sticking out of it. Here are a few examples.

Gap

Of course, if you want to talk short-lived logo reversals, we have to start with Gap’s six-day Helvetica vacation back in 2010. Turns out, “But we still have a blue square!” isn’t a compelling-enough appeal to win over an audience.

Gap logos, side by side. On the left is the word “Gap” in upper and lowercase in a sans-serif font, with a small blue square at the upper right side of the “P.” On the right is a dark-blue square, with the word “GAP” in all caps in a narrow serif font.
Left: Gap logo, 2010. Right: Gap logo, 2010 and then six days later in 2010.

Burberry

Also in the realm of fashion is Burberry’s Riccardo Tisci Don’t Live Here Anymore rebrand. In 2018, under new CCO Riccardo Tisci, Burberry abandoned their century-old serif font and jousting knight in favor of an all-caps wordmark that can best be described as “Arial.” (No shade to Tisci, who wrecked shop at Givenchy — his well-warranted attempts to democratize the Burberry brand did so at the expense of its foundational vibe, is all.)

Under Tisci’s successor, Daniel Lee, the brand cranked back to a refinement of that original 1901 logo, and y’all, I’m not saying it’s perfect, but if they’re going to be moving in a direction of modernization, this is a better starting place than “You know Saint Laurent’s new logo? … Oh, you don’t?”

Burberry logos, side by side. On the left is the word “Burberry” in a black sans-serif font, all caps, with the words “London England” in smaller letters centered underneath. On the right, in dark blue, is a drawing of a knight on a horse, charging, holding a shield with a script letter “B” on it and a banner above him that says, “Prorsum.” Underneath is the word “Burberry” in all caps in an old-looking serf font.
Left: Burberry logo 2018. Right: Burberry logo 2023.

HBO Max/Max/HBO Max again

HBO celebrated its 2023 merger with Warner Bros. Discovery by, as is sadly the case with so many new relationships, abandoning its identity. It removed the HBO from its streaming service HBO Max, leaving it just “Max,” because We’re more than just HBO, y’all!. And then it was Wait, people do like HBO but don’t like HBO+Food Network, and welcome back, HBO Max.

HBO Max logos, side by side. On the left is a gray box with the word “max” in it in blue, all lowercase, in a round sans-serif font. On the right is a purple box with the words “HBO max” in it, in white upper and lowercase letters in that same font.
Left: Max (formerly HBO Max) logo 2023. Right: HBO max logo 2020 and then again 2025.

Tropicana

This should surprise no one in marketing, because it’s basically a case study for re-branding cockups, but: In 2009, PepsiCo thought, “The problem with Tropicana’s packaging is it visually indicates what’s inside the bottle.” So they dumped $35 million into a packaging update and accompanying ad campaign, with a big ol’ orange swoop and a ‘00s generic font and a disturbingly biological orange screw cap. They discovered consumers didn’t recognize it on store shelves and even felt emotionally attached to the old branding, so back to the old branding they went. With a $35 million lesson in modernifying without thinking.

Tropicana orange juice cartons, side by side. The one on the left has an orange swoop and the word “Tropicana” in a modern, round font going up the right side of the carton. The one on the right has the word “Tropicana” in a curved, sans-serif font above an orange with a straw stuck in it.
Left: Tropicana packaging January of 2009. Right: Tropicana packaging 1964 and then again February of 2009.

Uber

You might not have noticed Uber’s revolving-door logo journey because your eyes weren’t really focusing well by the time you ordered the car. But in 2016, Uber decided a rebrand was in order to better communicate their mission of… something with bits and atoms, and network infrastructure and something? Key to this was, apparently, kerning, and an icon that looks like a backwards C on an Ikea throw pillow. In 2018, they decided all-caps was the problem, and settled on a logo that actually represents the service you’re trying to use.

Uber logos, side by side. On the left are the logos via 2016, with one that’s just the white word “Uber” in all caps in a black box and one that’s a circle that looks like a backwards letter C on a green patterned background. On the right is the word Uber, now in upper and lowercase, in a black box with curved corners.
Left: Uber logo 2016. Right: Uber logo 2018.

I’m bored, and everything should cater to that.

The takeaway here is that brands have gotten boring and I don’t like it, and I don’t care that logos have to be streamlined for a digital environment, because it’s boring and it makes me bored. There’s streamlining, and then there’s prioritizing utility over visual identity that’s representative of the brand itself (and don’t give me that whatever about “our transformation to a more modern blah blah blah and a sophisticated audience that yadda yadda” — I write brand rationales, too, and I know about the pump-jug of Trite BS under your creative director’s desk).

Anyway, make things like I want them to be, and if you have an hour and six minutes of “let’s get better at marketing” time, spend it watching oldish but good “Brand Management: Dropping The Stupid Stuff” from marketing guy Mark Ritson.

(I’ll confess that Burberry’s rebrand was the impetus for this entire post, and I’d love for anyone with connections at Diane von Furstenberg to let them know their 2017 logo redesign looks like they accidentally hit “fully justify” and then got distracted before they could change it back. I’ll take this shit from Calvin Klein, DVF, but you should be ashamed of yourself.)

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