A Guide to Choosing Colors for Your Brand

September 19, 2013 | Dmitry Fadeyev | 0 comments

One of the key elements of building a strong brand is color selection. Every color has a different feel and various associations. By choosing a color or a combination of colors for your brand identity, you will take on those associations. Colors will evoke certain emotions and feelings towards your brand so it is vital to choose a color that will represent your identity effectively.

Research reveals people make a subconscious judgment about a person, environment, or product within 90 seconds of initial viewing and that between 62% and 90% of that assessment is based on color alone.

WHY COLOR MATTERS

If you own a color in your industry, this color will symbolize your product. This can act as a great identifier. For example, if you sell physical goods, your packaging will stand out from the competition. The color will also be recognizable on any promotional media and your logos.

Where to start?

There is a great new tool which can help out with color selection called Cymbolism. It’s an interactive survey of color and word associations. Every page loads a new word, for which you have to select a color you feel best represents it. The results are then aggregated and you can see most popular associations either by color or by word.

To help you select the right color for your brand I’ve aggregated the results from Cymbolism, and also provided examples of logos that use each color:

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How to select your color

Look through the table above for a quick overview of what each color stands for. Some questions to ask yourself:

  • What color represents your brand\'s personality?
  • What color suits the characteristics of your product/service?
  • What color does your competitor(s) use?

Colors aren’t tied to any particular industry — though some may be better suited for some services/products than others. You should aim to pick a color that will represent your brand’s personality best. One that will give your customers the right impression the first time they see it.

You aren’t limited to one color. Some brands like eBay choose to go with many colors to represent variety — but you can also choose a couple of colors that work well together.

Consider differences in cultural interpretations of your color. For example in the Western world, white is considered the color of purity and peace, however, in some parts of Asia white is the color of death. Make sure the color you select will give the right impressions in the markets you’re present in.

Pick a color opposite to that of your main competitor. The color of your main competitor is probably the most important point to consider. If you’re the first in a new industry or market segment, then you have first picks. Choose the color that represents your product and its personality. If you’re second, then that first choice may already be taken. Instead of picking the same or similar color, pick the opposite. Pick blue if your competitor has red, pick purple if they have yellow, etc. A brand’s strength lies in its ability to stand out. Picking the same color to that of your key competitor makes you a me-too product. Instead, you want to separate yourself from the competitor, you want to show that you’re different.

Color Cymbolism
RED hot, passion, love, rebelious, powerful, sex, radical, excited, bold, devil
ORANGE warn, fall, summer, retro, mellow, solar, friendly, rococo, cottage, inviting
YELLOW solar, happy, cheerful, summer, fun, energetic, jubilant, young, sun, friendly
GREEN environmental, money, natural, organic, profit, earthy, grow, Dublin, trust, jealous
BLUE liberal, cold, smart, progress, music, trust, freedom, royal, medicine, launch
PURPLE royal, mystical, victorian, decadant, vanity, romantic, elegant, stylish, sensual, eclectic
BROWN rustic, furniture, fall, earthy, cottage, library, warm, romantic, colonial, book
MULTI COLOR enjoy, relax, fun, entertainment, shopping,

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