Branding Rock County’s Breadbasket

RCHSPantone

Woot! Woot! Congratulations to Mike Reuter and his Rock County Historical Society (RCHS) team for their great work with Adunate in creating a logo for their upcoming marketing campaign. And so the branding begins!

Mike, who serves as executive director, contacted me a couple months ago regarding the society’s campaign called Breadbasket (I wrote about the society here). Breadbasket will be a yearlong traveling exhibit that chronicles Rock County’s culinary history. The exhibit will run from June 1, 2013 to June 1, 2014, and will target youth of all ages, families and underprivileged families. According to Mike, these audiences will benefit from Breadbasket’s following embedded themes:

  1. Seed to Spoon: Where Does Our Food Come From?
  2. Tasty Traditions: How Does Food Shape Who We Are?
  3. Our Food Future: Bleak or Bright?

Discussing the project with Mike was exciting. He comes to the RCHS with a great portfolio, having previously worked as the operations manager and curator for the Milwaukee County Historical Society. His plans for Breadbasket are to have large, sweeping, door-type displays, along with educational kiosks. The exhibit will be headquartered at the RCHS campus but will also travel to outlying historical societies.

Mike then put together an interesting team of a people, all individual from one another yet all related to Rock County. For more than an hour we discussed what the county means to them (I’ve developed a super effective process of opening up participant’s creative brains and guiding them through the necessary brainstorming). What a fun time! I learned so many appreciative qualities of this area of south central Wisconsin. I daresay the participants did too—open-minded thinking always gives people perspectives they didn’t have before.

One of the objectives for the Breadbasket logo is that it work both independently and together with the RCHS logo. Therefore, it needs to have its own identity, yet coordinate.

Here’s the RCHS logo.

Rock County Historical Society logo, Janesville, WisconsinThe logo is very befitting to the society; the icon replicates its Lincoln-Tallman House and the typeface represents the Craftsman-style of its other buildings.

We decided the red color that RCHS uses in all its visual communications would be the coordinating factor. Rather than choosing one or the other of the two eras represented in the RCHS logo, we went with a generalized advertising style that would have been common in the late 1800s to early 1900s, a time frame common inclusive of both eras.

Rock County Historical Society

Rock County’s food history is fascinating. Like much of Wisconsin, it evolved as a wheat-growing county in the mid-1800s to a dairy-producing county in the 1900s. Today it celebrates everything from large acreages of field corn, to specialized farmers markets, orchards and vineyards, all of which work together to make up Rock County’s enticing breadbasket of food.

So here you have it: RCHS’s own breadbasket of food! I’m anxious to see the Breadbasket displays and the great programs the RCHS puts together in the next year!

 

 

 

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Wednesday Webs 3-28-12

coffee shop posters

I love being self-employed. And I love working from my home office. But I sometimes do worry I’ll miss out on the full brainstorming experience, or develop creative complacency, or maybe even lose tolerance of people around me. I combat this by regularly working in coffee shops, where the ambience of people everywhere keeps me inspired (and surely a community announcement board is cure for any creative block).

Other people must think about this too. Here are a few articles that discuss working alone.

Civil War event poster, Madison, WI

 

 

 

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A Golden Logo for Golden Alumni

PhoenixGold, Luther Preparatory School, Watertown, WI
May we please have a drumroll!

Introducing PhoenixGold—the name and logo for the new alumni association of Luther Preparatory School (LPS), in Watertown, WI.

Being on the ground floor of branding a new organization is honorary, exciting and fun. It’s also intimidating. So when Ken Taylor, mission advancement director for LPS, asked me to be part of his branding team, I felt all of the above. Not only was his committee creating a logo, they were literally building the structure of a brand new baby—name, identity, and all.

Here’s a bit of history:

Luther Preparatory School is like a merged family. As a WELS Lutheran high school, it was formed in 1995 by the amalgamation of Northwestern Preparatory School of Watertown and Martin Luther Preparatory School of Prairie du Chien. Back then, students came with histories from their original schools. Now, 16 years and more than a thousand graduates later, LPS is a united family cherishing strong Christian bonds.

Such a family needs its own alumni organization. It needs an organization unique from either of its feeder schools and it needs a visual identity to brand itself.

Ken has been awesome to work with. He knows his school well and gave the project lots of goal-oriented thought. In our initial conversation, he spoke of students emerging from LPS with spiritual and educated strength. He called them Golden. He also felt, as alumni, they share a love and responsibility for their school. As we brainstormed names and ideas for the organization, he directed our thinking toward those concepts.

 

PhoenixGold, Luther Preparatory School, Watertown, WI


The committee wanted to firmly associate the alumni organization with Luther Preparatory School. Using the same bird, typeface and colors, we visually tied the alumni’s name and logo to that of the school mascot’s.

Wrapping “Gold” around the Phoenix’s head emphasizes the idea of emergence, or rising. Adding a curved underline unites logo elements and conveys the school’s emphasis on the Word of God (the Bible).

 

PhoenixGold, Luther Preparatory School, Watertown, WI


As a new organization, PhoenixGold needs to be branded, or made known. This will take time and effort. In its introductory stages, LPS will use a tagline with the logo. Later, when the logo is easily associated with the organization, variations without the tagline will also be used.

Congratulations Luther Preparatory School on your new alumni organization! God’s blessings to PhoenixGold!

 

 

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Pie is More Than a Chart

One of the unique selling points (USP) of my word and design business is the personal, down-to-earth attention I give my clients. Working from a home office deep in the heart of Wisconsin’s dairyland sure sticks this idea. When clients meet here, they always comment on the pretty setting and how fun it is to get out in the country.

They especially like when I serve pie.

Now, pie is a good thing. I don’t profess to be an epicurean baker, but my pie is pretty tasty. And it makes an excellent visual as my clients and I formulate a plan for their communication and marketing needs.

When I ask them the six questions of journalism—Who? Where? What? Why? When? How?—I refer to them as the six pieces of the pie of good information gathering.

Who is your target audience?

What is your marketing goal?

How can we use communication to accomplish this goal?

And so on…

Examining each of these questions helps us better understand not only the project itself, but also how it relates to their business, their goals and their overall success. Each piece of the pie works together to create a whole.

Right now it’s strawberry season in Wisconsin and the berries sure are bountiful. I’m picking bowls like this every day from my little patch. I gotta say, the pies have been mighty good!

Want to stop on by and discuss communications for your business? Email or give me a call!

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How do You Creatively Convey Your Message?

So, they claimed to not be creative, but I recently had a lot of fun working with three very innovative and visionary thinkers.

Two months ago I met with Rachel DiGiorgio, Jeff Inniger and David Schroeder, a committee of three (an ideal number) for the WELS Commission on Lutheran Schools. They’re planning a leadership conference for 2012 and want an identifying logo for the event. We had a great brainstorming session.

Okay, I’ll admit part of our success can be attributed to the sub sandwiches Dave brought.

But another reason we did so well is that Rachel, Jeff and Dave have a complete grasp on their mission and the message they wish to convey. They opened up and communicated very well. That’s important—to unlock the mind, think and talk freely, let the ideas flow.

Here’s what they said:

The conference theme is Christ In All to All, based upon 1 Corinthians 9:23, which says “I do this for the sake of the gospel, that I may share in its blessings.”

Thoughts under this theme are:

  • It’s Christ who motivates me.
  • It’s Christ who teaches me.
  • It’s Christ who strengthens me.

Obviously, Christ is their center. And its Christ’s ministry that conference attendees will share.

“We’re all in this together,” says the committee about their audience, who will be WELS school principals, teachers, pastors and school board members.

“We want them (attendees) to receive this message of Christ and go out and give it to others. We want them to take it back to their congregations so each of their members can also go out and give it to others.”

Thus explains our logo.

Birds taking off in flight is an image we see all the time. They go forth in every direction and soar the world. For us, this image captures the idea of a shared ministry. It conveys the multiplying affect of each person taking the message of Christ out into the world.

The center dove represents Christ and by intersecting the other doves and setting them at a transparency, the center dove is “in all to all.”

Great project. Creative committee.

To God be the glory!

If you would like help creating an identifying logo for your organization or event, contact me for a telephone or personal consultation.

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