
A logo redesign can refresh a brand and attract new customers, but it can also confuse the people who already recognize you, and the difference lies in when and how you do it.
The logo is the most visible part of a visual identity, but that does not mean you should change it the moment you get bored with it or someone tells you it looks dated. A logo redesign is a serious decision with long-term consequences. Companies like Coca-Cola and Nike do not change their logo every decade because they have understood that recognition has enormous value. On the other hand, a company that holds on to the same logo for decades when it no longer reflects who they are and what they do loses relevance and makes it harder to attract new customers. The question is not whether to change it, but when and how.
Five strong reasons to redesign
There are situations where a logo redesign is not just justified but necessary. Recognizing these signals in time can save you months of declining relevance in the market.
When a company changes direction, enters a new sector, targets a different audience or positions itself in a premium segment it did not occupy before, the old logo can become an obstacle. Customers interpret visuals before they read messages, and if the visual says something opposite to where the company is heading, there is a cognitive dissonance that repels exactly the customers the company wants.
- The company has changed direction, entered a new segment or redefined its target audience
- The logo does not work in digital environments: looks poor on screen, cannot be reduced to an icon
- The visual is dated and does not reflect current aesthetic standards in the niche
- The company is merging with another or going through a larger rebranding
- The logo has technical problems: too little contrast, overly complex form, poor readability on dark backgrounds
When a redesign is not the right answer
A logo should not be changed simply because you are tired of it or because a competitor made a new one. The owner's boredom is not a valid enough reason, because customers see the logo infrequently, not every day. What looks worn to you may be comfortingly familiar to them.
Be especially careful if the logo is connected to a long tradition and if older customers have a strong emotional attachment to it. In that case, even a well-executed redesign can trigger rejection. Gap changed its logo in 2010 and within 24 hours reverted to the old one due to massive negative customer reaction. The lesson: recognition has economic value that is rarely factored into the decision.
A good logo redesign evolves a brand, it does not erase it.
Evolution vs. revolution: which approach to choose
There are two approaches to logo redesign. The evolutionary approach retains the key elements that are recognizable, the shape, a specific color, the typographic style, but refreshes them, gives them a more modern expression without completely severing the connection to the previous logo. This is how companies like BMW, Shell and Mastercard have operated for decades.
The revolutionary approach means a complete change. A new visual language, new typography, a new form. This approach only makes sense when the old logo has no recognition worth preserving, when the company is changing its identity beyond recognition, or when it is completely repositioning. It is riskier but sometimes the only correct move.
A redesign process that reduces risk
A logo redesign should not start in Photoshop or Illustrator. It should start with questions. Who are we today? Who are we talking to? What does our visual need to communicate? What emotion do we want? Where is the logo used (digital, print, spaces, packaging)?
Only when the answers are clear should the designer enter the creative process. A good designer will always present multiple directions, not one finished solution. Testing the final candidates on real users, even informally, always provides useful insights that neither the owner nor the designer can predict on their own.
- Define strategic goals before engaging a designer
- Test final candidates on a sample of your target audience before making the final choice
- Plan a transition period: old and new logos exist in parallel for a while to avoid confusion
The technical side that often gets overlooked
A modern logo must work equally well in digital and physical environments. It needs to be legible and effective at favicon size (16x16 pixels) as well as on a billboard. It must work on light and dark backgrounds, in color and in black and white.
File formats matter. Vectors (SVG, EPS, AI) are essential because they scale without quality loss. PNG with a transparent background is necessary for web and presentations. Every logo should come with at minimum: a horizontal version, a vertical version, a symbol without text and a version for dark backgrounds.
How to communicate the change to customers
Even a well-executed redesign can land poorly if you do not communicate it properly. Customers who have known you for a long time can be confused or annoyed when they do not recognize the brand they are used to. Communicating the change is part of the process, not optional.
Good practices include publishing the story behind the redesign, explaining why and what changed, showing continuity with the old logo where it exists, and gradually introducing the new visual rather than switching everywhere at once. Transparency with customers builds trust even in moments of change.
At izreklamiraj.me we have worked on branding and logo redesigns for clients across different sectors, and every time we start with strategy, not aesthetics. We know when a redesign makes sense and how to execute it so the brand stays recognizable while becoming relevant to a new audience. If you are thinking about a redesign or are still at the questions stage, book a free consultation at izreklamiraj.me.


