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Author: Branding London
HomeArticles Posted by Branding London
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CreativeMarketing
10 April 2026By Branding London

Branding London Wins a Stevie Award at the IBA

Creative
Marketing

Branding London Wins a Stevie Award at the IBA

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

Branding London Wins a Stevie Award at the IBA

Branding London has been recognised as a winner in the International Business Awards, receiving a Stevie Award for our work in brand and design strategy. The International Business Awards are one of the most respected global programmes celebrating creativity, innovation, and business impact, and this recognition means a great deal to us.

For us, the award reflects the thinking and care that shape the work, not just the final outcome. Much of what we do is built on rigour, research, and practical decisions that help brands grow in a way that feels considered and lasting. It also highlights the value this approach continues to create for the clients we support.

The judges recognised the strength of our creative direction and the way our work balances visual identity with strategic purpose. The projects acknowledged here come from a mix of collaboration and trust, spanning founders, growing businesses, and established organisations alike. Strong creative work only happens when clients bring ambition and openness to the process, and we’re fortunate to work with people who do exactly that.

This recognition pushes us to keep raising the standard of our work, and we’re grateful to every client and collaborator who has been part of that. Thank you to the International Business Awards for this honour, and to our clients and partners for their continued trust.

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CreativeMarketing
17 March 2026By Branding London

The Problem With Greenwashing

Creative
Marketing

The Problem With Greenwashing​

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

The Problem With Greenwashing

Sustainability has become part of mainstream brand communication. That visibility brings pressure to say something, even when the substance behind it is limited.

Greenwashing usually doesn’t begin with bad intent. It often starts with marketing teams amplifying small improvements as if they represent large-scale change. A recycled material becomes “fully sustainable.” A partial offset becomes “carbon neutral.” The language stretches beyond the reality.

The short-term effect can look positive. The message appears aligned with current expectations. But the long-term consequences are harder to manage.

Audiences are more informed than they were even a few years ago. Regulators are more active. Journalists are more direct. When claims are overstated, they are increasingly scrutinised. Once trust is weakened, rebuilding it takes far more effort than being measured from the start.

There is also an internal cost. When sustainability messaging runs ahead of operational reality, teams are forced to defend statements they didn’t shape. That misalignment creates friction inside the organisation as well as outside it.

Brands that navigate this well take a different approach. They communicate progress accurately. They acknowledge limitations. They avoid presenting early-stage initiatives as completed transformations.

Sustainability is rarely binary. It is incremental. It involves trade-offs, supply chain constraints, and ongoing refinement. Communicating that complexity may feel less compelling than a bold headline, but it is far more credible.

In the long term, brands are judged less on perfection and more on coherence. If your messaging matches your operations, trust compounds. If it outpaces them, the gap eventually becomes visible. Greenwashing backfires not because audiences expect flawlessness, but because they expect honesty.

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CreativeMarketing
17 March 2026By Branding London

What Makes a Website Rebrand Successful?

Creative
Marketing

What Makes a Website Rebrand Successful?

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

What Makes a Website Rebrand Successful?

A website rebrand is never just about making things look better. If aesthetics are the only focus, the project has missed the point. A successful rebrand solves real problems: it sharpens your positioning, improves user experience, and aligns your digital presence with the direction of the business. The visual refresh is simply the outcome of getting those fundamentals right.

So what separates a rebrand that genuinely works from one that only looks different?

Start with Strategy

The instinct is to jump straight into visuals. Founders look at their current site and think, “This needs to feel more modern,” and immediately start collecting inspiration. But without clarity on what you’re trying to communicate or who you’re trying to reach, design choices become guesswork.

Effective rebrands start with a few essential questions. What has changed about your positioning? Who is your audience today? What should someone understand within the first minute or two of landing on the site? Has your market shifted since you first launched?

Clear answers give the design phase direction. You’re not creating a site that only looks good; you’re creating one that communicates the right message to the right people.

Build a Sitemap That Matches How People Think

Information architecture isn’t glamorous, but it’s crucial. A visually impressive site with a confusing structure sends users elsewhere. If visitors can’t find what they need quickly, they leave.

Strong sitemaps follow user journeys rather than internal structures. That means identifying what different audience segments want, such as pricing pages, case studies, or product details, and making those paths easy to reach. If key pages sit several layers deep because they don’t fit your preferred hierarchy, usability suffers.

A rebrand is also the right moment to remove what no longer works. Old posts, outdated product sections, and redundant pages accumulate over time. Fewer, clearer pages almost always perform better than a sprawling site that dilutes your message.

Write Copy That Actually Says Something

Weak website copy often sounds like it came from a corporate phrase generator: “Leading solutions.” “Innovative capabilities.” “Empowering growth.” These lines fill space without saying anything.

Strong copy is specific. It explains what you do in clear language, without jargon or vague claims. It uses real details. It sounds like something a person would say if they were describing the company in conversation. That tone — direct, confident, human — creates trust.

A rebrand is also the right time to set tone-of-voice guidelines. Without them, a website becomes a patchwork of styles: one page formal, another casual, another overly sales-driven. Consistency is essential for a credible digital brand.

Make Design Decisions That Can Actually Be Built

Many rebrands fall apart during development. Beautiful mockups appear with custom animations, bespoke typography, and complex layouts, but then reality sets in. Animations slow the site down. Fonts require licensing. Layouts break on mobile. Compromises creep in and weaken the final result.

Successful rebrands involve developers early, ideally at the planning stage. When technical considerations are understood from the start, design becomes more grounded and more effective. You’re not creating something that only works in concept; you’re creating something that works in production.

This doesn’t mean limiting creativity. It means making informed choices. Some effects aren’t worth the performance cost, some layouts don’t scale cleanly, and some typefaces add unnecessary friction. These decisions strengthen the final experience rather than restrict it.

Plan for Content You’ll Actually Produce

Most rebrands include plans for new content such as case studies, articles, or resources. But if the new design makes content difficult to create or publish, those plans fall away quickly. Templates should be simple enough for your team to use without designers. The CMS should be intuitive. Image requirements should be reasonable.

A successful rebrand is sustainable. It shouldn’t launch beautifully and then become a burden to maintain. A site your team can update easily will perform far better than one that looks impressive but requires constant external support.

Test Before You Launch

It sounds obvious, but many rebrands go live without proper testing. Broken links, missing images, slow pages, and forms that fail immediately undermine trust.

Testing should cover the essentials. Does the site load properly across devices and browsers? Are all links functional? Do forms submit correctly? Is performance acceptable? Usability testing with real users is just as important. Can people find the information they need? Does the navigation make sense? Are there moments of hesitation or confusion?

Fixing these issues after launch is harder. Getting them right beforehand protects the credibility of the rebrand.


What Success Looks Like

A successful website rebrand isn’t defined by launch-day compliments. It’s defined by performance. Are users staying longer? Are they finding information more easily? Are conversions improving? Does the site reflect where the company is today?

These outcomes don’t happen by accident. They come from treating the rebrand as a strategic project rather than a cosmetic one. Start with a plan, build a structure that supports your goals, write copy that communicates specifically to your audience, design within the constraints you’ve identified, and revisit and refine.

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CreativeMarketing
17 March 2026By Branding London

Common Branding Mistakes Startups Make

Creative
Marketing

Common Branding Mistakes Startups Make

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

Common Branding Mistakes Startups Make

A company’s brand positioning rarely suffers some immediate, catastrophic event that ruins it. What actually tends to happen is that a series of relatively small choices are made for the company. You don’t immediately feel the impact these choices have on the target audience(s) so they may not seem significant at the time, but nonetheless, the impact is made.

Maybe your brand’s message is tailored to a new and exciting campaign. Maybe you decide to market a product to a slightly different audience. Maybe the team sees what a competitor’s doing and borrows a few ideas — brand guidelines be damned.

The changes often begin with simple inconsistencies. A page on the website uses slightly different language. Sales teams reshape their pitch to suit a particular type of prospect. A new piece of content introduces a tone that doesn’t quite match what came before. None of these examples would necessarily raise alarms, but the cumulative effect is a brand voice that starts to fragment, and eventually becomes harder for audiences to connect with.

A common example is when a company adds a new service without fully integrating it into the narrative. The service launches with its own language and emphasis, while the rest of the organisation continues communicating from an older perspective. Over time, this creates two parallel stories, and customers start receiving mixed signals about what the company is prioritising.

Growth adds another layer. As organisations expand, new people arrive with their own interpretations of what the company does well and why it matters. Without shared reference points, each person communicates from their own perspective. Over time, this creates multiple versions of the same story. It isn’t intentional, and it isn’t dramatic, but it leads to small variations that widen as more decisions are made from those different starting points.

Internal structure also plays a role. When product, marketing, and leadership work from slightly different understandings of value, the communication produced by each function can drift apart. A product update might emphasise one strength while marketing highlights another, and leadership frames the business differently again. Documentation helps only when it is current and actively used, rather than something created once and left behind as the company evolves.

Customers usually notice this shift sooner than the organisation does. They encounter a new campaign that doesn’t sound like the company they remember, or they see design decisions that feel separate from previous communication. Sometimes the tone is the giveaway. These details might seem minor, but they shape perception more quickly than internal teams expect.

The most common reason positioning weakens is pace. Day-to-day delivery naturally takes priority, and revisiting the fundamentals feels like something to address when the schedule allows. That moment rarely arrives on its own. The drift continues quietly until communication starts feeling harder than it should.

Re-strengthening positioning doesn’t require dramatic change. It often begins with a simple review of what has shifted since the last time the organisation aligned on its story. Clarifying how the company wants to be understood today gives teams a shared reference point. It makes decisions easier and more consistent. When that understanding is maintained, activity across the organisation feels more connected, and the story holds together as the business grows.

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CreativeMarketing
17 March 2026By Branding London

Sustainability Update: Our New Commitment for 2026

Creative
Marketing

Sustainability Update: Our New Commitment for 2026

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

Sustainability Update: Our New Commitment for 2026

Branding London’s new sustainability commitment for 2026 sets out how we intend to move forward as an agency. It reflects the standards we want to hold ourselves to and the direction we’re shaping as we continue working with brands that prioritise long-term impact. We’ve been developing many of these practices gradually over time, and this commitment brings them together in a clearer, more intentional way.

Instead of making broad claims, we’re focusing on actions we can measure. That includes improving the way we operate day to day, being thoughtful about the suppliers we choose to work with, and offering clients more structured guidance on building responsible brands. These aren’t dramatic changes, but they are deliberate ones, and they reflect the direction we want to grow into.

Internally, we’re taking a closer look at the environmental impact of our operations. Some of this involves straightforward adjustments—reviewing the tools we use, refining how we store and manage digital assets, and choosing lower-impact options where they make sense. Other parts will take more time, and we expect to refine these steps as we learn what works well for us.

With suppliers, we’re placing greater weight on environmental and ethical considerations when choosing partners. This doesn’t mean replacing long-standing relationships overnight, but it does mean being more intentional about who we work with and reviewing those partnerships periodically to ensure they still reflect the values we want to uphold.

For clients, sustainability is becoming a more active part of the strategic conversations we have, especially with founders building brands for the long term. We’re helping clients understand how responsible practices can support differentiation, strengthen trust, and contribute to brand equity in a way that feels genuine rather than performative. Often this means taking small, practical steps rather than trying to overhaul everything at once.

Our sustainability pledge is not a final outcome but a framework that will evolve as we learn, assess our progress, and identify new opportunities to improve. Sustainability already shapes the work we do, the partners we choose, and the brands we help build, and this commitment strengthens that direction while holding us to the standards we set for ourselves. Our approach will continue to develop as we review our progress over the coming years.

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CreativeMarketing
17 March 2026By Branding London

The Business Case for Sustainability

Creative
Marketing

The Business Case for Sustainability

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

The Business Case for Sustainability

Sustainability is often framed as an ethical obligation. Increasingly, it is also a commercial one.

Investors assess environmental risk exposure. Consumers evaluate brand credibility. Employees consider alignment when choosing where to work. Procurement teams review supply chain transparency. These pressures converge in ways that affect revenue, retention, and valuation.

The commercial impact rarely appears as a single metric. It shows up in multiple areas: greater operational efficiency, stronger brand preference, lower reputational risk, improved access to partnerships, and greater resilience to regulatory shifts.

There is also a competitive dimension. As sustainability expectations rise, what once differentiated brands becomes baseline. Companies that adapt early tend to integrate responsible practices more smoothly. Those that delay often face sharper transitions later.

None of this suggests that sustainability guarantees growth. Poorly executed or superficial commitments can be costly, both financially and to credibility. The return depends on whether the commitment is real across the business, not just visible in the marketing.

Where sustainability aligns with product development, supply chain decisions, and long-term positioning, it strengthens the brand’s narrative. It gives customers and stakeholders a clearer understanding of what the organisation stands for and how it operates.

From a brand perspective, this coherence matters. Brands are built on trust and consistency. When sustainability commitments are integrated rather than appended, they reinforce that consistency.

The business case, then, is less about a single percentage increase and more about structural strength. Responsible practices reduce fragility. They signal long-term thinking. They make the brand easier to believe in. In this sense, sustainability is not separate from commercial strategy — it is part of it.

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CreativeMarketing
17 March 2026By Branding London

How Brands Lose Their Positioning

Creative
Marketing

How Brands Lose Their Positioning

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

How Brands Lose Their Positioning

Startups move quickly. That’s part of the appeal. But the same speed that helps you iterate on product can work against you when it comes to branding. Not because branding needs to be slow, but because many of the mistakes we see come from treating it as something you can figure out later or something you can improvise without a clear plan.

Below are the patterns that show up most often, and why they end up costing more time and money than doing the basics properly from the start.


1. Confusing a Logo as a Brand

This is a classic one. A founder commissions a logo, feels good about it, and assumes the branding work is essentially complete. But a logo is only a mark. Your brand is the full experience: the language you use, the design consistency, and the decisions that quietly shape how people come to understand your company.

Without a wider brand system, a logo ends up sitting on top of inconsistent messaging, mismatched colours, and a tone of voice that shifts depending on who writes the copy. That inconsistency creates friction and makes you look less established than you actually are.


2. Copying What Successful Companies Do

There’s a reason so many SaaS startups feel interchangeable. Gradient backgrounds, geometric illustrations, similar typography, and the same website flow have become common not because they’re universally effective, but because companies copy the same handful of industry leaders.

The problem is that what works for Stripe or Notion works because of their history, scale, and credibility. Borrowing their aesthetic without the depth behind it doesn’t shortcut trust; it highlights the absence of it. Strong branding comes from understanding what makes your company distinct and expressing that clearly. Templates can inspire, but they don’t differentiate.


3. Writing Like You Think You Should

A lot of startup copy reads like a parody of “serious business language.” “We leverage cutting-edge solutions to optimise workflows.” “Our platform empowers teams to innovate at scale.”

These sentences are technically fine, but they don’t say anything.

The best brands communicate like real people. They explain what they do in straightforward terms. They avoid jargon because they’re confident enough in their product to describe it plainly. If you wouldn’t say it to a potential customer in conversation, it probably shouldn’t be on your homepage.


4. Dismissing Brand Guidelines as Unnecessary

Early-stage teams often skip guidelines because they seem like something only bigger companies need. But guidelines aren’t about formality; they’re about preventing drift.

Without them, every designer, marketer, or new hire makes slightly different decisions about colours, spacing, tone, and layout. Over time, the brand fragments. Basic guidelines don’t need to be complicated. A single page covering the essentials – logo usage, colour palette, typography, tone principles – is often enough to keep everyone aligned.


5. Ignoring How Things Actually Get Made

A brand system has to be practical. A beautiful deck full of custom typography and intricate layouts is meaningless if your developers can’t build it or your marketing team can’t reproduce it in real tools.

Good branding accounts for constraints. If your site is going on a specific platform, design for what that platform can do. If your team will be producing content regularly, make sure the system is simple enough that they can use it without calling a designer every time. Branding shouldn’t depend on ideal conditions.


6. Rebranding Too Soon (or Too Late)

Some startups rebrand constantly because they want to feel like they’re moving forward. Others cling to an outdated identity long after it no longer represents the company. Both approaches cause problems.

A rebrand makes sense when something meaningful has changed, whether that’s your positioning, your audience, or your product scope. Save the rebrand for when there’s a genuine strategic need.

 

The Pattern Behind the Mistakes

Most of these mistakes share the same root cause: treating branding as decoration instead of infrastructure. When you see it as something applied after the important work is done, it becomes an afterthought. But when you understand it as the system that shapes how people perceive and interact with your company, the decisions get clearer.

You invest in the basics early. You stay consistent. You make choices that reflect what the company truly is, not what you think it should look like.

That approach doesn’t just avoid mistakes; it builds the foundation for a brand that can grow with you.

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CreativeMarketing
17 March 2026By Branding London

Branding London Named in Entrepreneur UK’s London 100

Creative
Marketing

Branding London Named in Entrepreneur UK’s London 100

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

Branding London Named in Entrepreneur UK’s London 100

Branding London has been named in Entrepreneur UK London 100, a list that highlights start-ups making meaningful contributions to their industries across the capital. The recognition reflects the standards we hold ourselves to and the direction we continue to build toward.

Entrepreneur UK’s profile of Branding London emphasised our approach to shaping conscious, commercially grounded brands. Our work is designed not only to look good, but to create positive impact and support long-term growth. The feature also noted our fully bootstrapped journey. Since founding the agency, Sukhy Singh Cheema has focused on building a base of long-standing client relationships through consistent quality and strategic clarity.

The publication highlighted the range of organisations our team has delivered work for, including Cisco, HP, Lloyds Banking Group, and Microsoft. More importantly, it highlighted our partnership-led approach. We work as a strategic design partner rather than a conventional service provider. Research, clarity, and commercially grounded decisions shape the way we build brands.

Branding London was also acknowledged for Branding Support, our free one-to-one initiative for early-stage founders. The programme gives entrepreneurs access to guidance they can rely on at a stage when clarity and structure can make the greatest difference. It’s one of the ways we aim to make high-quality branding more accessible to those building from the ground up.

Awards are not the goal, but they offer a useful reflection of the work behind the scenes – the discipline, the approach, and the standards that shape every project. Being named in the London 100 reinforces the value of that approach and the direction we continue to move in.

Thank you to Entrepreneur UK for the recognition, and to our clients for trusting us with their brands.

(The article can be viewed here)

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CreativeMarketing
17 March 2026By Branding London

Brand Identity vs Visual Identity

Creative
Marketing

Brand Identity vs Visual Identity

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

Brand Identity vs Visual Identity

Brand identity and visual identity are often used interchangeably, but they aren’t the same thing: Visual identity is what people see, while brand identity is how your brand is perceived

A visual identity includes your logo, typography, colour palette, imagery, and layout system. It shapes first impressions and creates recognition. But on its own, it doesn’t explain why your company exists, who it’s for, or how it’s different.

Brand identity is broader. It includes positioning, messaging, tone of voice, behavioural principles, and the decisions that shape how the organisation presents itself. It determines what you say, how you say it, and what you choose not to say.


When companies focus only on visuals, the result can look polished but feel hollow. The design may be consistent, but the message lacks clarity. Over time, that gap becomes noticeable. Teams describe the company in different ways. Sales conversations shift depending on the audience. Marketing campaigns lean on aesthetics rather than substance.

Strong visual systems are built on clear brand foundations. When positioning is defined, design decisions become easier. Colours feel intentional. Typography supports tone. Layout reinforces hierarchy. Everything connects. This distinction matters because it shapes where effort is placed. If your challenge is lack of differentiation, redesigning the logo won’t fix it. If your message is unclear internally, adjusting the colour palette won’t align your teams.

When the two are developed together, design becomes a reflection of strategy rather than a substitute for it. That’s when identity starts working as infrastructure rather than decoration.

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CreativeMarketing
17 March 2026By Branding London

Brands Doing Sustainability Well and Why

Creative
Marketing

Brands Doing Sustainability Well

(10 APRIL 2026)

(BY BRANDING LONDON)

Brands Doing Sustainability Well

Some brands treat sustainability as a campaign theme. Others treat it as an operational principle. The difference is visible in how consistently it appears across the decisions that company makes. Brands that handle sustainability well tend to share a few characteristics:

1.  Their messaging matches their behaviour. Claims are specific. Language is measured. Progress is described alongside limitations. This creates a sense of realism rather than perfection.

2.
 Sustainability is embedded in product or service decisions. It influences materials, sourcing, partnerships, and long-term planning. It isn’t confined to a single page on the website.

3. They communicate the trade-offs. Responsible decisions often involve cost, time, or margin considerations. Acknowledging those trade-offs signals maturity. It shows that the brand understands complexity rather than simplifying it for effect.

 
Patagonia is frequently cited for this approach. Their communication reflects operational detail, not just aspiration. Reports outline impact, but also areas for improvement. That transparency has become part of their identity rather than a temporary campaign.

The lesson isn’t to replicate another brand’s tone or aesthetic. It’s to observe the alignment between narrative and action. Sustainability works as a brand dimension when it is coherent, not performative. For some organisations, sustainability will be central to positioning. For others, it will sit alongside other priorities. Both approaches can work.

What matters is that what a company claims to support is also supported by their actions.
Brands that integrate corporate social responsibility well understand that trust (and therefore credibility) must be developed over time by following through on their commitments.

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