WINDOWS

New Windows 8 Logo Is Pure Genius

Feb 19, 2012 12:11 pm | PC World
The new Windows 8 logo has sparked debate and criticism, but the most important thing is that it is getting attention

by Tony Bradley

Microsoft unveiled a new look for the Windows logo for Windows 8. There seems to be a dramatic rise in branding and style experts online, and some significant backlash around the Internet, but all of that misses the point of why the new Windows 8 logo is a brilliant move.

First, let’s catch you up in case you’ve been living a Luddite existence camping in the Appalachians the last few days. Microsoft revealed that the logo for Windows 8 rejects the established evolution of a multi-color flag waving briskly in the digital wind, and instead opts for a simple rectangle of blue divided vertically and horizontally by white lines. It looks like…well, it looks like a window. Go figure.

No Such Thing as Bad Publicity

Why is the new Windows 8 logo genius? Well, you’re reading this article, that’s why. There is an anecdote that a Ronald Reagan campaign strategist was once asked if he was concerned about negative ads being run by the former President’s opponent. His response was that there is no such thing as bad publicity.

The brain is a wondrous and complex organism, but in some ways it operates on a surprisingly simple binary level. Just look at the number of people who vote in local elections based on the candidate with the most yard signs. They don’t know anything about the candidates at all, but make some sort of connection that more yard signs somehow equates to a better choice.

Love it or hate it, the new Windows 8 logo is front and center in the public consciousness. It is being discussed and debated throughout the Web and around the world. When the dust settles, all that will remain is the fact that everyone is very familiar with the new Windows 8 logo, and instantly associates the blue, four-paned rectangle with Microsoft’s flagship operating system.

Even Kids Can “Read” Logos

Logos matter because they are easily and instantly associated with the brand. Long before children can actually read words and sentences they are able to “read” a wide variety of signs and symbols.

Some are purely symbols, like the golden arches of McDonald’s, or the “swoosh” on the side of a pair of Nike shoes. Some logos are also words, such as Subway, or FedEx, or Pizza Hut. The words become irrelevant, though, because it’s the colors and style of the word that registers in the brain as a connection to the brand the logo represents.

The logo is a symbol that is easily recognized, and immediately associated with the brand it represents. The dramatic change in the Windows logo is a not-so-subtle hint representing fundamental shift for the operating system itself.

Distinctive Line in the Sand

You may ask, “If the logo is so important to brand recognition, why would Microsoft reject its established brand and start over?”

It’s a fair question. I don’t have any inside information from Microsoft, and I don’t claim to have the answers. But, my guess is that Microsoft wants to establish that Windows 8 is “not your daddy’s Windows.”

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