Skip to main content

Marathon Social: Identity Design and Process

By April 4, 2014November 3rd, 2021Design

 

  • Thought I’d share with you some of the process involved in creating an identity mark for Marathon Social, a start up social media public relations firm.
    The client wanted a bold, clean and corporate mark that had an active tone to it.

ms-logo

 

 

 

Below is a look at the development of the identity and how it developed over two rounds, which is a fairly quick and thin proposition for identity work.

A carryover from my college days is a benchmark to complete 50 different sketches (most of dubious merit) before I move into the computer.  It continues to be valuable because I don’t have preconceptions about color or form based on software vogue.  To follow, are a few selections from my sketchbook pages…

ms-scans-a

The client was very specific about wanting a logo in addition to a wordmark.  Shades of the final mark can be seen in the bottom right above. 

I pursued two primary graphic directions: monogram and triangles.

Abstracting the “marathon” part of the name, I made overlapping triangles that formed a sort of foot/shoe.  Rotating the points forward could make them into multiple shapes that come together to form an M.

ms-scans-b

 

The monogram approach also took a pointy, flag aspect.
What you’ll also see here at the far right is a late idea for a pet M, an m with four legs.  Social and Friendly but probably too family for the client.

ms-scans-c

I’ve been big on triangles this year.  And particularly three pointed shapes with circular cutaways.  Some soft longing for Herman Miller?  It dogs me but doesn’t stop me.

Whether monogram or abstract, the logo had to have an active “sporty” vibe to it.

ms-roundoneI presented four drafts in the first round. 

The exclamation mark on the top left i still feel is brilliant for a scrappy social media pr company.  But it was the two on the right that the client wanted to see more development on.

ms-roundtwo

The monogram changed to become symmetrical.  The color fade within the mark is to emphasize the S within the M.  Pretty and liked but the client voted it down as too Transformers.  Maybe.  But hey, the 80s are back.

 

The three triangle M got adjusted so that the feet were all on the same horizontal, and the scale was changed to fit a Fibonacci meter.  The client found the color too orange and we changed it to a bluer-red with a slight top to bottom fade which gave the top-heavy mark a greater right thrust.


ms-meterONLY

ms-meter

The three triangles sit within a Fibanacci meter.  The smaller two create the third.  The spacing between the feet of the M are the distance of a middle triangle.  Outside border and typography are each a small triangle in scale.

ms-fulllogo

The finished mark and type say Active and Clean.  Three triangles are rotated 30° with a right lean and given a top to bottom fade creating a subtle weight and movement.  Each shape is identicle in form but not in scale.  The many shapes coming together, working together suggests the “social” part of what the company does.  The positive form suggests an M to reinforce the monogram element; the negative space looks like billowing sails in the wind which underlines the active part of the message and helps to reduce the Running implications from marathon.
Total time, about four weeks from start to finish on the identity.  Everyone is very happy.
We also worked on business cards for the client.  The final card had to be single sided and unvarnished.  Below are some iterations as well as an illustration of how these things are a battle of millimeters (or points, if you’re old school).

ms-buscardsdraft

 

E. Tage Larsen
Latest posts by E. Tage Larsen (see all)