Labels, logos, seals, symbols : when visual instills trust

Posted on October 26th, 2008 in Advertising, English by Amaury de Buchet

Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), Rainforest Alliance, Fairtrade (Max Havelaar, AlterEco, …) : we have become accustomed to seeing those labels on sustainable development / fairtrade products. They popped up in the last 10 years and now figure prominently on packaging, shop receipts, advertising, and even now cities

 

Green, sustainable development and fairtade logos

But why are they used ? what do they mean ? Logos, labels, seals, symbols, … what is the difference ? As a marketer and a visual thinker it has long been a subject I wanted to cover, but found difficult to wrap around in a blog post.

Let’s start with the definitions :

 

  • seal : it is a complex word, having multiple meanings, both as a noun (to describe the animal, the object or the symbol) and as a verb (to describe the action of closing or signing)

  • logo : short for logotype, visual symbol. “A logo (Greek = logotypos) is a graphical element, (ideogram, symbol, emblem, icon, sign) that, together with its logotype (a uniquely set and arranged typeface) form a trademark or commercial brand” (Wikipedia).

  • label : the result of a labelization process, with an identification / differenciation objective, it is often mistaken as a logo, as the label of a product often consist only of a logo, the easiest way to identify a brand. “A word or phrase used with a dictionary definition to provide additional information” (Merriam Webster). “The general function of labels are widely known and recognized as a method of distinction that helps people recognize one product from another” (Wikipedia).

  • symbol : another complex word. From Greek symbolon, literally, token of identity verified by comparing its other half. It has different meanings, among which “an arbitrary or conventional sign used in writing or printing relating to a particular field to represent operations, quantities, elements, relations, or qualities” (Merriam Webster). Or, according to Wikipedia : “Symbols are objects, pictures, or other concrete representations of ideas, concepts, or other abstractions. In digital communications, a symbol is the smallest unit of data transmitted at one time.”

Because this is a visual design blog, below is a visual version of the definitions, using Visual Thesaurus :

 

4 definitions by Visual Thesaurus

Seals have been used for centuries, allowing the authentification of documents and coins, bearing the signature (coat of arms, head profile or another symbol). They were created for the purpose of information and goods exchange, often within the frontiers of a territory (the seal bearing the mark of its emperor, king or lord), or its influence area. They were marked on wax or using ink on paper / parchemin, often using a steel stamp or a signet ring.

 

State and corporate seals

Labels : in order to assert the quality of products in a mass-market environment, certification authorities have been created. Based on references (origin of ingredients, production process, …), and following a labelization / certification process, they authorize producers to display the logo of the label on their products. Producers typically pay for this label, that can be taken away should an audit prove they do not respect the guidelines.

 

Common labels

 

The process to manage a label involves 4 different entities : the person requesting it, the referential base, the authority granting it, and the person controling its application. See the diagram below from Arnaud Belleil (Cecurity.com / AFCDP), shown during a Social Media Club session.

 

Label - ecosystem

The common value of all those visual tools (labels, seals and logos) is to “encapsulate” trust in an authority to which one could resort to in order to get satisfaction, should anything go wrong.

Some common visual features can be found in seals and label’s logos :

 

  • the round shape : from the stamp

  • the “v” sign : to indicate validation / authorization

  • tagline : like old “mottos”

  • relief : a remnant from embossing, it is still used as it makes fakes more difficult

     

 

Pictures, identity and privacy : a sociological research and a game

Posted on October 5th, 2008 in English, Research, photography by Amaury de Buchet

We used to “Google” someone, now we “Facebook” him/her. Pictures tell so much more about the person than a few words here and there. A sentence taken out of its context can be misunderstood, one could have been careless, tricked or just tired, and said a few words that went further than what was intended. Almost anybody would agree, at least the tolerant ones ;-)

But what about pictures, pictures of you taken by others (and not “Photoshopped” of course), or pictures you’ve taken, and which end up online ? How far would you go in exposing yourself, voluntarily or even “unvolontarily” (if someone took a picture of you doing something that society usually condemns, by habit, morale, if not legally) ?

Sociogeek was developped to try and understand the behaviors of Internet users in the social media / web2.0 era. This study uses a game-like online survey (in French, using the new and powerful Flash CMS from SpinMedias) to help you and the researchers understand how you act. The results will be shared publicly. This research is a joint program by :

 

Here are the results of my test :

My Sociogeek survey results

What about you ?

Maps and metaphors : a love story between the web and the metro

Posted on October 2nd, 2008 in Blogroll, Designers, English, MindMap, Serendipity, maps by Amaury de Buchet

Once again the metro / subway / underground metaphor to map websites and blogs. Here is the recent (Sept 2008) creation of Claude Aschenbrenner (Serial-Mapper blog), and maps his selection of visual thinkers blogs, in France and abroad. Thank you Claude for including me in such a nice company (between E. Tufte and J. Veronis) !!

by blog name :

Map of visual thinkers blogs by url

by blogger’s name :

Map of visual thinkers blogs by name

The PDF version of the map is interactive, each node is clickable to access directly the blog on internet, it was done using Adobe Illustrator after collecting all blog urls and sorting them in a MindMap using Mindomo.

Using the metro metaphor, you remember the famous web2.0 map from the Japanese agency Information Architects (updated 2008) :

Information Architects web2 map

The other metaphor often used to map a web territory is the planisphere (see my previous article), and the last good examples I’ve seen were the ones from :

 

Map of online communities

 

Map of the internet

 

  • designer Christophe Druaux (blog Oui Non) for his detailed (subjective but with heavy number crunching) maps of the French “blogarchie” (2007 edition) and Forums

Map of the French blogarchie

 

Map of the French forums

 

And last but not least, a more artistic version by Berling artist eBoy, using the city and pixelart to present web2.0 services :

eBoy FooBar poster