Verizon Strips Down Its Logo in Lukewarm RebootSimple. Check. Scalable. Check. Already hated on by T-Mobile CEO John Legere. Six checks.
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FirstGoogle. Now Verizon. The multibillion-dollar telecommunications giantdebuteda new stripped-down version of its logo this week. The leaner, cleaner updated look marks the company's first visual refresh in 15 years.
If you think the new emblem is neither clever nor flashy, and we're betting you do, you'reright. It's plain and simple by design, even bordering on boring. More importantly, it's scalable.
"There definitely is some inherent flexibility with it," Verizon spokesperson Kim Ancin toldAdWeekyesterday. "It's not as difficult to reproduce, so that makes it an affordable option for us. It's cleaner and neater and kind of the direction that we're going. It's about being simple."
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廉价的新标志, drafted by the global design housePentagram, retains Verizon's signature high-contrast black and stop sign red color scheme, though it's smaller and shows off only one slight splash of crimson. The big, bold red check mark that once appeared above the lowercase logotype is history, and, along with it, the oversized red "z" in Verizon. Instead, a thin red check mark appears to the right of the letter "n," like an exponent symbol in math.
It's as a nod to the past and a hint at the future. That's how Verizon frames the change, at least.
"At its most basic level, the new logo is a visual statement that honors our history and reflects an identity that stands for simplicity, honesty and joy in a category rife with confusion, disclaimers and frustration," a Verizonstatementheralding the mod reads. "It's a cleaner, more human design and the checkmark, the universal symbol for getting things done, uniquely expresses the reliability of Verizon."
.@VerizonNews's new checkmark logo CHECKS all the boxes. Send me more using#NewVerizonLogohttp://t.co/0ZqWcZm4zFpic.twitter.com/ORnVwiBjH9
— John Legere (@JohnLegere)September 2, 2015
As expected, there's no shortage of criticism of the notably bland refresh on Twitter, including a predictably hot-headed burn from the spark plug CEO of one of Verizon's fiercest competitors. T-Mobile's John Legere did not disappoint. He wasted no time in tweeting out the refreshed logo, trailed by a fittingly check-marked list of the ways he claims Verizon "screws over" customers. Uh, maybe he should check himself before he wrecks himself.
Related:T-Mobile's Latest Attack on Verizon Is a Masterful Marketing Maneuver