Opinion: Do automotive brands need multiple logos?

    A different logo seems unnecessary if the brand name and promise stays the same.

    Published on Nov 25, 2023 08:00:00 AM

    16,187 Views

    Opinion: Do automotive brands need multiple logos?

    Mahindra launched a third logo for... Mahindra. Tata Motors revealed a second logo for – you guessed it – Tata Motors! 

    Brand logos are not only going flat, I think they are also going schizophrenic. Mahindra has three now, one for EVs, one for SUVs and one for whatever is left in their automotive portfolio. Tata Motors, too, has one for EVs now. I reached out to someone at Tata Motors saying I didn’t think this was a great idea and asked  “why”. The cryptic answer was, “Since you don’t have full visibility, you might have a skewed take.” Sure, but isn’t that also the case with customers, to whom a logo is meant to address? 

    Logos are not for boardroom discussions and personal ego trips. They are all about external stakeholders, especially customers. Of course, in the automotive world, we do see different logos from the same company, but that’s also where the brand name differs. So Toyota created the Lexus and Scion brands and uses different badges for them. GM created a Saturn, Citroen created a DS and Hero created a Vida. All different brands, with a distinct DNA, and so their own logos as well. 

    In most cases, when the brand name remains the same, it’s the same logo too. Honda stands as an outlier here, I must mention, with different logos for their Honda bikes, cars and jets, but for nearly everyone else, if the brand is the same, it’s the same logo too. VW carries the same badge across all product types, BWM bikes and cars use the same logo as do Suzuki for their cars, bikes and marine motors. Mercedes also uses the same logo on their cars, buses and trucks, but Bharat Benz, which is a different brand name and thus promise, uses a different logo. 

    The everyday customer identifies the brand primarily by the badge. So, if one brand name indulges in two or three different badges, it will confuse the men and women on the street. Thus, I strongly believe you should have a separate logo only if you want to create a different brand name to focus on a specific range/solution and with its own DNA and ethos. You cannot mix up issues here. Under the pretext of the EV or the SUV customer being ‘different’ from the others, justifying a new logo but carrying the same name isn’t the way to go. 

    As a Mahindra tractor customer wanting to buy a Scorpio, I would like to see the same badge on both. Besides familiarity and brand promise, it’s a matter of pride too. The same logic holds when a Tata truck operator wishes to buy a Nexon EV, and this works in the reverse too.

    Solutions may be different, but the brand is the same, in purpose and promise. Does the brand wish to behave differently with me in different experiential contexts or purchase scenarios? If not, then why different logos?

    Comments
    ×
    img

    No comments yet. Be the first to comment.

    Ask Autocar Anything about Car and Bike Buying and Maintenance Advices
    Need an expert opinion on your car and bike related queries?
    Ask Now
    Poll of the month

    The Mahindra XUV 300 facelift will be called the XUV 3XO. Should more brands rename models for facelifts?

    Yes, it could give new life to a slow-selling car

     

    14.21%

    Yes, but only if there are significant changes

     

    32.53%

    No, it's confusing and dilutes the brand name

     

    29.70%

    No difference, the product speaks for itself

     

    23.55%

    Total Votes : 1626
    Sign up for our newsletter

    Get all the latest updates from the automobile universe