Is Your Logo Lying? Why Your Brand Needs a Brain, Not Just a Face.
We’ve all been there. You’re a CEO or a Marketing Director, looking at your latest quarterly reports, and something isn’t clicking.
The leads are cooling, the sales team is complaining that they're being "price-shopped," and your brand feels about as inspiring as a damp biscuit.
Your first instinct? "We need a new logo."
I hate to be the one to burst the bubble, but 99% of the time, a new logo is just a fresh coat of paint on a house with no foundation
If you want to stop blending along with the competition, you need to understand the fundamental difference between Logo Design and Brand Strategy. One is a symbol, the other is a system.
The Logo is your brands "Face"
Let’s be clear, a logo is important. It is the "face" of your company, the visual shorthand that makes you instantly recognisable.
A great logo should be simple, memorable, and versatile.
But here is the hard truth: a logo is what your competitors can copy; a brand strategy is what they can’t.
A logo is a picture you show people. It isn’t the reason they buy from you
If you rely on a graphic to define your market identity, you aren't building a brand, you're taking a significant financial risk.
The Strategy is your brand’s "Brain"
If the logo is the face, the brand strategy is the brain. It is the deliberate plan used to shape how the market perceives you. While logo design is a design decision, brand strategy is a business decision.
A robust strategy answers the "boring" but vital questions that keep CEOs up at night:
- Who is this business really for? (Target Audience).
- On what basis can we actually win against competitors? (Positioning).
- What do we want to be known for in the customer’s mind? (Messaging).
- Why should anyone care? (Value Proposition).
Why You Should Spend 80% of Your Energy on Strategy.
Most businesses get this backwards. They spend months arguing over shades of corporate blue but zero minutes defining their brand positioning.
Without a strategy, your marketing spend lacks a "job description".
Your capital flows in conflicting directions because your team doesn't know exactly what they are building.
When your strategy is absent, your logo is just an empty vessel, and the market defaults to seeing you as a generic commodity, which is why you’re getting pushed back on pricing.
The Golden Ratio: You should spend 80% of your time and energy on the strategy and only 20% on the logo.
Because it’s the strategy that makes the logo matter.
The Signs You Need More Than a Graphic Designer
If you identify with any of these, a "pretty" logo won't save you:
- Narrative Confusion: Ask three employees what the company stands for. If you get three different answers, you have a positioning problem.
- The "Price Trap": If customers only choose you because you’re the cheapest, your brand has failed to communicate its unique value.
- Outgrown Identity: You’re pitching to enterprise-level clients, but your branding looks like it was made in a garage in 2014.
Strategy Decides, Design Expresses
A brand strategy consultant doesn't just "make things look nice".
They build the rules for how your brand shows up in the real world.
Strategy defines the "why" and "who," while design decides "how it shows up".
When the strategy is clear, the design feels inevitable.
Think of the Apple logo: it’s a simple icon, but it only holds power because of the decades of innovation, quality, and sleek strategy behind it.

We are Unrattled, a Kent based strategic branding agency serving ambitious businesses across the South East and London.
We are currently looking for businesses that are struggling with B2B growth and are tired of "blending in." We don’t just design logos; we build the strategic foundations that help you command the room and your industry.
