Website Logo Review
https://www.collegewebsites.ac.uk/technical-reviews/logos
I am not a graphic designer and know very little about semiotics, colour theory and the like. This limitation necessitates a purely technical review of the files being used as a logo on the 448 FE/6F/AE College website in the UK.
Because the technical variables don’t place is a hierarchy and aesthetics consideration is outside of my field I have used a funnel system to filter a conclusive answer to the less emotive question, which College Website Logos meet the standard of a hypothetical Level 3 qualification in Digital Operations?
There are usefully only three filters required to get to the answer:
- File Format Pass = SVG or PNG
- Naming Convention Pass = /name-of-the-college.
- Layout = Includes Padding
Website Logo Reviewhttps://www.collegewebsites.ac.uk/technical-reviews/logos I am not a graphic designer and know very little about semiotics, colour theory and the like. This limitation necessitates a purely technical review of the files being used as a logo on the 448 FE/6F/AE College website in the UK. Because the technical variables don’t place is a hierarchy and aesthetics consideration is outside of my field I have used a funnel system to filter a conclusive answer to the less emotive question, which College Website Logos meet the standard of a hypothetical Level 3 qualification in Digital Operations? There are usefully only three filters required to get to the answer:
File Format
Naming Convention The vast majority of files are incorrectly titled with a huge percentage being called /logo instead of the correct /name-of-the-college. This is basic Search Engine Optimisation and to rename files to include the name of the college and using hyphenation is a quick straightforward task. In my opinion maintaining simple file naming conventions is the most solid foundation for long-lasting operational development:
Using this funnel plus only using SVG or PNG formats and not using an image sprite, these are the seven current examples of FE/6F/AE sector best practice:
Layout Padding is the space between the graphic elements and the edge of the file. Its usefulness is almost equal to the naming convention and is critical in the Goggle Knowledge Panel. It may not be straightforward to adjust the site layout to fit a larger file into the same location, but, then again, it is well worth allocating the time to create a new version with padding. Using this final filter the only two logos remaining from the field of 448:
Because I set the test/write the curriculum I can’t then win the competition, so my answer to the question Which Logo is Best is Brockenhurst College’s Website Logo: Map Pins & Social Media Versionshttps://www.criticalfriend.ac.uk/map In addition to the technical standard there is the practicality of having a logo for use in social media, as a favicon and, in this case, pins on a map. A very useful test for the effectiveness of a logo design is as old as logos themselves; is it visible from a reasonably long distance? In modern digital terms, the question has now become; is the logo recognisable as a 24px favicon? I plan to run a full review of social media logos but in the meantime I have produced a map featuring 448 logo pins. There are clear examples of design that are effective throughout history as well as in the digital age, but also some that fail the admittedly stiff test of distinctiveness at 20px. There are lots of great examples of traditional heraldic characters as well as modern symbols and geometric patterns that achieve the simplicity that is critical in all logo design. 1st. February 2018 Snapshot College Traffic Rankingshttps://www.collegewebsites.ac.uk/traffic-reviews/current-alexa-rankings-in-order The 4 consistent top performers - City Lit, Edinburgh College, Glasgow City College, and Havering College dominate the Top 10 and are joined by 6 intermittent performers. Coincidentally or not, see the Logo Report, Brockenhurst College of late showing strongly. Finally I will be at the 2018 AoC Communications & Digital Marketing Conference tomorrow, with strict instructions to do more listening, and so hope to meet you there. |