2019 is the year of design contradictions

Welcome back to my Monthly blog!

This month I took a look at the trend of including Geometry in graphic design.

Design helps us understand our world, and trends place us in a time frame or era. The design trends for 2019 which stand out seem to fall in line with every other aspect of life at the moment. We seem to be in opposition with ourselves: this year is all about contradictions. Design trends from conflicting eras and opposing ends of the visual spectrum are all catching our attention.
Here are my top 5 trends that are out there…

3-D

Three-dimensional work seems to be everywhere at the moment: entire compositions that have so much depth, you just want to reach out and touch them. 3D typography especially feels ready to jump out at you. And there’s no particular type that works best for this trend: bold, skinny, sans-serif, script, any font can be rendered in 3D.

Asymmetrical design

This year we are starting to see the beginnings of a move away from the rigid grid-based designs that have been standard for the past few years. Enter the asymmetrical design trend. As these layouts break free from the rigid and predictable grid, they deliver more energy and movement. An asymmetrical layout, whether on a design for print, in an app or on a website, grabs attention. The user feels an innate curiosity about where the information and graphics might go next, creating a feeling of movement and interest as they scroll or look at a design.

Art Deco

The artistic movement that began after World War I and continued int the roaring 20s.These highly ornamental and glamorous Art Deco designs of the 1920s are truly wonderful. This trend is now emerging in 2019. We are seeing complex line work intense symmetry. And combined with metallics echoes some of the eras best work. These designs feel opulent and luxurious—and starkly in contrast to the rustic, country-inspired work that has dominated for the past few years.

Mid-Century Modern period

Mid-Century Modern period of the 1950s is another trend which is seeing a come back in 2019. Following the glitz of the Art Deco period design became more about illustration, with dreamy subdued vintage colour pallets. Stripped down clean lines harking back to the iconic post-war illustrations. We are seeing this trend in web and print work.

Isometric designs

Isometric designs create whole universes in tiny little spaces. Isometric design sounds highly technical, but it’s simply a method of drawing a 3D object in two dimensions. The drawing is simple and clean but has a depth that flat design can’t give. The area where this trend is being seen a lot is with icons. Isometric icons have a lot more tactility and warmth than flat design creating interest.

Written By Kim Burrage
Managing Director at Trident

Monthly Roundup – May 2019

Welcome back to the Trident Monthly round-up!

The aim of these monthly posts is to keep you abreast of all the weird and wonderful news and insights to come out of the world of marketing. Every month, our team will pick our favourite campaigns, brand insights and marketing trends that you can use to enhance your marketing knowledge or even as inspiration to delight your audience.

So let’s get cracking with our top stories from May:

Halifax Rebrands

This rebrand caused quite a stir on our Twitter, with many divided opinions on whether this was a rip-off of the Monzo Bank branding or a great re-brand.

The 166-year-old high street bank has been given a new visual identity, which aims to “declutter” the brand and help it appeal to younger people. The new identity aims to humanise Halifax, and through using softer colours, flatter graphics and people photography, help it appear “more honest and democratic”, and enable it to stand out from high-street competitor banks such as Natwest, Santander and Barclays. “We want to make it feel less like an institution and more a bank of choice that is easy to engage with.”

Halifax’s new branding and ad campaign is currently rolling out across all touchpoints, including the website and app, in-store signage, and print and marketing materials.

Source: Design Week

Images can “give a voice” to protesters and cross language barriers to share messages about cross-cultural issues around the world, says political illustrator Edel Rodriguez. “Unlike words, imagery crosses language barriers, which means it can be understood by people across the world, regardless of what language they speak. Putting images out into the world can also spread messages and help “educate” people much faster than words, it’s much harder to ignore an illustration than writing, as it makes a visual impact.”

Cuban-born Rodriguez is best known for his work interpreting political subjects on magazine covers including Time and Der Spiegel, with a focus on criticising Donald Trump’s presidency. However, Rodriguez’s work managed to reach new heights in terms of reach, thanks to the use of Social Media.

In this era of short attention spans, having a strong visual impact is key to catching the attention of your audience, that’s why at Trident we are still big believers in the power of print marketing, especially when combined with modern tools such as social media.

Source: Design Week

Burger King – Unhappy Meals

The aim of these monthly posts is to keep you abreast of all the weird and wonderful news and insights to come out of the world of marketing. Every month, our team will pick our favourite campaigns, brand insights and marketing trends that you can use to enhance your marketing knowledge or even as inspiration to delight your audience.

Burger King wants to raise awareness to the fact that not everyone is happy all the time and that’s ok with a limited release of “Real Meals,” a set of meal boxes designed to represent various emotions, as part of a campaign they’ve called “Feel Your Way,” a take on their longtime slogan “Have it your way.”

The boxes’ release is timed to coincide with Mental Health Awareness Month, and the hamburger chain has teamed up with Mental Health America, a non-profit organization that seeks to address the needs of those with mental illness and promote the overall mental health of Americans. Of course, the brand has also managed to take a little swipe at their rival fast-food chain, McDonald’s. The boxes do not contain toys unlike the Happy Meal boxes McDonald’s offers.

We think this is a great tongue in cheek way to promote a great cause, in the typical Burger King brand voice, which often takes sly digs at their rivals.

Source: The Dieline

PepsiCo saw an opportunity to evolve the packaging and brand experience for this much-adored brand in an effort to improve the product position in the market for Walker crisps. Through understanding their history, they came up with ideas of elements to incorporate onto the pack, like things that are traditionally seen as British, such as rain, clouds, tractors, tea etc..

“Walkers has been a part of people’s lives as they’ve grown up, and we realized the brand had become detached from that. We wanted to connect the packaging back to what makes the UK distinctly different, including the quirky, strange things about British culture.”

We think they’ve done a good job of giving the packs a “British” feel, although some of the design elements incorporated can be seen as stereotypes of Britain.

Source: The Dieline

The city of Vienna rebrands

The city of Vienna has been rebranded, with a new identity that looks to put “humans at its heart” and aims to serve tax-paying citizens as well as tourists. Vienna, Austria’s capital city, is currently the best place to live worldwide, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit’s global liveability index conducted last year.

The rebrand aims to be “highly prominent in the lives of Vienna’s inhabitants”, and is being incorporated across touchpoints that are part of citizens’ “day-to-day lives”. This includes signage at public parks, buildings and universities, print materials for local services and governmental departments, advertising for museums, banners on public transport such as buses and tourism apps. It also brings the city’s 70 governmental departments under one brand, which previously used different, inconsistent logos.

We have previously written about rebrands of countries and towns, and this is part of a continuing trend which we are big supporters of. Cities such as Vienna are the business centres of their countries and should be seen as “brands”, to help give them a unique identity and attract more visitors, which ultimately helps generate more revenue for local businesses.

Source: Design Week

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Written By Adam Burrage
Managing Partner at Trident

What the incoming Facebook redesign means for businesses

After a brutal 2018 that forced Facebook to admit it hasn’t got the best reputation when it comes to privacy, Mark Zuckerberg has big plans for the social networking platform in 2019: Facebook is being redesigned.

The new version of Facebook, codenamed ‘FB5’, will be the biggest change the social network has experienced in years: almost every single aspect of the platform is changing in some way. In this blog, we try to list the changes that will be seen on the platform and how these could affect businesses in the UK.

Payments and shopping integration

Facebook has always wanted to be an all-encompassing app/platform that tried to do a bit of everything. The Chinese platform WeChat has many features that Facebook probably wish they integrated first. WeChat is often considered the “everything app” for China’s nearly 800 million smartphone owners: it’s a game console, a bank, and even a gateway to Chinese ride-sharing giants, food delivery, and thrift shopping.

Facebook is bringing in payments and shopping integration within Marketplace, “its Gumtree-style online classifieds service. Users in the US will soon have the option to pay for their purchases directly on Facebook and ship to anywhere in the country.” (The Telegraph, 2019). PayPal will process payments for purchases made directly inside Marketplace, according to a company spokesperson.

Facebook-owned Instagram will also allow users to make purchases in a more streamlined fashion with the use of stories and posts.

Meanwhile WhatsApp, historically Facebook’s most private product, will gain product catalogues and secure payments. Another new feature of the app will be a Product Catalogues section. It seems that this feature will basically function as an online store located on Whatsapp where customers can not only browse products but purchase them, too. Another addition to the platform will be Whatsapp Pay, a service designed to be a peer to peer payment platform. Facebook wants people to enjoy the convenience of sending money as simply and securely as sending messages, and it seems this has been successful in India, where the feature was launched a few months ago and has already been used over a million times.

This service will also allow Facebook to improve the adverts it sends to individuals. For example, if the app detects that you are spending money on a regular basis to football related goods, it will send you adverts relating to that category. This means adverts will be a lot more targeted for users of Whatsapp Pay.

All of this means, e-commerce businesses must now take Facebook and Whatsapp seriously not just for their advertising but also to generate sales directly from the marketplaces and the other new shopping features. It will be an interesting few months to see how businesses pivot their strategy and content to adapt to the new changes.

Focus on community building

It won’t be enough to just post out your business content on your channels and expect results. Zuckerberg made it clear that Facebook’s focus is shifting to communities both public and private. This means that Groups are going to be the core focus: there are already tens of millions of active Groups on Facebook.

Groups will be easier to find, and easier to participate in, thanks to a new, redesigned Groups tab. This means businesses need to find a strategy to be more active within these groups and communities which are built on familiarity, trust and interesting content.

Virtual Reality

Virtual reality has been dubbed as the next big thing for a long time, but Facebook is finally trying to take the technology to the next level with their recently acquired Oculus Rift brand.

The product is a wireless VR headset, Oculus Quest – which does not require a connection to a PC, smartphone or games console.

Although it is primarily designed to be a gaming platform, it is sure to be used by brands to create the next generation of experiential marketing campaigns. Imagine in a few years, you walk into a Thomas Cook store, you’re undecided whether you want to go to Turkey or Tenerife for your next family holiday. Next thing, the sales assistant puts an Oculus Rift headset on your head and allows to “virtually” experience each location before making your decision.

Facebook Dating!?

Ok, this feature probably won’t impact your business but may impact your personal or your friends’ personal lives. Facebook Dating is going to be a new feature looking to rival the likes of Tinder and Match. The new feature will allow people to have a “Secret Crush” feature that lets users know if they and an existing friend harbours hidden feelings for each other, without exposing them if it’s unrequited. The dating tool is launching in 14 new countries.

You can expect to see all of these changes coming to your phone and desktop in the next few weeks. It will be very interesting to see how these changes will affect Facebook’s reputation and business performance over the next year or so.

Don’t worry we will keep an eye out and keep you updated!

Written By Kim Burrage
Managing Director at Trident