New logo whhaaat?

I think working on a logo is one the hardest things for me. Im still working on mine. I guess some have a nack for it and some dont. Im no artist either.

I basically take a trip thu the messages and see how others have done theirs. That helps for ideas.

Keep working on it. It will come!
coffee
 
Ultimately thats all that matters. I think that if you do good work and are honest and build a name for yourself then your logo gets socially accepted. Within reason of course. So, If you are satisfied then thats great!
 
Try and think from a potential clients perspective when doing logos.

Does the logo show "that you work with computers"?

In my opinion no.

As some others have suggested in other threads, go and have a good look at some other logos on other sites that create them and get ideas.

Regards,
 
Fine, what's your option c?

"nice concept. Ideally could use further development"

Ive said it before on here (probably sounding like a broken record) but you only get one chance to make a good first impression. After that its the other guy (your opposition) that gets the customer's dollar.

Just my 5c
 
What I have learned from logos (now that I pay attention daily), is that they should be strong to stand alone, without text from your company. They should be able to be recognized in a marketing flyer (for example) and people will see the logo and know it's your company.

I'm not a huge fan of text in logos, but as long as they are done right and you can add text later for marketing, that works for many I have noticed. Sometimes a good logo is just text...so it can be kind of hard to understand branding, I get confused too often, but try to keep consistancy.

An example of good branding. Nike and the swoosh. Nike has a good font that can be added to anything, the Swoosh can be put anywhere and it's absolutely recognizable without Nike text.

Your logo is both, a graphic with 2 c's back to back. The blues seem to fade, I would use a dark outline for the C's to get them to stand out more. Outline with entire graphic with a darker outline boarder maybe too. I'm not a designer, but it seems to need some BLING to bring it out.
 
What I have learned from logos (now that I pay attention daily), is that they should be strong to stand alone, without text from your company. They should be able to be recognized in a marketing flyer (for example) and people will see the logo and know it's your company.

I'm not a huge fan of text in logos, but as long as they are done right and you can add text later for marketing, that works for many I have noticed. Sometimes a good logo is just text...so it can be kind of hard to understand branding, I get confused too often, but try to keep consistancy.

An example of good branding. Nike and the swoosh. Nike has a good font that can be added to anything, the Swoosh can be put anywhere and it's absolutely recognizable without Nike text.

Your logo is both, a graphic with 2 c's back to back. The blues seem to fade, I would use a dark outline for the C's to get them to stand out more. Outline with entire graphic with a darker outline boarder maybe too. I'm not a designer, but it seems to need some BLING to bring it out.

+1 to this.

It's nice but throw an outline on the triangles or the C's for some clarity. You might just make the colors a sharper contrast to make it pop and get that flair in there.
 
What I have learned from logos (now that I pay attention daily), is that they should be strong to stand alone, without text from your company. They should be able to be recognized in a marketing flyer (for example) and people will see the logo and know it's your company.

I'm not a huge fan of text in logos, but as long as they are done right and you can add text later for marketing, that works for many I have noticed. Sometimes a good logo is just text...so it can be kind of hard to understand branding, I get confused too often, but try to keep consistancy.

An example of good branding. Nike and the swoosh. Nike has a good font that can be added to anything, the Swoosh can be put anywhere and it's absolutely recognizable without Nike text.

Your logo is both, a graphic with 2 c's back to back. The blues seem to fade, I would use a dark outline for the C's to get them to stand out more. Outline with entire graphic with a darker outline boarder maybe too. I'm not a designer, but it seems to need some BLING to bring it out.

Maybe I liked it so much because of how much I paid the designer that made it lol.

Anyway, idk. I suck with things like this, but I fell in love with this one.

Perhaps I should setup a local focus group and see what the locals have to say?
 
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