Branding is not just making a brand look nice. It is deciding what someone should remember when they see, hear or experience a company. That is why the price of a branding project depends on scope: adjusting a visual identity is not the same as building a brand from strategy.
A branding project can include strategy, positioning, naming, visual identity, graphic system, verbal tone, applications, brandbook and adaptations. The more decisions and touchpoints involved, the higher the budget.
| Project type | Typical price | Best fit |
|---|---|---|
| Basic identity | 800–1,500 € | Small brand with simple visual needs. |
| Professional branding | 1,500–4,000 € | Company that needs system, judgement and applications. |
| Strategic branding | 4,000–10,000 € | Brand with positioning, message and complete identity. |
| Rebranding | 3,000–12,000 € | Existing company that needs repositioning. |
| Complete system | From 10,000 € | Brand with teams, channels, products and many applications. |
It can include diagnosis, strategy, positioning, value proposition, brand architecture, visual identity, logo, palette, typography, graphic style, verbal tone, applications and documentation.
Not every project needs everything. A new brand may need more definition. An existing brand may need order, simplification or updating.
The logo is only one part of branding. It can be important, but it does not solve positioning, tone, coherence, visual system or perception by itself. A strong brand needs more than a symbol.
When a project only delivers a logo, the client often improvises colours, uses, texts and applications. That creates inconsistency.
The price depends on strategy depth, number of applications, sector complexity, naming, architecture, team involvement, revision rounds, brandbook and urgency.
It also changes depending on whether the project is for a startup, an established company, a product, a service line or an international brand.
The price of a branding project depends on whether you only need a visual identity or a brand capable of giving direction, coherence and trust. The value lies in making the brand easier to recognise, explain and remember.
Branding should answer questions that go beyond design: what the brand represents, why it should matter, who it speaks to, who it competes against and how it wants to be remembered. Without these answers, visual identity can look good but feel empty.
A strong brand helps make decisions. When there is clear criteria, it becomes easier to design a website, write copy, create a campaign, prepare a presentation or adapt the brand to social media.
Strategy defines positioning, value proposition, audience, differentiators, personality and main message. This phase is especially important when a company cannot explain itself clearly or competes in a market where everyone sounds similar.
Strategy does not always need to be huge, but it needs a base. Without that base, every communication piece makes decisions separately.
Visual identity translates strategy into form. It includes logo, colours, typography, composition, graphic resources, photography, iconography and usage rules. Its goal is to make the brand recognisable and coherent.
A good identity is not the most complex one. It is the one that can be applied consistently across many contexts without losing personality.
Branding also includes how the brand speaks. A brand can be close, technical, premium, direct, institutional or provocative. Tone must fit the audience and the value proposition.
Message is key because many brands have good design but explain poorly what they do. If the discourse is not clear, the brand loses strength.
A branding project can include business cards, presentations, signatures, social media, packaging, commercial documents, templates, website, ads or internal materials. The more applications, the more the system must be ordered.
Applications matter because they show whether the brand works beyond the mockup. An identity can look good on one page, but fail when applied to real formats.
Rebranding updates, repositions or corrects an existing brand. It may be necessary when the brand is outdated, no longer represents the business, does not differentiate or creates confusion.
It does not always mean changing everything. Sometimes the system, tone, colours, structure and applications need adjustment without losing recognition. Other times, a deeper change is needed.
A branding project should not end only with nice files. It should leave a clearer, more coherent and easier-to-apply brand. The price depends on scope, but the value depends on the judgement it brings to the business.
In a new company, branding helps start with a clear base. It defines how to present the business, how to explain the value proposition and how to avoid every communication piece looking like it belongs to a different brand.
When a brand starts without criteria, the website may have one tone, social media another, presentations another and commercial material another. Branding prevents that initial dispersion.
Many companies do not need branding because they are new, but because they have changed. They have grown, expanded services, reached a different audience or the brand that worked years ago no longer represents their current level.
In these cases, the project should organise the past without losing what still has value. It is not always necessary to break everything; sometimes the system needs to be elevated.
When there are several services, products or lines, it is necessary to decide how they coexist. Does everything sit under the same brand? Are there sub-brands? Does each line have its own identity? This decision affects names, hierarchies, design and communication.
Poor architecture creates confusion. The client does not understand what the company offers, how the lines relate or which option is for them.
The website is one of the places where branding is most visible. A brand with clear visual and verbal criteria makes it possible to create a more coherent, more differentiated and easier-to-understand website.
Without branding, the website can become a set of nice blocks without direction. With branding, every section can reinforce a central idea.
Trust does not depend only on design, but design influences it. A well-crafted brand communicates more control, more professionalism and more clarity. If the message is also honest and specific, perception improves.
In sectors where clients compare several providers, a clear brand can reduce doubts and justify price better.
To compare branding quotes, check whether strategy, visual identity, applications, revision rounds, brandbook, final files, usage rights and support are included. Two quotes may look similar but deliver very different things.
Also check whether the project only promises design or truly helps organise the brand. The difference may not be in the number of pieces, but in the quality of the decisions.
A good branding project makes the brand easier to recognise, apply and explain. It is not only an aesthetic layer; it is a tool to give coherence to the business.
When branding is well done, the logo matters, but it stops being the only piece. The whole system works so the brand becomes clearer, more memorable and more useful.
Positioning is one of the most important parts of branding. It defines which space the brand wants to occupy and why someone should choose it. Without positioning, visual identity may be attractive but not different enough.
Positioning is not a slogan. It is a decision about market, audience, value, competition and perception. Design, tone and applications must then express that decision.
A well-built brand can help justify price better. Not because it performs magic, but because it reduces uncertainty, communicates judgement and makes the company feel clearer and more reliable.
When a brand feels improvised, the client may perceive more risk. When it is coherent, the client understands better what they are buying and why it is worth what it costs.
Branding also works internally. It helps sales, marketing, leadership and design teams speak with the same logic. If every person explains the brand differently, the market receives confusing signals.
A well-documented branding project reduces that dispersion. It does not remove every decision, but it provides criteria to make them.
It is worth investing more when the brand plays an important commercial role, competes in a saturated market, needs to elevate perception, expands into new markets or will be applied by many people.
Also when a wrong decision can be expensive: name change, public rebranding, new business line or launch with investment in website, campaigns and materials.
A simpler version can make sense to validate a project, start a small brand or order minimum visual criteria. But simple should not mean without judgement. The brand still needs to know what it represents and how it should be applied.
The danger is confusing basic branding with improvisation. A small brand also needs coherence.
| Phase | Objective | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis | Understand situation, market and problems. | Initial criteria. |
| Strategy | Define positioning and message. | Brand direction. |
| Identity | Create visual and verbal system. | Applicable brand. |
| Applications | Test the brand in real formats. | Practical coherence. |
| Documentation | Order rules and uses. | Brandbook or guide. |
A branding project is more valuable when it helps make better decisions. If it only changes appearance, impact is limited. If it orders strategy, identity, message and applications, the brand becomes a real tool for growth.
An essential part of branding is turning the value proposition into a clear idea. Many companies know what they do, but they do not know how to explain why it matters to the client. Branding helps organise that answer and make it visible in messages, visuals and applications.
The value proposition should not be a nice phrase without substance. It should connect need, difference and credibility. When this base is clear, the brand stops depending only on visual taste and starts communicating a reason to be chosen.
Differentiation does not always mean doing something radically new. It can mean explaining a specialisation better, showing a proprietary method, focusing on a type of client, organising an experience or turning a way of working into brand.
The problem appears when every brand in a sector uses the same colours, claims and promises. In that case, branding must find its own code without losing relevance.
The brand does not only live in the logo or website. It also lives in a sales meeting, a proposal, an email, an invoice, a presentation or packaging. That is why a branding project should think about experience, not only visual identity.
When all these touchpoints communicate the same judgement, the brand feels stronger. When each point speaks differently, perception breaks.
Even when the project is limited, it is useful to test the brand in real applications. An identity can work in a presentation board but fail in an email signature, proposal cover or website header.
Minimum applications often include a card or signature, presentation cover, social template, website example and commercial document. This helps validate whether the system is flexible.
A useful brandbook should not be a decorative document. It should help anyone apply the brand with judgement. It should explain logo uses, colours, typography, visual resources, tone, examples and mistakes to avoid.
If the brandbook is too abstract, nobody consults it. If it is clear and practical, it reduces errors and helps maintain coherence over time.
A brand that wants to grow needs a system. Today it may only need a website and a presentation; tomorrow it may need campaigns, events, commercial documents, social profiles, packaging or content. If branding is not ready, every new channel forces improvisation.
A scalable system allows growth without redesigning everything every few months. That is one of the big differences between a punctual identity and a well-planned branding project.
Branding should not be seen as an expense before design, but as a decision that affects all communication. It helps decide what to say, how to show it and how to keep coherence as the company grows.
When a brand is well built, it sells better because it is understood better. And it is remembered better because it does not depend on isolated pieces, but on a recognisable system.
It can range from 800–1,500 € for basic identities to more than 10,000 € for complete strategic projects.
Strategy, positioning, visual identity, logo, colours, typography, applications, verbal tone and brandbook depending on scope.
No. The logo is a visual piece; branding defines system, perception, coherence, message and brand experience.
Rebranding can range from 3,000 to 12,000 € or more, depending on brand size and number of applications.
Only if the brand does not have a name or needs a new one. Naming increases budget because it requires strategy and validation.
It is the document that defines visual and verbal rules so the brand is applied consistently.
A simple project can take 3–5 weeks. A strategic branding project may require 8–12 weeks or more.
Because creating a logo is not the same as defining positioning, visual system, applications and complete documentation.
Usually not as full production, but it can include visual criteria and applications for website, social media or presentations.
Explain objective, current situation, company type, audience, competitors, required applications and whether strategy or only identity is needed.
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