Logo design is not easy. At all. You have to distill the entire essence of an organization down into something instantly identifiable, easily reproducible, appealing, eye-catching, everything. It’s far more challenging than I think most people realize. And when it’s not right, everyone can tell, immediately, almost innately. If you don’t believe me, just look at Jaguar’s new logo – and the associated new brand-image campaign – and look at the reactions it’s inspiring, almost none of which are positive. This is feeling like a logo disaster.
Jaguar making a radical and bold change is absolutely a good thing, don’t get me wrong. The brand has been stagnant for some time now, and in desperate need of some sort of reboot. Sure, they have a fantastic history and a legacy of truly iconic cars, but that doesn’t help them sell new cars, which I’m told carmakers enjoy doing. So the idea that Jaguar needs to make a dramatic change is something I absolutely agree with.
I’m just not sure the change should be whatever this is:
Oh boy. There’s a lot there, isn’t there? Let’s just start with the logo:
Now, on some basic design level, I don’t hate this at all; I think the rounded forms are friendly and clean, and the mixing of upper and lower case is playful. It’s approachable and clean, slightly 70s-retro as well. It would be a fantastic logo for, say, a maker of fun budget consumer electronics or perhaps a frozen yogurt brand.
But for a car? For a Jaguar? No.
I mean, I think the old logo was definitely in need of an update; the typography felt stale and dated, and the jaguar itself – the “leaper,” was a bit too complex for an effective logo. It was fine for what it was, but I do agree that an update was in order.
That said, it’s hard to imagine something that feels more wrong than what Jag decided on. As I said, it’s not terrible graphically, but we have to consider what this “device mark” (that’s what Jaguar calls the wordmark logo) feels like and reminds us of, visually, because I hardly think it works as a car brand attempting to compete with Rolls-Royce, Mercedes-Benz, and Bentley.
Here are some other logos that feel very visually similar to the new Jag logo:
So, we have Nintendo’s line of little toys that interact with video games, the stylized typography used for a sci-fi movie about gigantic worms and desert-dwelling drug addicts, and the design of the typography on those Bloomingdale’s bags my Aunt Margie used to always have.
None of these feel like “premium vehicle” to me, electric or otherwise.
Plus, where’s the cat? Why would you get rid of the leaping feline from the logo? That’s the best part! To be fair, the new brand identity does have a place for the leaping jag, shown as a “makers mark” on a striped background that they call “strikethrough” and seems to refer to horizontal line design motifs.
That’s a bit better, and could certainly work well on some sort of rectangular grille. Jaguar also is showing a sort of monogram-like makers mark, too:
Again, not a bad design (if you can get past a sort of monogram that’s JaguaR) but it still doesn’t feel very Jaguar, even if Jaguar wants to make a new idea of Jaguar. I know it’s easy to criticize, because I’m doing that right now so I know, but I still think this logo could have been much, much better.
Here, I’m going to take five minutes to just show you roughly what I mean:
That’s a literal five-minute effort, and I’m not saying this is perfect or even good by any means, but I feel like it captures modernity and Jaguar-ness better than the “device mark” Jaguar put out. Using that new more angular leaper would make it better, but I don’t feel like spending another five minutes doing that. You can imagine it, right?
Okay, that’s just the logo. Let’s get into the brand identity stuff shown in that video I embedded up there. You know, the one with this wacky crew:
Okay, so here’s my big problem with all of this: for something that says “copy nothing,” this is some incredibly derivative stuff. This kind of bold, colorful couture, these saturated-color-monochromatic backgrounds, it’s not new or bold, it’s almost the default go-to when some organization wants to prove how bold and edgy and daring they are.
Don’t believe me? Here’s a little experiment to try. Grab a sample image of one of these Gautier-ish-looking models and do a reverse image search. Let’s try one with this vivid friend here:
…and the results:
There are many, many similar earlier examples of this aesthetic, going back about 20 years or so. There have been plenty of looks like this, the ruffles, the color, the fit, the expression, the overall look. This is not new ground that’s being tread, this is the easiest, most worn path to making people think new ground is being tread.
Some of these references go back even further. Take Temu Tilda Swinton here with her sledgehammer:
She’s not breaking any moulds there; she’s snuggling into a mould that was first used to cast a brand identity back in 1984.
And I think that may be the real problem here: this whole identity and campaign wants so desperately to be seen as shocking or new or novel but it just isn’t. It’s pandering and lazy and while I respect that Jaguar wants to shoot for something artier and unexpected, this just isn’t it.
This kind of artful shocking, using striking, unusual-looking models and visuals that arrest and surprise certainly can be done to sell cars. Citroën figured it out decades ago, for example:
And, it’s also just not particularly appealing. There’s no sense of fun here. There’s no joy. It’s needlessly confrontative to some unnamed idea, some strawman of conformity or whatever. But it’s all approached with a self-seriousness that I want nothing to do with.
Seriously, can you imagine going on a road trip with this guy?:
After about an hour of listening to his atonal music and listening to him complain about every fucking billboard you pass and refusing to play word games with you and eating his smelly mung beans, noisily, you’d want to ditch this scarlet bore at the first Sheetz you stopped at.
The tone isn’t innovative, it’s smug and elitist and while, sure, that’s part of the Jaguar identity, this is stupidly and derivatively smug and elitist. I suppose there will be people who will say that at least we’re talking about Jaguar now, but I’m not sure that’s so great. Because everyone seems to be talking about how they don’t want whatever Jaguars come out of this.
There needs to be a new idea of Jaguar, no question. Whatever this mess is, though, is not it.
Jaguar, if you want a do-over, I think everyone is okay with that.
It’s almost as if someone at the ad agency watched a commercial for a fashion or perfume brand and had their minds blown. Seriously, I cannot remember when was the last time I saw a perfume commercial that made any sense or gave me an idea of what I would be buying.
Exhibit A: What is even going on here? Why is the lady crying gold?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDrCCj2UCaw
Exhibit B: You know what, screw it, let’s do a supercut:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BpIOeQ86Lls
Jaguar, buddy, don’t do this!
God I hate perfum ads.
Over here they are on constantly during the run up to Christmas. That one with Jonny Depp makes me assume it smells of drunk pirates and shame.
All of them just make me add that company to the list of wankers who will never get my money.
On entirely the other side of the marketing coin is Alpinestars. I own a set of Alpinestars bike leathers, bike boots, FIA race boots, and FIA race suit, two MTB tops and five pairs of Alpinestars gloves, and I have no idea why I chose them.
I see neither grace, space nor pace in this advert.
Disgrace?
This isn’t for you, poor vermin! Our brand is catering to the movers, and shakers, and the Hunger games organizers. It’s the perfect apocalypse-cruiser for today, air tight, bulletproof, and fully integrated with our line of privatized security drones. With an eye to the future, it is stylishly optimized for SpaceX or Blue Origin cargo bays, for when you need to leave all the rabble behind. Now in extinct orange and melted glacier blue!
The typeface reminded me of an early Dodge Neon logo.
Hi.
The fact that we all had “Hi.” instantly come to our minds shows that the marketing folks at Dodge knew how to do it back then.
This? I will forget whatever this is by the end of the day. Maybe sometime in the future it will cross my mind when I see a Fanta in the supermarket aisle, but that’s it.
Or, the current brain trust at JLR and the ‘creatives’ (Darth Creative?) who came up with this dreck: High.
Yeah probably not the refined premium experiance they were hopeing for.
Oh
Oh, yeah
Jaggy made some cars
Jamming good with Weird and Gilly
And the Spyders from Mars
He played it left hand
But made it too far
Became the special man
Then we were Jaggy’s brand
Jaggy really sang
Screwed-up eyes and screwed-down hairdo
Like some cat from Japan
He could lick ’em by smiling
He could leave ’em to hang
He came on so loaded, man
Well hung and snow white tan
So where were the spyders
While the fly tried to break our balls?
Just the beer light to guide us
So we bitched about his fans
And should we crush his sweet hands? Oh
Jaggy played for time
Jiving us that we were voodoo
The kids were just crass
He was the nazz
With God-given ass
He took it all too far
But boy, could he used to make good cars
Making love with his ego
Jaggy sucked up into his mind, ah
With the leaper messiah
When the kids had killed the man
I had to break up the brand
Oh, yeah
Ooh
Jaggy made good cars
He could have been a hero…
Please remove the topshot and the one on the front page. It’s making me sick to my stomach.
I’m sure I’m not the only one you’ll be helping out.
Look, marketing degree final projects are HARD, okay?
It’s funny you say that. At my university, there were three business degrees available – Accounting, Management, and Marketing. It was very, very, very clear that the brains were in Accounting, the sort of average folks were in Management, and the Marketing majors were the fraternity and sorority members were who were far more interested in partying than school, and the jocks on the sports teams who were too busy training and playing to take anything difficult. It was the Underwater Basket Weaving of the Business school. As an accounting major I still had to take some marketing classes as core requirements – they were a joke. Business management and finance classes were far more rigorous, and IIRC the marketing majors didn’t even have to take stats or any of the advanced business math classes.
Looks more like first year term projects.
So, it seems that this is more than merely a TYPOGRAPHICAL ERROR!
On your way…
What in the PRIMARK is this? So generic.
I don’t think I ever really experienced a new logo or a re-branding being met with applause. When a new logo is introduced that is this different, it’s bound to be met with criticism and derision. I always thought the old Jaguar logo symbol on the back of a I-PACE looked completely off, and I actually think the new logo will work much better.
MotoGP just rolled out a new logo yesterday and from the reaction online you’d have thought they just announced they were gonna be racing scooters instead from here on out.
The visuals here are odd but as far as the logo goes, in the long run it won’t matter to how good or bad the cars are.
Chat : Is This ✨Bahaus✨
Is that a car or a cologne commercial?
Either way, it stinks.
So, a rebranding for a car company that doesn’t make any cars, looking like they’re trying to appeal to people who don’t like cars but still take Ubers everywhere?
Also, if we’re going wordmarks, I’m rather fond of the old hexagon that imprinted on me at a young age from The Visual Dictionary of Cars.
https://mossmotors.com/214-736-jaguar-round-metal-sign
Two thoughts on this:
1) What does Goth Uncle think?
2) The lower-case/upper-case mixing hurts my OCD so very, very badly.
Everything about this feels appropriate for some wannabe trendy flavored water or an ad for rayon fabric, not a luxury car brand.
Bizarre.
I’ve always felt the “other” Jag logo, the round emblem frontal view cat head, needs to return. It’s cool in its original form, and could be nicely modernized, esp for EVs.
Absolutely this.
That “other” one is called Growler, and even on recent models it’s been on the grille; it didn’t go anywhere.
Sweet! I always liked it, and the background could be tweaked it make it look electric perhaps.
I am a graphic designer and I also hate it.
Reminds me of the 20+ year old Smart car logotype and Garnier hair products.
Just use the cat. Like Nike’s “swoosh”, only better.
Except PUMA already has it.
yeah that might be an impediment, it was my first thought to changing the cat.
Audi: let’s introduce a new brand where the logo is not four circles but AUDI. Jaguar: hold my lager…
Warm lager
Ale.
I can’t wait to awaken from my velour Jaguar covered bed, slide into my luxurious Jaguar slippers, pop a JR K-cup into my exclusive Jaguar inspired Keurig, and fire up the JaguarApp (patent pending) to warm up Jag from my Jaguar themed art deco McMansion.
Jaguar: The Endangered Species
Right about now Shane Gillis is lighting up a Cuban cigar and drinking a Bud Light waiting for the call to come in from Jag and a new direct deposit to hit.
What a disaster of a concept for a car company.
That is some really bad design. Wow. I thought the KN Kia logo was bad, but at least it wasn’t phoned in like this garbage.
Absolutely terrible design, and then they don’t even have a car in the commercial. You can’t change the logo that dramatically and then intro it without even showing a car. No one would associate this with cars. This is a commercial for a new cosmetics company, maybe a new high end clothier, and I refuse to believe anything else.
In order to put a new car in the commercial, you have to have one.
I disagree. They have 100 years of cars they could have used. But you’re not wrong, it’s hard to claim to be a car company if you’re not making cars.
They are trying to obliterate their past to forge a new dystopian future, which might be wise if people conflate your brand with unreliable transportation. However, there are some of us that remember Jaguar as the epitome of Cool Britannia, which could have been the basis for a new millennia reboot.
Their also obliterating their already slim chances of me and many other people buying their products.
We prehistoric car enthusiasts had decades of opportunity to buy their wares and did not. I guess that is why they are trying to attract the very narrow market of Berlin EDM club owners.
If they are going to go that far, they should just change the name of the company to something completely different and start over again.
I’m sure the marketing geniuses who came up with “Stellantis” aren’t doing anything and are available.
A car commercial that literally does not have anything to do with a car, and the font is so dramatically different that it could be mistaken for a new makeup company. Yeah… They’re off to a good start with this ad campaign.
Are they even trying? Nothing about that logo reminds me of classic British cars and XKEs
Not the logo, but the person with the sledgehammer makes you think of how much people typically want to smash their trouble prone English cars right? No? Oh…
Whether it’s right or wrong, they don’t want to remind anyone of classic British cars and XKEs.
“Temu Tilda Swinton” made me take a break from reading the article because I was laughing too hard. +1 for Jaguar getting a redo, cause this ain’t it.
Man, this feels like Cadillac all over again, but even worse.
Cadillac was never 1/100th this bad.
Cadillac was pretty bad but Jaguars cringe is orders of magnitude higher.
A few dumb commercials are orders of magnitude more forgivable than a company’s entire branding and image package being complete shit.
Everyone’s a critiq.
You are on fire in this comment stream.
Is that the new Cadillac sports car?