Wherever you work, and you’re sitting in the boardroom and the words ‘Rebrand’ are on the agenda, I bet you’ve heard this before: “Maybe we just need a new logo.”
It’s usually followed by a nervous laugh, a few nods, and someone emailing a graphic designer they know from Lockes to ‘modernise’ things. A bit of teal here, a gradient there, a new font, maybe a fresher website template?

Job done, right?
Hmm, not quite, honeyz.
A logo refresh can absolutely be part of a brand revamp, but it’s just the tip of the iceberg, not the whole thing. If the goal is to stay relevant, attract the right clients (new ones too), and galvanise your people, a brand revamp has to go much deeper than just swapping out the stationery and signage.
When a brand starts to feel… tired
You don’t always need a crisis to justify a brand refresh. Sometimes it’s more subtle:
- Your firm has evolved, but your brand still looks and sounds like it did 10 years ago.
- You’ve expanded your services or moved into new jurisdictions, but your messaging is still stuck in your ‘old world’ mode.
- Younger talent and clients can’t quite see themselves in your brand, and so they don’t choose you and go elsewhere.
- Internally, people can’t clearly explain what makes you different without referring to a brochure or a soundbite/strapline the MD shouts at EVERY monthly town hall.
This is usually the moment when someone suggests a new logo. It feels tangible. It’s visible. It’s easier than asking the harder questions.
But if you change how you look without changing what you stand for, all you have is a shinier version of the same confusion.
Start with clarity
Before you chat to Dave the Designer the next time you’re ordering your oat-milk latte, ask some grown‑up questions:
- Who are we actually for now? (Not ‘everyone with money/a business’. Be really specific. This could be the time to create some buyer personas.)
- What problems do we solve better or differently than other firms? This is when you conduct some competitor analysis. Find your difference, and that is where you begin.
- What do we want to be known for in 3–5 years? You want your new brand to evolve with you, not stay static.
- What do our best clients say about us when we’re not in the room? This is your unique selling proposition (USP). Make sure you regularly refer to this throughout your brand blueprint, whether online on your website or offline in your brochures, and remind your people, too, so they can share those good words with prospective customers/clients.

If your leadership team can’t answer these questions consistently and with little difficulty, no logo in the world will fix it.
This is the strategy bit most firms quietly gloss over. Yet it’s the foundation that everything else sits on. Visual identity, website, LinkedIn presence, pitch decks, and even how your reception team answers the phone.
Your brand lives by your people, not in brand guidelines
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: your brand isn’t your logo, fonts or colour palette.
Your brand is:
- How quickly you respond when a client has a wobble.
- How your associates speak to junior colleagues.
- Whether your partners turn up prepared for meetings.
- What your people post (or don’t post) on LinkedIn.
- How consistent does your client experience feel across teams and offices?
You can launch a stunning new visual identity, but if clients still experience slow responses, inconsistent service, or ‘that’s not my department’ culture, the new brand will feel hollow very quickly.
A proper revamp asks: “Do our behaviours match the story we’re telling on our website and beyond?”
If not, that’s where the work starts.

Where the logo does fit in
Once you’ve nailed the strategy and behaviours, then you look at expression:
- Does our logo and visual identity still reflect who we are and who we want to attract?
- Is our website clear, easy to navigate, and written in human language?
- Do our LinkedIn profiles and company page look like they belong to the same firm? And more importantly, above all, are everyone’s profiles consistent? Do we all use the same company banner? Do we have a set piece of text we use to describe our business for our About Section? Do we all use the Featured Section to drive LinkedIn profile viewers away from LinkedIn and onto our website?
- Do our pitch decks, brochures, and event materials feel consistent? Or are they a bit of a mish‑mash, designed/written with the intimate style of their author, offering zero consistency?
This is where a refresh can make a huge difference to perception. For professional services brands, especially, even a well‑executed evolution (rather than a dramatic revolution) can:
- Help prospects/new customers/clients understand you more quickly.
- Make your people feel proud to represent the firm.
- Support recruitment by signalling ‘we’re not stuck in 1998’.
But the visuals should express the strategy, not serve as the starting point.
Don’t forget your people in the process
A brand revamp done in a boardroom and then ‘announced’ rarely lands well.
Bring your people with you:
- Talk to teams at different levels about how the brand feels today.
- Ask fee earners what clients say, and where the current brand gets in the way.
- Share early thinking and invite feedback (within reason, of course. This isn’t design‑by‑committee, but you do want buy‑in).
- Run simple brand training so people know how to confidently talk about the firm, in its new way and new look.

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If your people don’t understand the ‘why’ behind the revamp, they won’t change how they talk about you or how they represent your brand. And if they don’t change, clients won’t feel a difference.
Practical places to start a proper refresh
If you’re reading this thinking, ‘Our brand is looking a bit dusty,’ here’s where I’d begin:
Website copy:
Does it clearly say who you help, what you do, and why it matters? Or is it just generic waffle?
LinkedIn presence:
Do your partners and senior leaders have coherent, on‑brand profiles, or are some of them still egg‑avatars? Yeesh, if there is one thing I need to plead right now, it is please, add a professional photo to your profile. Not having a photo means no one will trust you. And remember, people buy from people they trust.
Client journey:
From first contact to onboarding to billing, is the experience joined up and on‑brand?
Internal alignment:
Can your people explain in one sentence what makes your firm different from the others?
Tidy those, and you’ll often see more impact than simply dropping a new logo on the front door sign.
A final thought
A brand revamp isn’t a vanity project; it’s an opportunity to make sure how you look, sound and behave all pull in the same direction.
By all means, refresh the logo if it’s genuinely past its sell‑by date. But if you stop there, you’ve just repainted the front door sign and ignored the foundations. The saying ‘fur coat, no knickers’ springs to mind.
Rebrand the right way and your clients, your people and your future recruits will notice the difference.








