Designing a Modern Arab Identity for your Brand
Last time we spoke about the
clichés being made in developing Modern ‘Arab’
Identities, but never identified what makes one successful. While
the task is tricky, and the rules are still being defined, there
are a few simple guidelines that can help achieve this:
1. Does being ‘Arab’ make sense?
First of all it’s important to identify the importance and
relevance of positioning your offer (product, service, etc) as
‘Arab’. For example, if your offer is a global innovation, it may
not be necessary for your identity to evoke ‘Arab’. Where it might
be important to you personally to identify your offer as ‘Arab’, it
might not server your offer. It might
actually hinder it by positioning it locally.
So when does being ‘Arab’ make sense? It makes sense for a
modern developed identity to be ‘Arab’ if the target audience is
predominantly an Arabic speaking community, if the origin is
relevant to the offer, or if the location is relevant to the offer.
Otherwise, there is no added value to your offer in being
‘Arab’.
2. What is ‘Arab’?
We’ve already identified the clichés around Arab identities, but we
are still left with the indeterminable question: What is Arab? Arab
culture has a long history with a vast geography, including many
different identities. Perhaps that is why we tend to lean back on
the cliché characteristics of surface Islamic culture at its
beginnings. However, Arab is not purely Islamic, nor is it purely
of that time, especially if we are talking about
contemporary Arab identity.
It might seem like this leaves us with little (or rather, too much)
choice. However, we tend to forget the most obvious functional
characterization of making an Arabic identity; let it lead in
Arabic. After all, what defines an Arab Identity better than the
language that defines it? An “Arab” identity is an identity in
Arabic.
3. Modernizing the Arabic Language
The Arabic language has always had a rich historical rhetoric. Few
people today communicate in what is known as “classical” Arabic.
However the professional and business industries still do. This
creates an issue when trying to develop a contemporary identity.
The trick is to find a modern way to communicate your intentions
without adapting to colloquial dialogue (as it can be
misinterpreted as “slang”).
Furthermore, the inherent nature of Arab typography has been
struggling to adapt to the modern innovations of typography and
their ability to convey an identity and its needs today.
Traditionally, Arabic typography was solely calligraphic, and used
to write Quranic verses. Its artistic and versatile nature makes it
more difficult than other languages (with the exception of Chinese,
perhaps) to develop unique and modern characters for modern
identities. However, if you truly want your Modern Arab Identity to
be unique, it is crucial that you develop a distinctive and
functional font for it.
4. Local vs. Global
In the struggle and immediacy of emerging Arabic identities, there
have been no rules about the role that language has in identity
implementation. This is also perhaps because of the gap of natural
development in the industry historically. Wars and colonization and
more wars have left the region underdeveloped and stagnant for
hundred of years. With this said, we’ve seen horrendous
appropriations of Western marks into Arabic because there are laws
that all brands must be equally displayed in Arabic. We’ve seen
Arabic names that exist primarily in phonetically translated
English. We’ve seen bilingual mashups of too many words, resembling
a poster collage more than an identity.
Instead of trying to force too much information, it is important
to define a hierarchy. Determine what is most important to
communicate and do it simply. If there’s a need for global
recognition, use Latin as a secondary signature, rather than flip
your brand into English. In the same manner that flipping a Latin
design into Arabic is controversial, so is the opposite. Remember
not everything has to be 50-50. In fact, unless Arabic and Latin
will exist separately in every application (where you have a
separate version of each), together they compete and cancel each
other out. There should be a purpose for every decision you
make.
5. Form Follows Function
Lastly and most importantly, and this applies to any form of
identity creation, form must always follow function. We already
used this rule to determine whether your identity should be ‘Arab’
or not.
Does it work for what you are trying to communicate? Use a color because it evokes meaning, not because you like purple. The font isn’t a personal choice; it’s a professional one. If you need to convey fun, the font should be playful; if you need to be serious, it should be more conservative and strict; so on and so forth.
Define a purpose for your identity, and let every decision you make along the way be defined by it. The purpose cannot be “to sell chocolate cookies.” That’s purely a business description. It’s more about the how and why you want to sell chocolate cookies. What makes you different from the other chocolate cookie sellers? Are you sweeter?
Of course designing a brand identity involves many more steps
and can be a lot more complicated. That’s why we hire experts. But
if you let your process be guided by these five guidelines, at
least you understand what it is you want to achieve in developing
your identity. Most of the time, it seems difficult to assess
whether one design is better than the other because you are not
really sure what you are looking for. You want it to look more
‘Arab’ but don’t know why or how. Committing to anything seems like
a struggle because you do not feel confident that your decision is
the right one.
You need an identity because you need it to work for you.
It’s the same reason you chose to wear the shirt you are wearing to
the business meeting, instead of the shirt you slept in last night.
And the same reason you use one word over the other to communicate
your message. It’s also the same reason you choose what language to
speak in. It’s your image, and it needs to convey a meaning to a
specific target, about your offer.