
What Is Brand Identity?
Brand identity is the intentional design of visual, verbal, and behavioural elements that define how your brand presents itself and how it should be remembered. It combines strategic clarity with recognisable cues to build long-term brand value.
On one side, identity includes positioning, tone of voice, values, and personality—what Jean-Noël Kapferer captures in his Brand Identity Prism. These shape how your brand looks, speaks, and acts.
On the other hand, identity relies on distinctive brand assets (brand codes)—logos, colours, mascots, slogans, or sounds that are consistently used and easy to recognise. As Jenni Romaniuk explains in Distinctive Brand Assets, these elements increase mental availability, helping your brand come to mind quickly in buying moments.
Think of the red and white script of Coca-Cola, the golden arches of McDonald’s, or the bitten apple of Apple—all of these are brand codes that go beyond function. They serve as instant mental triggers. In the e-commerce space, think of Amazon’s curved arrow, Shopify’s green bag icon, or Zalando’s orange triangle—symbols that have become instantly recognisable across markets.

Source: GALTON Brands
Unlike brand image, which reflects external perception, strong brand identity is what you actively build and manage. Done right, it becomes a system that drives recall, relevance, and deeper customer loyalty and connection.
Why Is Strong Brand Identity Important?
An effective brand identity system:
- Builds brand recognition in a crowded marketplace
- Increases mental availability—making your brand easier to recall at buying moments
- Strengthens emotional connection and trust through distinctive brand assets
- Ensures consistency across all touchpoints
- Supports differentiation in both B2C and B2B environments

Source: GALTON Brands
💡 A great example of how these principles come to life is the rebranding of e-commerce brand Orodian (formerly SilneMagnety.sk), developed by GALTON Brands. Faced with the challenge of expanding beyond the Slovak and Czech markets, Orodian needed a memorable brand identity that could transcend local relevance and appeal to a wider European audience. We introduced the brand idea “Surprise” to capture the unexpected strength and versatility of magnets—a concept that became the core of the new identity.
This brand idea informed every element of the system, from magnetic-inspired typography and a bold colour palette to a custom 3D mascot named Ori designed to create emotional resonance and memorability. Magnetic field lines, generated through a custom tool, added movement and depth, while sound branding and a consistent tone of voice reinforced the identity across touchpoints. The result: a distinctive, cohesive brand that builds recognition, evokes emotion, and works across markets.

Source: GALTON Brands
Key Elements of Brand Identity
At the heart of every successful brand is a clear strategic foundation combined with recognisable assets that make the brand instantly memorable. These elements work together to shape perception, build trust, and drive mental availability.
Strategic Foundations
A strong brand identity starts with strategic clarity. Jean-Noël Kapferer’s Brand Identity Prism defines six essential dimensions that shape how a brand is built and perceived:
- Physique – tangible features like logo, packaging, or product design
- Personality – the brand’s tone, language, and behavior
- Culture – values and principles that guide the brand from within
- Relationship – the nature of interaction the brand fosters with its audience
- Reflection – the idealized image of the target customer
- Self-image – how potential customers feel about themselves when engaging with the brand
Together, these elements form a complete picture of a brand’s internal and external identity.
While the Brand Identity Prism defines what your brand stands for and how it connects with people, distinctive brand assets bring that identity to life in the minds of your audience. These assets act as mental shortcuts—helping people recognise, remember, and choose your brand.

Source: GALTON Brands
Distinctive Brand Assets (Brand Codes)
These external cues act as memory triggers and increase brand salience:
Visual Assets
- Logos (e.g., Nike’s Swoosh, Twitter’s bird)
- Colors (e.g., Tiffany Blue, Zalando’s orange)
- Typography (e.g., Google Sans)
- Shapes (e.g., Coca-Cola bottle)
- Mascots (e.g., Duolingo’s owl, Orodian’s Ori)
- Graphic layouts (e.g., Absolut Vodka’s ad structure)
Verbal Assets
- Taglines (e.g., “Just Do It”, “Let’s Make You a Business”)
- Brand names (e.g., Amazon, ASOS)
- Signature messaging styles (e.g., Apple’s minimalism)
Audio Assets
- Sonic logos (e.g., Netflix’s “ta-dum”)
- Jingles and voice styles (e.g., McDonald’s “I’m Lovin’ It”)
Motion/Animation Assets
- Mascot and logo animations (e.g., Pixar lamp, Klarna icons)
- Branded transitions in videos or social content
Multisensory Assets (Emerging)
- Packaging textures, signature scents, or digital UI behaviours
Connecting internal brand strategy with external brand assets is essential to building a consistent and recognisable identity. When these elements are aligned, the brand becomes easier to recall, more emotionally engaging, and more effective across channels and markets.

Source: GALTON Brands
How to Create a Brand Identity
Creating a strong brand identity starts with understanding who you are and what makes your brand different. Start with stakeholder workshops to uncover your brand’s roots, vision, mission, values, and goals. These sessions surface internal strengths, challenges, and key opportunities.
Next, analyse this internal input alongside audience insights and competitor research. The goal is to identify what sets your brand apart and how you can position it clearly. From this, you define your brand strategy: your purpose, positioning, tone of voice, and personality.
At the heart of this strategy lies your brand idea—a central concept that expresses your brand’s essence and inspires all messaging and design. From there, you create a memorable tagline—one that distills the brand idea into a few powerful words—and bring your identity to life through visual and verbal elements like logo, color palette, and typography.
These components are brought together in a comprehensive brand kit (brandbook), which documents how your identity should look, sound, and behave across channels to ensure brand consistency.
Here’s a step-by-step recap of the process:
- Run internal workshops – Capture your brand’s foundation, values, and goals
- Research your audience – Understand what your loyal customers want and expect
- Audit your competitors – Identify gaps, overlaps, and differentiation opportunities
- Define your brand strategy – Clarify your purpose, brand idea, tone, and positioning
- Design your identity system – Develop your logo, colours, fonts, and other key elements
- Craft your messaging – Align voice and key messages with your brand strategy
- Build your brand kit – Document and guide consistent usage across touchpoints
If you’re unsure where and how to start, many businesses turn to a professional identity specialist or branding agency. Working with an experienced branding partner can help uncover insights you might overlook, ensure strategic alignment across all elements, and save time by avoiding costly trial and error. Plus, agencies bring a tested process and creative firepower to turn your vision into a distinctive, scalable brand system.
Maintaining Consistency in Well-Crafted Brand Identity
Consistency is what transforms individual brand assets (brand codes) into a cohesive brand identity. When applied across all touchpoints—from Instagram posts and product packaging to newsletters and customer service—it builds trust, recall, and loyalty.
A brand identity kit ensures everyone working with your brand stays aligned. It includes clear guidelines on how to apply your brand’s visual and verbal elements—such as logos, colors, typography, tone of voice, imagery, and messaging—so that your identity remains unified across every channel and team.
Measuring the Effectiveness of Brand Identity
Brand identity is not just about aesthetics—it’s a performance tool. To understand if it’s working, measure both perception and real-world behaviour.
At GALTON Brands, we use neuromarketing testing to measure emotional response and subconscious associations. This helps validate how well key assets—like mascots, sounds, and visual codes—perform on a deeper level.
Other useful approaches include:
- Distinctive Asset Measurement
- Brand recognition surveys
- Consistency audits
- Brand tracking
Together, these tools offer a full view of whether your brand identity is not just consistent, but emotionally engaging and growth-oriented.
Conclusion
In a crowded, copy-paste digital world, a distinctive brand identity is your edge. It’s what makes people remember you, trust you, and choose you. Nail your strategy, own your assets, and show up consistently—and your brand won’t just grow, it’ll stick. For e-commerce brands, that’s not optional. It’s survival.
Cultivating a brand identity is integral to building a loyal customer base and enhancing your marketing efforts. By establishing a cohesive visual identity, you ensure that all marketing materials consistently convey your brand’s message, fostering a memorable and positive brand image. This consistency extends beyond just visuals; it shapes the overall customer experience, allowing your audience to feel a connection with your brand at every interaction. As a result, your brand stands out in the marketplace and builds lasting relationships with customers who value the reliability and authenticity your brand represents.

Source: GALTON Brands
Frequently Asked Question
What is brand identity?
Brand identity is the intentional creation of a brand’s visual, verbal, and emotional presence. It includes logos, colors, typography, messaging, and more—everything that shapes how a brand is perceived.
What is in a brand kit?
A brand kit typically includes your strategic pillars (vision, mission, purpose, values, positioning), brand idea, tone of voice, logo variations, color palette, typography, iconography, imagery, illustrations, sound logo, jingles, and messaging guidelines to ensure consistency.
Should I work with a professional brand identity specialist?
Yes—especially if you lack in-house expertise. A specialist brings strategic thinking and creative execution to build a cohesive and effective brand.
Why is brand identity development important?
It creates a recognisable image, builds trust, attracts the right customers, and supports sales and marketing. Without it, a brand risks becoming forgettable.
Why is brand identity important for small businesses and startups?
For startups, it’s key to standing out and building credibility. It signals professionalism and helps shape strong early impressions.