In this semester-long project, you draft digital elements of a professional “brand” to help you present a consistent image to potential employers or grad schools.
“Create your own visual style… let it be unique for yourself and yet identifiable for others.” – Orson Welles
Assemble the elements
Start by creating a Google Doc and a project folder in Google Drive.
As the semester proceeds, you will add elements to the doc and gradually tweak them. Where appropriate, include a sentence about your choice: what it represents or how it connects to your message.
- Name – the standard form you plan to use in professional correspondence.
- Audience – identify who they are – perhaps potential employers, clients, business associates, or professional schools.
- Tagline – a concise phrase that tells the audience the message of your visual identity. See this article and this slogan generator for ideas.
- Typefaces – pick 3 at Google Fonts. Provide a visual with samples.
- Colors – pick 5 at Adobe Color. Provide swatches, names, and hex numbers.
- Headshot – a photo for LinkedIn. There’s help on Google Drive.
- Logo – a simple one that works in a single color. Try this site.
- OR a wordmark graphic with your name in your typefaces & colors.
Optional elements
- Music- a soundtrack or theme (instrumental CC music).
- Mood board – see this document
Apply the elements in your ePortfolio
- List the elements on the Visual Identity page
- Customize the “look and feel” by using the typefaces where you can, applying the colors, incorporating your logo and headshot, etc.
- Include these documents, incorporating your visual identity.
- Résumé – one page is enough.
- Business card – one-sided is fine. This template should help.
Optional items
- Social media – a screenshot showing your visual identity applied to a site.
- Email signature – from WiseStamp or a similar site. This article is helpful.
Materials to help develop a personal brand:
- Your personal brand workbook – advice from PricewaterhouseCoopers
- How to create a personal brand, and why you should by Anna Wakeling.
[image credit: photo by Ed Gregory from Stokpic.com]