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Coley Porter Bell has been appointed to modernise a raft of Russian confectionery brands under the banner of Soviet-era manufacturer Krupskaya.

You will recall, of course, that Nadežda Konstantinovna Krupskaya was the wife of revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin. They married in 1898. When she died in 1939 the workforce petitioned Sovnarcom, the Council of People’s commissars, and asked if it would be possible to immortalise her by naming the factory after her.

The project which includes updating the brand logo, involves developing new pack designs for Troika chocolate and crushed nuts bar, Petersburg Nights chocolate bar range, and Summer Gardens boxed assortment.

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A ‘GOOD DESIGN’ start to the Year

8/01/10 by Vicky Bullen

We have a had very good start to the year with 2 awards already under our belt . We won Gold Chicago Atheneum GOOD DESIGN Awards for our Inishturkbeg and Museum of London Corporate Brand Identities .

In the words of Lary Sommers of The Chicago Atheneum :

‘Founded in Chicago in 1950 by architects Eero Saarinen, Charles and Ray Eames, and Edgar Kaufmann, GOOD DESIGN bestows international recognition upon the worlds most prominent designers and manufacturers for advancing new, visionary, and innovative product concepts, invention and originality, and for stretching the envelope beyond what is considered ordinary product and consumer design’

Thank you to both the Inishturkbeg and the Museum of London client teams for helping us to create two beautiful identities that we are immensely proud of.

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Bitesize

7/12/09 by Vicky Bullen

For those of you that missed our latest Visual Futures presentation ‘Bitesize’ earlier this month, we have made a 3 minute bitesized version which covers some of the key points from the full presentation.

Take a look and if you’re interested in having us present the full story to you, please don’t hesitate to contact me at vicky.bullen@cpb.co.uk.

Enjoy.

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The invisible equity

11/11/09 by Adam Ellis

What is is that makes my 6 year old daughter love Kinder eggs?  Is it the amazing orange and white stand-out on shelf or maybe the promise of delicious chocolate?  Who are we kidding?  The real lure is the gift inside.  Just as important, and what makes a Kinder egg over a standard bar of chocolate, is the sense of theatre.  From the nostalgic unwrapping of the crinkly foil to the breaking of the chocolate shell, you continuously engage with the brand through so many layers.  By the time you’ve popped open the little yellow egg with eager anticipation of your ‘air fix kit’ style toy, you well and truly feel that your 45p was well spent.  Then there are the hours of ‘fun’ fiddling to put it together.

This got me thinking that many of our favourite brands also secretly hold a valuable, almost hidden, invisible equity.  Admittedly many brands have been savvy enough to capitalise on brand theatre - Orangina’s shake to wake, Grolsch’s unleashing of their ceramic stopper to the heavy thud of a BMW door followed by a gentle fade of the vanity light.

But the area I find really fascinating is when, just simply through the passage of time, a brand can own a valuable equity they never intended to have.  Who doesn’t now pine for the foil on a Kit Kat bar or the little colourful embossed alphabet letters on the lid taken from a Smarties tube?  Interestingly to some brands these aren’t equities hence the move to replace the Smarties tube with a hexagonal box.  Yes I buy the argument that the new packaging is more environmentally aware but I can’t help but feel robbed of all the charm the brand has given me over the years (it took me about 5 years to collect the whole alphabet).

Sometimes it’s the oddities around the brand that make the brand.  Take Heinz Tomato Ketchup.  Sure you can put it in a neat clinical squeezy plastic bottle, but for loyalists, unless you thud the ‘diner’ style glass bottle, it just ain’t Heinz.  You can keep a jar of coffee uber fresh with a modern click vacuumed lid, but what you really want is to smash your tea spoon through that lovely gold foil on a jar of Gold Blend.

However, it’s not always negative that times change and brands move on.  One brand actually making this ‘invisible’ theatre the main crux of its latest advertising campaign is nestle cereal Shreddies.  Rather than the theatre just being tactile it’s observational too.  Watch the hilarious tongue in cheek market researchers get feedback on the taste difference of the new ‘diamond’ shape, which of course isn’t Shreddies turned 45 degrees - oh no, it’s new Diamond Shreddies!  The campaign is very clever as the theatre is running through the ‘new’ old brand.  In fact, the diamond shape and the ads have become a Youtube hero in their own right - you can even vote online for which shape you prefer.  Very design savvy - making the existing shape of the product become what’s new (and it must have saved a fortune in R&D).

But it’s not just brands, one entire category that has successfully turned around a major piece of their ownable theatre, is wine.  Who at first didn’t doubt the transition form the ceremonious de-corking to the very under whelming unscrewing of a cap?  But it worked and people have adopted the new ritual whether it’s a cheap and cheerful bottle of plonk through to more premium wines.  No more stressfully rattling around the cutlery drawer for the elusive corkscrew, and hey presto, at picnics you’re straight in.

But simply replacing theatre with convenience won’t always work.  The real trick as we design into the future is that we continue to create and protect a brand’s potentially invisible equities.  Pringles know that ‘once you pop you can’t stop’ will out live any surface graphics.  The DNA of brands aren’t just visible equities but also emotive, tactile ones.  Long live jokes on lolly sticks, crisps with salt packets, shamrocks drawn on pints of Guinness and yellow eggs with toys in them.

Adam Ellis is Design Director at Coley Porter Bell.

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More award wins for Coley Porter Bell

29/10/09 by Vicky Steward

The DBA’s Design Effectiveness Awards honouring the best in design, held Thursday 22nd October, saw Coley Porter Bell achieve further award success in 2009. CPB’s clients Fairview Cheese (a South African brand) and Lactalis Nestlé won Gold and Bronze respectively, both in the packaging branded food and drink category.

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PRESS RELEASE

2 June 2009

Quorn™ given a bright new brand identity by Coley Porter Bell

Coley Porter Bell has given QuornTM a bright new brand identity, as part of a major re-brand, which is being rolled out across all packaging and point of sale in major supermarkets throughout summer 2009.

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On a winning streak

9/01/09 by Sarah Ridley

PRESS RELEASE

9 January 2009

Coley Porter Bell on a winning streak

Coley Porter Bell has just won 3 awards at the international Mobius Advertising Awards where over 4900 entries were received from 33 countries.

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PRESS RELEASE

30 October 2008

Museum of London unveil new brand identity

Museum of London unveils its new brand identity, created by Coley Porter Bell, as part of its largest ever redevelopment. This is the first time the Museum has undergone a radical change in identity since the late 1970s.

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PRESS RELEASE

2 October 2008

Coley Porter Bell brand private island ‘Inishturkbeg’

Coley Porter Bell has given private island Inishturkbeg a stylish brand identity. Inish Turk Beg means ‘small island of the wild boar’ in Irish and is located in Clew Bay, County Mayo, on Ireland’s Atlantic west coast.

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New packaging for Comfort Naturals Range

29/06/08 by Sarah Ridley

PRESS RELEASE

June 2008

Coley Porter Bell Creates Packaging for New Comfort Naturals Range

Coley Porter Bell has designed the packaging for Comfort’s new Naturals range, three new Comfort clothes conditioner variants which launch in July.

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