T... — Branding Governance: A Participatory Approach
Every quarter, a rotating group of employees from different departments met to discuss what was working. The "Governance" wasn't a top-down decree; it was a peer-reviewed consensus. The Result
On one side sat the , clutching a 150-page Brand Bible. They wanted consistency—the exact shade of "Electric Teal" on every PDF. On the other side were the Regional Leads , who argued that a rigid Swiss design didn't resonate in the humid, chaotic streets of Bangkok or the minimalist hubs of Copenhagen. Branding Governance: A Participatory Approach t...
The conference room at “Velo-City,” a growing urban mobility startup, felt more like a courtroom. Every quarter, a rotating group of employees from
The brand was fracturing because it was being policed, not lived. The Shift: From Policemen to Facilitators They wanted consistency—the exact shade of "Electric Teal"
By giving up total control, Velo-City gained something better: .
They replaced the rigid "Bible" with a "Living Kit." It provided the DNA (the core values and logo), but allowed for "Regional Mutations." Local teams could choose from a palette of secondary colors that felt like their home cities.
Six months later, the brand felt more cohesive than ever, precisely because it was allowed to breathe. The Bangkok team launched a street-art inspired campaign that went viral, something the central office never could have designed.