Home/Glossary/Logo & Style Guide
Glossary · Branding & creative

Logo & Style Guide

Branding & creative · Glossary

What is Logo & Style Guide?

A logo and style guide define your mark and the rules for using your brand , colours, fonts, spacing , so everything stays consistent everywhere.

AI quick answer

A logo and style guide is a brand’s core mark paired with a written rulebook for using it. The guide specifies approved logo files and variations, exact colors (hex, RGB, CMYK), fonts, spacing, and minimum sizes, plus what to avoid, so the brand stays consistent across signage, websites, social profiles, and print, no matter who creates the materials.

Example: a Winter Park med spa

A Winter Park med spa hires three vendors in one year , a Park Avenue print shop for menus, a freelancer for Instagram, and a contractor for the new website. With no style guide, the logo shows up in two slightly different shades of blush pink, paired with mismatched fonts, and stretched out of shape on the booking page. After the owner hands every vendor one PDF with the exact logo files, hex codes (#E8B4B8 blush, #2C2C2C charcoal), approved fonts, and clear-space rules, the brand finally reads as one polished business across the storefront sign, the Google Business Profile photos, and every printed card. Customers start recognizing the look before they even read the name.

Why it matters: consistency is what turns scattered touchpoints , your sign, your van wrap, your Instagram, your invoices , into one recognizable brand. A uniform look is tied to stronger recall and trust, and for a local business that trust is the difference between a scroll-past and a phone call. A style guide is also a time-saver: when a new contractor asks “what blue do you use?” the answer is one line in a document instead of a week of back-and-forth and a wrong print run.

What a real one contains: the logo in multiple formats (vector SVG or EPS for clean scaling, PNG for web) plus its variations , full color, one-color, a reversed version for dark backgrounds, and an icon-only mark for social avatars. Then the palette as exact hex, RGB, and CMYK values; the fonts with sizes and weights; minimum clear space and minimum size; and a short list of what NOT to do (don’t stretch it, don’t recolor it, don’t add a drop shadow). Common mistakes: handing vendors a single JPG with no source files, skipping the dark-background version, and never writing the rules down so each project drifts a little further from the original.

How it connects to local SEO and answer-engine optimization: a consistent logo and brand colors across your website, Google Business Profile, Facebook, and Yelp send the same visual signal everywhere, which reinforces the name-address-phone consistency search engines already reward. When the same avatar and palette appear on every profile, AI assistants and search crawlers more confidently link those listings to one business , and a clean, recognizable mark is what gets screenshotted, shared, and remembered when someone asks for a recommendation.

Frequently asked

What is the difference between a logo and a style guide?
A logo is the single mark that identifies your business. A style guide is the rulebook around it , the approved logo files and variations, exact color codes, fonts, spacing, and do’s and don’ts , so anyone using your brand keeps it consistent everywhere.
What should a small-business style guide include?
At minimum: your logo in vector and web formats with color, one-color, and reversed versions; exact brand colors in hex, RGB, and CMYK; your fonts with sizes and weights; minimum clear space and size; and a short list of misuses to avoid, like stretching or recoloring the logo.
Do I really need a style guide for a small local business?
Yes. The moment more than one person touches your brand , a printer, a web designer, a social manager , a one-page guide keeps everything looking like the same business, saves hours of back-and-forth, and prevents costly wrong print runs.
Related service

Branding & creative with Omega Trove

See how we put this to work for Central Florida businesses , and book a free consultation.

Explore the service →
Related concepts

See also

Free consultation

Want this done for you?

We’ll show you exactly where you’re invisible , free.