Pointer.Digital
Over the summer, we were approached to create a brand for a new digital marketing agency, Pointer Digital. While Pointer’s experience and strength lie in politics, Pointer Digital is not just a political agency. One of the challenges for this project was the need to create an ide

Over the summer, we were approached to create a brand for a new digital marketing agency, Pointer Digital.
While Pointer’s experience and strength lie in politics, Pointer Digital is not just a political agency. One of the challenges for this project was the need to create an identity that was trustworthy enough for a political campaign, while not pigeonholing itself to a specifically political market. The client recognized that almost everything these days is political, but just because it’s political doesn’t mean that it has to be partisan. To convey the brand’s characters, we focused on these themes: Community Connection, Collaboration, Protection, Change, and Honesty.
The name of the company was inspired by the client’s dog, a very cute German Shorthaired Pointer, and it seemed like the most obvious representation for the identity. However, after our initial design research, it became evident that centering the identity around a dog mark did not accurately reflect the agency. We focused on other ways to convey the brand’s ethos. We honed in on the dot in the name Pointer.Digital, as a point, and built an expanded system around it. The firm utilizes the .digital domain extension, so naturally, the dot became a focal point in the wordmark. The tagline “Get to the Point,” speaks to the refreshing straightforward and honest attitude that the firm brings to their projects.
Even though we pivoted the understanding of the brand, we still wanted to keep some of the company’s history, so we ended up working a simple dog mark as a secondary legacy mark, only to be used sparingly and in conjunction with other Pointer brand elements.
Pointer.Digital relaunched with their new identity this week and we’re excited to see how the agency grows.






First Things First 2000 at 20
Originally released in 1964, the First Things First manifesto rallied against design’s role in consumerism and called upon designers to be more humanist in their approach to their practice. Adbusters updated the manifesto in 1999, restarting the conversation about priorities in t

Travelogue: Copenhagen
A few weeks ago my wife and I traveled to Copenhagen, Denmark’s capital. A modern city famous for bicycles, new Nordic cuisine, and world-class culture. Copenhagen is well known as one of the greatest design cities in the world and a very eco-friendly tourist destination, with pl

Case Studies
Over the years, we’ve had the pleasure to work on a lot of cool projects. Some of our favorites have been for social media campaigns to help launch new products. For each campaign, we developed the look and feel and crafted messaging and graphics for social media and web content.
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Double Exposure 2019
For the third year in a row, Double Exposure’s Investigative Film Festival and Symposium asked us to develop the look and feel of this year’s festival theme: Decay. Our teams wanted to visually represent the decay and erosion that the journalistic landscape has experienced in rec
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Motivo
Last spring, at the Circular Summit, an annual women entrepreneurship conference hosted by Alice, we met Rachel McCrickard, founder of Motivo. Motivo is the first online platform that connects new therapists with experienced supervisors from the beginning to the end of the clinic
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