Logo Design Agency
Your logo is the most visible element of your brand — it appears on every touchpoint, from your website to your business cards to your LinkedIn profile. In B2B, a strong logo signals credibility, professionalism, and the confidence that comes with a well-built brand.
Logo Design Projects
Sevenloop
Brand identity and website design for Sevenloop, an end-to-end custom manufacturing solutions provider

Lumora Security
Branding and website design for Lumora Security, a cybersecurity solutions provider for growing businesses

Adnaut
Rebrand and website design for Adnaut, a technology-driven digital media and ad tech consultancy
Good Food Movement - Akshaykalpa
Multimedia portal design for Good Food Movement by Akshayakalpa, educating consumers about sustainable food choices
Ximkart
Brand and website design for Ximkart, a cross-border trade platform simplifying raw material imports
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Fortuna Cysec
Brand strategy and website design for Fortuna Cysec, an AI-driven managed security services provider for threat detection and compliance
Tunnel
Brand and website design for Tunnel, a payment automation platform built for equipment manufacturers

Fortuna Identity
Brand strategy and identity design for Fortuna Identity, a cybersecurity firm specializing in identity and access management
Progcap
Brand and website design for Progcap, a fintech platform enabling supply chain financing for underserved retailers

Swiffy Labs
Brand and website design for Swiffy Labs, a modular fintech lending infrastructure platform

SimpliContract
Brand and website design for SimpliContract, an AI-powered contract lifecycle management platform

s11s
Brand identity and website design for s11s, a SaaS community platform connecting marketers and founders

TLH
Rebranding and website design for TLH, a leading law firm specializing in corporate and commercial law
What makes a great B2B logo different from a consumer logo?
B2B logos need to work harder in more contexts — from tiny favicons to large-format event banners, from dark presentation backgrounds to light website headers. They need to convey trust and authority while remaining distinctive and memorable. Everything Design creates logos that are rooted in brand strategy, not just aesthetics — logos that scale beautifully, reproduce cleanly across all media, and give your brand an identity that stakeholders and customers alike remember.
Logo Design Experts
Logo Design Expert at Everything Design
Visual Transformation process that focuses on enhancing a brand’s visual identity to resonate with its audience and stand out. It includes the following services:
- Logo Refresh: Updates existing logos to align with current trends and brand evolution.
- Logo Redesign: Creates entirely new logos that capture the brand's essence.
- Graphic System Redesign: Develops cohesive visual elements to support brand identity.
- Identity Design: Establishes a unified visual identity across all brand touchpoints.
- Brand Guidelines: Provides comprehensive guidelines to ensure consistency in brand presentation.
Branding for Indian VCs
Swiffy Labs Branding
This approach emphasizes the creation of a modern and enduring visual identity that aligns with the brand’s goals and enhances its market presence.
Why selling the Logo is as important as creating it?
AdNaut Brand Design
Creating a logo is often seen as the pinnacle of a designer’s craft—a single mark that distills a brand’s identity, vision, and aspirations into a powerful visual. But the unsung hero of this process isn’t just the artistry behind the design; it’s the ability to sell the logo to clients, stakeholders, and eventually, the world.
Designing the logo is only half the battle. The other half? Convincing everyone involved that it’s the right choice.
The Creative Process: From Spark to Stakeholder
The moment a designer creates a logo, they’ve done the seemingly impossible: captured the soul of a brand in a few strokes. But what seems intuitive to the creator often feels abstract to others.
Imagine presenting a logo to a room full of stakeholders—executives, marketing leads, product managers, and even legal teams. Each person has their own vision for the brand and, often, their own subjective preferences.
The result?
- Endless questions: “Why this color? Can we make it more modern?”
- Unrealistic expectations: “Can the logo represent innovation, trust, creativity, and sustainability all at once?”
- Personal biases: “I just don’t like red.”
The logo must survive this gauntlet of opinions while staying true to its purpose.
The Hardest Part: Persuasion
Legendary designer Paula Scher once said:
“The design of the logo is never really the hard part of the job. It’s persuading a million people to use it.”
This is the essence of selling a logo. Designers don’t just create visual assets—they craft stories. A logo isn’t just a shape or color; it’s a promise, a vision, and a connection to the brand’s audience.
To sell a logo effectively, a designer must:
- Tell the Story Behind the Design
Every logo has a rationale. Explain why the color palette aligns with the brand’s identity, how the typography reflects its tone, and why the design works across all touchpoints. - Address Concerns Without Diluting the Design
Clients often request tweaks or iterations. While feedback is essential, the designer must protect the logo’s integrity and guide discussions back to the brand’s core values. - Help Clients Visualize the Logo in Action
Showing how the logo will appear on packaging, websites, or advertising campaigns can bridge the gap between abstract design and real-world application. - Stay Resilient
Persuasion isn’t just about logic—it’s about patience. Winning over skeptical stakeholders requires empathy, adaptability, and determination.
Why Selling the Logo Matters
A brilliant logo that never sees the light of day serves no one. Selling the logo ensures that:
- The brand’s identity stays consistent: Without alignment, the brand risks diluting its message with multiple, inconsistent iterations.
- Stakeholders embrace the design: A logo can only succeed if the people behind the brand fully believe in it.
- The audience connects with the brand: A well-communicated logo becomes a recognizable symbol, building trust and loyalty over time.
The Designer’s Dual Role: Creator and Advocate
In the end, designing a logo is both an art and a skill. Selling it? That’s where the real mastery lies. It’s the ability to combine storytelling, empathy, and strategy to ensure that the design doesn’t just exist—but thrives.
A logo represents a brand’s future. And the designer’s role is to guide everyone—clients, stakeholders, and audiences—to see its potential. Because when a logo is both beautifully crafted and passionately sold, it transcends design and becomes iconic.
Your logo deserves not just to be created but championed.








