IBM Sustainability

20222023

We once again joined forces with long-time partner Blue Studio — IBM’s internal brand experience and design group — to shape and solidify IBM’s unique POV toward sustainability. IBM, no stranger to the sustainability space, had for years been helping enterprises achieve their environmental goals through IBM consulting, software services, and infrastructure solutions. But with the world moving into a future where sustainability is no longer an invitation but an obligation, it was crucial IBM developed a distinct voice and a codified point of view to unite behind.

Starting with Strategy

With such an audacious and amorphous ask, crystalizing a foundational brand strategy was essential.

Ambition and action are spoken about frequently in the sustainability landscape, but at this point, they’ve become table stakes. An audit of IBM as a brand, its competitors, and the sustainability space as a whole uncovered insights that revealed how IBM could distinguish itself: by focusing on what comes next.

In discussions with a spectrum of IBM stakeholders — from leadership to designers, program managers, and more — what felt most relevant and important to IBM’s stance took shape. This process yielded four strategic territories, including one that became the North Star for our creative work.

Micro-Macro

Where did we land? “Micro actions achieve macro impact.” A strategic positioning centering on smaller, actionable steps that drive the cumulative action needed to achieve the big goals and outcomes; small steps create ripples of significant, positive change.

We dubbed this direction “Sea Change” as a double allusion to both IBM's belief in being the catalyst for transformative shifts in perspective, and to the idea that to make effective change, you need the data and insights to know where and how to apply effort for maximum effect.

With our strategic foundation solidified, our focus turned toward expressing this POV as an extension of IBM’s visual identity.

An Identity, Not a Logo

While it’s usually imperative to imagine something new when defining a visual identity, Sustainability didn’t demand the creation of a new mark or a kit of parts. The ask was to elaborate on what was already there, and find power and relevance through subtraction.

Stripping away pieces of what already existed within the IBM ecosystem, we arrived at a singular, universal element of IBM’s visual language as our unit of expression: the circle.

Although the circle is fundamentally a primitive shape, that is also its strength . Its ubiquity gave us the opportunity to create a visual association with sustainability that functioned retroactively, bringing a significance and meaning to material that predates the creation of the visual identity itself.

Visual, Verbal

Exploring the circle took many exciting forms, with a strong focus on macro-to-micro relationships.

Singular circles highlight, reveal, and bring focus — delicately pairing with typography as a subtle means of creating emphasis. In multiple instances, the circle both evokes and depicts data, and plays different roles as minimalist illustrations: one to one, one to many, everything at once.

These visual relationships were strengthened with a sympathetic color palette from the core IBM palette, finely art-directed photography pairings, and rigorously crafted infographic–inspired symbols.

Hand-in-hand with the visual identity is a verbal one: a specific tone of voice and approach that we defined as Enthusiastic Pragmatism. Inspired and inviting, functional and factual. Sustainability communications also inherit an ‘A to B’ approach toward relationships between actions and outcomes —‘Micro to Macro’ remaining the gold standard example of this technique.

Dot Dot Dot

The outcome is an identity that is subtly distinct from the core IBM brand, but made of it and for it. It’s an expression that can stand on its own to visually and verbally communicate a specific sustainability POV, while also permeating into every facet of where, how, and why IBM communicates.

Credits

BUCK

Group Creative Director

Jon Gorman

Creative Director

Shannon Jager

Art Director

Abbie Winters

Han Gao

Designer

Daniel Stuhlpfarrer

Margaux Saulou

Lucas Ramos

James Rivas

Executive Producer

Kim Stephens

Producer

Bess Howell

Alex Decaneas

Strategy Lead

Surabhi Rathi

Brand Strategist

Scott Sparks

Madison Caprara

Copywriting

Josephine Heintz

Charlie Short

Special Thanks

Will Burkart

Marla Moore

Camille Chu

David Evans

IBM Sustainability Hero Video

BUCK

Group Creative Director

Jon Gorman

Creative Director

Joyce N. Ho

Shannon Jager

Executive Producer

Kitty Dillard

Producer

Alex Decaneas

Art Director

Diego Morales

Production Coordinator

Dani Ortega

Strategy Director

Surabhi Rathi

Copywriter

Charlie Short

Josephine Heintz

Designer

Margaux Saulou

Rafael Bessa

2D Animation Lead

Alex Perry

2D Animator (AE)

Gilles Desmadrille

Meitar Almog

Morgan Allison

Nicole Pappas

Compositor

Melissa van het Spijker

Post Supervisor

Jose Fuentes

Editor

Cameron Kelly

Dave Conte