audio-logo-design
关于
This skill helps developers create and evaluate short, memorable sonic logos by applying proven audio branding principles. It provides guidance for designing effective 2-5 second audio signatures, briefing sound designers, and analyzing competitor logos. Use it when integrating audio branding into applications or when advising on sonic identity projects.
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技能文档
Audio Logo Design
Create memorable sonic logos using design principles from Intel, Netflix, and McDonald's—crafting 2-5 second audio signatures that achieve instant brand recognition.
When to Use This Skill
- Creating a sonic logo for a brand
- Evaluating audio logo proposals from agencies
- Understanding what makes sonic logos effective
- Briefing sound designers on logo requirements
- Analyzing competitor sonic logos
- Adapting existing logos for new contexts
Methodology Foundation
Source: Walter Werzowa (Intel) + Case Studies (Netflix, McDonald's, Mastercard)
Core Principle: "The simpler the chime, the more memorable." Intel's 5-note logo plays somewhere in the world every five minutes. Netflix's 2-beat "ta-dum" is recognized globally. Effective sonic logos distill brand essence into the simplest possible audio signature that creates instant recognition.
Why This Matters: A sonic logo is the audio equivalent of a visual logo—used thousands of times across every touchpoint. Getting it right creates compounding brand equity. Getting it wrong means constant noise pollution that damages rather than builds the brand.
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures production workflow | Final creative direction |
| Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices |
| Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards |
| Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions |
| Generates script outlines | Final script approval |
What This Skill Does
- Applies proven design principles - Simplicity, distinctiveness, flexibility
- Guides composition - Note selection, duration, instrumentation
- Evaluates effectiveness - Criteria for success
- Ensures longevity - Timeless vs. trendy choices
- Plans for flexibility - Variations and adaptations
How to Use
Design Sonic Logo
Help me design a sonic logo for [brand].
Brand personality: [traits]
Visual logo description: [what it looks like]
Primary use case: [where it will be heard most]
Duration target: [seconds]
Evaluate Sonic Logo
Evaluate this sonic logo design against best practices:
[Describe the logo or provide context]
Brand it represents: [brand]
Concerns: [what you're unsure about]
Create Design Brief
Create a sonic logo brief for a sound designer:
Brand: [company]
Values: [personality]
References: [sonic logos you like]
Requirements: [technical constraints]
Instructions
When designing audio logos, follow this methodology:
Step 1: Understand the Design Principles
Core principles from the masters.
## The 5 Principles of Effective Sonic Logos
### 1. SIMPLICITY
"The simpler the chime, the more memorable."
**Intel** (Walter Werzowa, 1994):
- 5 notes, 3 seconds
- Pattern: D♭ D♭ G♭ D♭ A♭
- "Estimated to play somewhere in the world every five minutes"
**Netflix** (2015):
- 2 notes (16th note timpani), 2.5 seconds
- D2 and D3 (octave)
- "The unofficial sound of binge-watch sessions"
**Rule**: If you can't hum it after one hearing, it's too complex.
### 2. DISTINCTIVENESS
Must be unlike anything else in the category.
**What makes it unique?**
- Unusual interval combination
- Distinctive timbre
- Unexpected rhythm
- Signature production element
**Test**: Play for someone who's never heard it.
"What brand might this be for?"
If they guess correctly (or close), you've hit brand alignment.
If they guess your competitor, redesign.
### 3. ALIGNMENT
Sound must match visual identity and brand values.
**Intel's logic** (Werzowa):
"Marrying computerized and physical sounds" created both
"futuristic" and "familiar"—matching Intel's position as
the technology behind everyday computing.
**Translation test**:
If your visual logo became a sound, what would it be?
- Sharp angles = percussive, defined
- Soft curves = rounded, flowing
- Bold colors = full, saturated sound
- Minimal design = sparse, clean audio
### 4. FLEXIBILITY
Must work across every context.
**Test across**:
- Video end-frame (with logo)
- Audio-only (radio, podcast, phone)
- Large format (cinema, event)
- Small format (notification, app)
- Different durations (full vs. abbreviated)
**Mastercard's approach**:
Same 6-note DNA used in:
- Full sonic logo
- Payment confirmation beep
- Hold music
- Brand advertising
### 5. TIMELESSNESS
Should work for 10+ years without feeling dated.
**Timeless elements**:
- Classic instruments or synthesis
- Clean production
- Focus on melody over production tricks
- Avoids trendy sounds
**Dating elements** (avoid):
- Heavily processed vocals
- Specific genre markers
- Technology-dependent sounds
- Trendy production techniques
**Intel's longevity**: Created 1994, still recognizable 30+ years later.
Same basic DNA with occasional production refreshes.
Step 2: Define the Parameters
Establish constraints before composing.
## Sonic Logo Specifications
### Duration
| Length | Use Case | Trade-off |
|--------|----------|-----------|
| 1-2 sec | Notifications, quick hits | Less melodic, more impact |
| 2-3 sec | Standard logo | Ideal balance |
| 3-5 sec | Video end-frames, cinema | More expression, attention required |
| 5+ sec | Extended brand moment | Risk of overstaying welcome |
**Recommendation**: Design at 2.5-3 seconds, create shorter cut-downs.
### Note Count
- **2-3 notes**: Ultra-simple, impact-focused (Netflix)
- **4-5 notes**: Balanced memorability (Intel)
- **6-7 notes**: More melodic, requires more time (Mastercard)
- **8+ notes**: Usually too complex
### Tonal Considerations
- **Key**: Major (positive), minor (dramatic), modal (unique)
- **Interval**: Distinctive but not dissonant
- **Resolution**: Typically ends on stable tone
### Instrumentation Categories
| Style | Character | Example Brands |
|-------|-----------|----------------|
| Electronic/Synthetic | Modern, tech-forward | Intel, Audi |
| Orchestral | Premium, established | NBC, THX |
| Acoustic | Warm, human | McDonald's |
| Hybrid | Balanced, versatile | Netflix |
| Vocal | Distinctive, human | T-Mobile |
Step 3: Analyze the Icons
Learn from proven success.
## Case Study Analysis
### Intel - "The Bong" (1994)
**Creator**: Walter Werzowa
**Notes**: D♭ D♭ G♭ D♭ A♭ (5 notes)
**Duration**: 3 seconds
**What makes it work**:
- "Marrying computerized and physical sounds"
- Starts with repetition (D♭ D♭) for attention
- Rises to unexpected note (G♭) for interest
- Returns home but ends on A♭ (not D♭)—creates forward momentum
- Sound design: synth + mallet percussion hybrid
**Lesson**: Blend familiar and unexpected. Create journey in 3 seconds.
---
### Netflix - "Ta-Dum" (2015)
**Notes**: D2, D3 (2 notes, octave apart)
**Duration**: 2.5 seconds
**What makes it work**:
- Ultra-simple (just 2 beats)
- Deep timpani = gravitas, cinema quality
- Octave jump = opening, invitation
- Reverb creates space = premium positioning
- Perfect timing triggers anticipation
**Lesson**: Brevity is power. Two beats can be enough.
---
### McDonald's - "I'm Lovin' It" (2003)
**Notes**: D E F# B A ("ba-da-ba-ba-ba")
**Duration**: ~2 seconds (melodic hook)
**What makes it work**:
- Musical pattern is the identifier (no lyrics needed)
- Rhythmic pattern as memorable as notes
- Works as vocal or instrumental
- Adapts to any language/market
- Ultra-flexible for variations
**Lesson**: Melodic pattern > specific lyrics. Flexibility = longevity.
---
### Mastercard - "Sonic DNA" (2019)
**Notes**: 6-note tune
**Duration**: Variable (full logo to single confirmation tone)
**What makes it work**:
- Same DNA in every asset
- Sonic logo, acceptance sound, brand music all connected
- "Seamless familiarity" across touchpoints
- System thinking, not just logo thinking
**Lesson**: Design the DNA, then derive everything from it.
Step 4: Composition Approach
How to create the logo.
## Composition Process
### Approach 1: Start with Feeling
1. What emotion should the logo trigger?
2. What musical elements create that emotion?
3. Simplify to essence
**Example**:
- Target emotion: "Confident anticipation"
- Musical elements: Rising motion, strong resolution, moderate tempo
- Simplify: 4-note upward phrase, ending on firm beat
### Approach 2: Start with Brand Shape
1. Describe the visual logo as sound
2. Translate characteristics to audio
3. Compose to match
**Example**:
- Visual: Sharp angles, bold sans-serif, red and black
- Audio translation: Percussive, defined edges, bold timbre
- Compose: Staccato notes, clean synthesis, strong attack
### Approach 3: Start with Use Case
1. Where will this primarily be heard?
2. What audio context surrounds it?
3. Design to stand out appropriately
**Example**:
- Primary use: Video end-frames after voice-over
- Context: Following human speech, preceding silence
- Design: Contrast from speech (melodic), bridges to silence (reverb tail)
### Iteration Process
1. **Create 5-10 variations** (rough sketches)
2. **Test with fresh ears** (sleep on it, revisit)
3. **Narrow to 3 candidates** (different approaches)
4. **Test in context** (actual use cases, not isolation)
5. **Refine winner** (polish production)
6. **Create variations** (short, long, stems)
Step 5: Evaluate and Test
Assess effectiveness systematically.
## Evaluation Criteria
### Immediate Tests
**Singability Test**
Play once. Wait 5 minutes. Can you hum it?
□ Yes (pass) □ No (simplify)
**Distraction Test**
Play while doing something else. Does it grab attention?
□ Yes (pass) □ No (increase impact)
**Context Test**
Play after video content. Does it feel like natural ending?
□ Yes (pass) □ No (adjust dynamics)
### Comparative Tests
**Distinctiveness Test**
Play your logo, then 3 competitor logos (randomized).
Ask listener to identify yours.
□ Easy to identify (pass) □ Confused with others (differentiate)
**Attribute Association Test**
Play logo, ask: "What words describe this brand?"
□ Matches brand values (pass) □ Wrong associations (redesign)
### Long-Term Tests
**Fatigue Test**
Listen 10+ times in a row. Do you hate it?
□ Still tolerable (pass) □ Annoying (simplify or adjust timbre)
**Memory Test**
Wait 24 hours. Can you recall it?
□ Yes (pass) □ No (make more distinctive)
### Stakeholder Evaluation
Rate each criterion 1-5:
| Criterion | Rating | Notes |
|-----------|--------|-------|
| Simplicity | /5 | |
| Distinctiveness | /5 | |
| Brand alignment | /5 | |
| Flexibility | /5 | |
| Emotional impact | /5 | |
| Memorability | /5 | |
| **Total** | /30 | |
**Scoring**:
- 25-30: Excellent candidate
- 20-24: Good, minor refinement
- 15-19: Needs significant work
- Below 15: Start over
Step 6: Production and Delivery
Final steps for professional delivery.
## Production Specifications
### Technical Requirements
**Master Files**:
- Format: WAV, 48kHz, 24-bit
- Stereo and mono versions
- Headroom: Peak at -1 dB
- No limiting on master (allow flexibility)
**Delivery Formats**:
- WAV (master quality)
- AIFF (Apple ecosystem)
- MP3 320kbps (web use)
- M4A/AAC (mobile)
### Variation Suite
**Duration Variations**:
- Full (primary logo, ~3 sec)
- Short (truncated, ~1.5 sec)
- Sting (single hit, <1 sec)
**Context Variations**:
- With reverb tail (video end)
- Dry/tight (tight edits)
- Extended (event/cinema)
**Stem Delivery**:
- Melodic elements (separate)
- Rhythmic elements (separate)
- Full mix
### Documentation
Deliver with:
- Technical specifications
- Usage guidelines
- Variation descriptions
- Contact for questions
### File Naming Convention
[Brand]SonicLogo[Variation]_[Format].[ext]
Examples: TechBrand_SonicLogo_Full_Master.wav TechBrand_SonicLogo_Short_Stereo.wav TechBrand_SonicLogo_Sting_Mono.mp3
Examples
Example 1: Tech Startup Sonic Logo
Context: Creating sonic logo for a productivity app.
Input:
Design a sonic logo for FlowState, a focus/productivity app. Brand is calm, focused, premium. Visual logo is a subtle gradient circle with soft edges. Primary use: app launch and completion sounds.
Output:
FlowState Sonic Logo Design
Brand Analysis
- Values: Calm, focused, premium
- Visual: Soft gradient, circle, gentle
- Context: App sounds (needs to be non-intrusive)
Design Direction
Emotional target: "Calm arrival"—the feeling of settling into focus
Sonic translation:
- Calm → Soft attack, rounded tones, minor/major ambiguity
- Focused → Clean, uncluttered, single melodic line
- Premium → Refined timbre, subtle complexity, space
Composition Recommendation
Structure: 3-note descending phrase + resolution
- Notes: G → E → C → (breath) → G (octave up, soft)
- Pattern represents: Settling down, then lifting into focus
Rationale:
- Descending motion = calming (brain research supports this)
- Final rising note = optimism, beginning
- Major resolution = positive completion
Duration: 2.5 seconds
Instrumentation:
- Primary: Soft mallet (vibraphone/marimba hybrid)
- Support: Subtle sine wave pad
- Character: Warm, organic, premium
Production Notes
- Soft attack (no percussive hit)
- Generous reverb (spacious, not distant)
- Gentle compression (natural dynamics)
- Filter: Slight high-end roll-off (warmth)
Variation Suite
| Variation | Duration | Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| Full | 2.5 sec | App launch, marketing |
| Completion | 1.5 sec | Task complete sound |
| Subtle | 1 sec | Background notification |
| Extended | 4 sec | Brand video end |
Mock-Up Brief for Sound Designer
"Create a 3-note descending melodic phrase with a soft mallet sound, followed by a gentle rising resolution note. Think: the feeling of taking a deep breath and settling into productive work. Warm, premium, never harsh. Should feel like an invitation, not a demand."
Example 2: Evaluating Agency Proposals
Context: Evaluating three sonic logo options from an agency.
Input:
We received 3 sonic logo options from our agency. How do I evaluate them? Brand is a B2B fintech, values are trust, innovation, precision.
Output:
Sonic Logo Evaluation Framework
Evaluation Scorecard
Rate each option 1-5 on these criteria:
| Criterion | Option A | Option B | Option C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simplicity (can hum after 1 listen?) | |||
| Distinctiveness (unlike competitors?) | |||
| Trust (does it evoke reliability?) | |||
| Innovation (modern without gimmicky?) | |||
| Precision (clean, not messy?) | |||
| Flexibility (works in all contexts?) | |||
| Memorability (recall after 24 hours?) | |||
| TOTAL | /35 | /35 | /35 |
Context Testing
Test each in actual use:
- After a product demo video
- As a notification sound (quieter, shorter)
- Over a phone line (compressed audio)
- In a trade show environment (noisy)
| Context | Option A | Option B | Option C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Video end-frame | |||
| Notification | |||
| Phone quality | |||
| Noisy environment |
Stakeholder Gut Check
Ask 3-5 colleagues who haven't heard these:
- Play each blind (don't reveal which is which)
- Ask: "What words describe this company?"
- Ask: "Which would you trust with your money?"
- Ask: "Which is most memorable?"
Red Flags to Watch For
Avoid if:
- Too long (>4 seconds for primary use)
- Too complex (>6 distinct notes)
- Sounds like existing brand (legal risk)
- Uses trendy sound design that will date
- Team dislikes it but can't articulate why
- Requires explanation to understand
Final Decision Framework
Choose the logo that:
- Scores highest overall
- Performs well across ALL contexts (not just one)
- Has stakeholder consensus (or majority)
- Agency can articulate the "why"
- You won't tire of in 1,000 hearings
Checklists & Templates
Sonic Logo Design Brief
## Sonic Logo Brief: [Brand]
### Brand Context
**Company**: [name]
**Industry**: [sector]
**Brand values**: [3-5 traits]
**Visual logo description**: [what it looks like]
### Audio Direction
**Primary emotion**: [target feeling]
**Sonic references**: [2-3 logos you admire]
**What to avoid**: [sounds/styles not right]
### Technical Requirements
**Primary duration**: [X seconds]
**Variations needed**: [list]
**File formats**: [WAV, MP3, etc.]
### Use Cases (Priority Order)
1. [Primary use]
2. [Secondary use]
3. [Tertiary use]
### Timeline
**First concepts**: [date]
**Revisions**: [date]
**Final delivery**: [date]
### Budget
[Range]
### Approval Process
**Decision maker**: [name]
**Stakeholders**: [names]
Evaluation Quick Checklist
## Sonic Logo Evaluation
□ Memorable after one listen?
□ Distinctive from competitors?
□ Aligned with brand values?
□ Works in video context?
□ Works as notification/short version?
□ Not annoying after 10 listens?
□ Still memorable after 24 hours?
□ Production quality is professional?
□ Duration appropriate for use cases?
□ Stakeholders approve?
Skill Boundaries
What This Skill Does Well
- Structuring audio production workflows
- Providing technical guidance
- Creating quality checklists
- Suggesting creative approaches
What This Skill Cannot Do
- Replace audio engineering expertise
- Make subjective creative decisions
- Access or edit audio files directly
- Guarantee commercial success
References
- Walter Werzowa. Interview on Intel's Sonic Logo
- Twenty Thousand Hertz. "Intel Inside" Podcast Episode
- Adweek. "How 5 Companies Built Sonic Logos"
- Voices.com. "Sonic Logos Master Class"
Related Skills
- sonic-branding - Full audio brand strategy
- ux-sound-design - Product sound systems
- sound-design-murch - Audio design principles
Skill Metadata (Internal Use)
name: audio-logo-design
category: audio
subcategory: branding
version: 1.0
author: MKTG Skills
source_expert: Walter Werzowa, Intel/Netflix/McDonald's Case Studies
source_work: Sonic Logo Best Practices
difficulty: advanced
estimated_value: $5,000-50,000 (equivalent design project)
tags: [sonic-logo, audio-branding, mnemonic, brand-sound]
created: 2026-01-26
updated: 2026-01-26
GitHub 仓库
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