Full Definition
A single logo design is rarely enough. A professional logo system gives you a family of coordinated variations built from the same design DNA, each suited to different contexts. A complete logo system typically includes: **Primary logo**: The full version — usually wordmark + symbol together — used when space permits. This is the hero mark. **Secondary / stacked version**: A condensed arrangement (e.g., symbol above wordmark instead of beside it) for square or near-square spaces. **Icon / symbol only**: The symbol or initial letter mark, used at small sizes or when the brand is already established in context (like a social media profile photo). **Wordmark only**: The logotype without the symbol, used in contexts where the icon would be too detailed. **Reversed / white version**: For use on dark or coloured backgrounds. **Monochrome version**: A single-colour version for embroidery, stamps, or applications where colour printing isn't available. Each version should come with defined clear-space rules (how much empty space must surround the logo) and minimum size guidelines (the smallest size at which the logo remains legible). Businesses without a logo system often run into trouble: the single logo they have looks great on a website but breaks on a small Instagram profile photo or disappears when embroidered on a cap. Actionable tip: When briefing a designer, specifically ask for deliverables: primary, secondary, icon-only, reversed, and monochrome versions in both vector (SVG, AI, EPS) and raster (PNG at 3x resolution) formats. Any designer who pushes back on this scope is under-delivering.