Philip, A good logo would help you grow your sales. BUT I'd like to endorse what Artie said about doing a bit of research and planning before applying a logo. I work for a R&D manufacturing company and am on tech side, but have learned from the marketeers just how very important this is. We are now on our 3rd logo in 20 years of trading, if we had known then what we know now we would have avoided some mistakes. I'm not an expert, so suggest you read around a bit before taking the plunge.
Logos are part of your brand. Whether you like it or not, you have a brand and a brand image already. For instance, you make quality tools, you are a craftsman, over time you will get a good reputation and more people will buy your tools, a logo gives you more recognition in the market. Think Stanley or Veritas for a successful brand etc. If you make good tools then people will copy them, a logo and maybe a simple copyright will give you protection from cheaper poor quality copies. The Logo will give recognition, you could then start to project your designs with copyright etc if the size of business warrants it.
Read up or speak to someone from the more psychological expertise and a creative type before you choose your loga. A good logo is simple and says a bit about you, it is also easy to recognise when printed small (ie avoid a long string of letters or words in the logo). The other thing to consider is how divers is your product range. If you have high quality well made tools and some cheap and cheerful ones, then you might want to have two separate identities so you don't confuse your customer base. I think Stanley would do well to badge the cheap imports under a different brand to their quality tools, in my view they have damaged their brand by mixing the too.
I'm not an expert, but its worth considering the 'dark arts of marketing' before you launch your first logo. A cheap sticker could do more harm than good.
If you choose carefully then the same logo will endure as you grow your business. Good luck.
Logos are part of your brand. Whether you like it or not, you have a brand and a brand image already. For instance, you make quality tools, you are a craftsman, over time you will get a good reputation and more people will buy your tools, a logo gives you more recognition in the market. Think Stanley or Veritas for a successful brand etc. If you make good tools then people will copy them, a logo and maybe a simple copyright will give you protection from cheaper poor quality copies. The Logo will give recognition, you could then start to project your designs with copyright etc if the size of business warrants it.
Read up or speak to someone from the more psychological expertise and a creative type before you choose your loga. A good logo is simple and says a bit about you, it is also easy to recognise when printed small (ie avoid a long string of letters or words in the logo). The other thing to consider is how divers is your product range. If you have high quality well made tools and some cheap and cheerful ones, then you might want to have two separate identities so you don't confuse your customer base. I think Stanley would do well to badge the cheap imports under a different brand to their quality tools, in my view they have damaged their brand by mixing the too.
I'm not an expert, but its worth considering the 'dark arts of marketing' before you launch your first logo. A cheap sticker could do more harm than good.
If you choose carefully then the same logo will endure as you grow your business. Good luck.