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A logo too far: What separates a successful rebrand from a failure

To modernize its image, Cracker Barrel swapped its heritage-rich logo for a sleek, simplified wordmark. The change sparked immediate backlash, forcing the company to reverse course days later.

The rebrand faltered for several reasons, chief among them a failure to understand its core audience.

  • “[Cracker Barrel] wanted to attract new customers, but you also have to retain your current customer base. They don’t want a clean, sleek space,” said our analyst Zak Stambor on a recent episode of “Behind the Numbers.”
  • Equally problematic, the new design didn't appeal to the younger demographic the company was trying to attract.
  • "If you're looking to attract Gen Z, for example, I don't think 'blah' is what's going to do it," said our analyst Rachel Wolff. "You're both alienating your existing customer base and not doing enough to attract the customer that you want."

What separates a successful rebrand from a failed one often comes down to purpose.

"The most important thing is to have a clear story to tell," noted Wolff. "The reason that you're updating your brand shouldn't just be, 'we needed a new logo.' There has to be some sort of narrative behind it that consumers and people within the company can get behind."

The crucial difference between refresh and rebrand

A brand refresh typically involves cosmetic updates to visual elements like logos, fonts, and colors to keep pace with current design trends. In contrast, a full rebrand represents a fundamental shift in a company's identity.

"One is just cosmetic and the other is a fundamental rethinking or repositioning of what the brand is, who its target audience is, what its mission is, and what it is seeking to achieve," explained Stambor.

  • This distinction matters because the approach determines execution strategy and customer expectations.
  • When Cracker Barrel attempted a simple refresh that touched core elements of its brand identity, it triggered an immediate negative response from loyal customers who felt the company was abandoning its heritage.

Do consumers notice subtle changes?

Many brand updates go unnoticed by consumers.

  • This gives companies freedom to make incremental updates without risking the backlash Cracker Barrel experienced.
  • These small, iterative changes help brands stay fresh even when consumers don't consciously notice the differences.

"Small, iterative steps are important for keeping the brand feeling fresh even when somebody doesn't notice it," Stambor explained. "Because if you don't take those steps to modernize, over time as your competitors do, then your brand starts to feel stale."

When a rebrand actually works

Not all rebrands end in disaster.

Kia's 2021 transformation replaced its familiar red oval logo with a modern, geometric silver design that some consumers initially misread as "KN."

  • However, this confusion worked in the company's favor.
  • "It generated a lot of buzz, some media attention, and just people talking about the brand in a way that I don't think people have ever quite talked about Kia," Stambor noted.
  • The logo change coincided with the launch of forward-looking vehicles that matched the new brand positioning, creating a cohesive narrative that resonated with consumers.

How to mitigate rebrand risks

Rebranding is about more than swapping out a logo—it’s about intention and authenticity. It should begin with a narrative explaining the change, backed by real shifts within the company.

  • Research is key. “Do a logo audit or a brand vision audit and talk to your customers, talk to the customers you’re trying to get into your fold,” said podcast host Suzy Davidkhanian.
  • A strong rebrand also means standing for something meaningful, not just chasing modernization. As Stambor noted, brands should “capture attention in a good way,” pointing to Gap’s dull redesign as a cautionary tale.
  • Testing and learning before rollout helps ensure the new identity resonates.

Listen to the full episode

This article was prepared with the assistance of generative AI tools to support content organization, summarization, and drafting. All AI-generated contributions have been reviewed, fact-checked, and verified for accuracy and originality by EMARKETER editors. Any recommendations reflect EMARKETER’s research and human judgment.

This was originally featured in the Retail Daily newsletter. For more retail insights, statistics, and trends, subscribe here.

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