
You’ve probably heard it before: your brand is more than your logo. But what does that actually mean in practice, and how do you know whether your brand is doing its job or quietly costing you clients? The truth is, most businesses in Zimbabwe are running on incomplete brand identities. They have a logo, maybe a good one, but the rest of the system is either nonexistent or inconsistent.
The result is a business that looks different on Facebook than it does on a flyer, sounds different in an email than it does in person, and struggles to build the kind of trust that turns strangers into paying customers. This checklist is designed to help you audit your brand from top to bottom. Go through each section honestly. The gaps you find are exactly where your next investment should go.
Section 1: Visual Identity
Your visual identity is the most immediately recognizable part of your brand. It’s what people see before they read a single word.
Logo
- Do you have a professionally designed logo, not a Canva template or a DIY attempt?
- Does your logo work in full color, black and white, and reversed (white on dark)?
- Do you have your logo in vector format (SVG or AI) so it can be scaled to any size without losing quality?
- Does your logo look appropriate at small sizes, such as a social media profile picture or a favicon?
- Is your logo distinct enough to be recognized without your business name next to it?
Color Palette
- Have you defined a primary color palette of 2–3 colors with exact HEX, RGB, and CMYK codes?
- Do you have 1–2 secondary or accent colors for supporting design elements?
- Are your brand colors used consistently across all touchpoints, print, digital, and signage?
- Have you checked that your color combinations meet basic accessibility contrast standards?
Typography & Imagery Style
- Do you have a defined visual style for photography: bright and clean, dark and moody, documentary, or editorial?
- Are the images on your social media and website consistent in style and quality?
- Do you avoid using low resolution, watermarked, or obviously stock images?
Section 2: Brand Message
Your visual identity gets attention. Your messaging keeps it and converts it.
Brand Name & Tagline
- Is your brand name easy to spell, pronounce, and remember?
- Do you have a tagline that communicates what you do and who you serve in one line?
- Does your tagline work in both English and, where relevant, Shona or Ndebele?
Value Proposition
- Can you clearly articulate what you offer, who it is for, and why it is better than the alternatives in two sentences or fewer?
- Is this value proposition prominently displayed on your website homepage and social media profiles?
Brand Voice
- Have you defined your brand’s personality in 3–5 adjectives (e.g., bold, approachable, expert, warm)?
- Is the tone of your captions, emails, and marketing materials consistent with this personality?
- Do your communications sound like a human being rather than a corporate machine?
Key Messages
- Have you identified 3–5 core messages you want your audience to associate with your brand?
Are these messages reflected consistently in your content, proposals, and conversations with clients?
Section 3: Brand Touchpoints
A brand identity is only as strong as its most inconsistent touchpoint. Every place a client or prospect interacts with your brand is an opportunity to either build or destroy trust.
Digital Presence
- Is your website professionally designed and mobile-friendly?
- Does your website clearly communicate what you do, who you serve, and how to get in touch?
- Are your social media profile photos, cover images, and bios consistent with your brand identity?
- Do your social media posts follow a consistent visual style and tone?
- Is your email address professional (yourname@yourdomain.com, not yourname@gmail.com)?
Print & Physical Materials
- Do you have a professionally designed business card?
- If you use flyers, brochures, or posters, are they consistent with your brand identity?
- Does your physical space, if you have one, reflect your brand identity through signage, colors, or design?
Proposals & Documents
- Are your quotes, invoices, and proposals branded and not plain Word documents?
- Do your email signatures include your logo, contact details, and website?
Section 4: Brand Strategy
The most visually impressive brand identity in the world will underperform without strategy behind it.
Target Audience
- Have you clearly defined who your ideal client is their industry, size, location, pain points, and goals?
- Does your brand identity speak directly to this audience, or is it trying to appeal to everyone?
Competitive Positioning
- Do you know who your main competitors are and how they present themselves?
Is your brand identity distinct enough to stand out from competitors in your space? - Have you identified a clear point of difference, something you offer or stand for that competitors do not?
Brand Guidelines
- Do you have a brand guidelines document that specifies how all of the above elements should be used?
- Have you shared these guidelines with everyone who creates content or materials for your business?
What To Do With Your Results
If you ticked every box, your brand is in excellent shape. The next step is making sure it stays consistent as your business grows. If you identified gaps, don’t panic. Almost every business has them. Prioritise in this order:
- Logo and color palette first; these underpin everything else.
- Value proposition and brand voice are second; without clear messaging, even beautiful design underperforms.
- Digital presence: Your website and social media profiles are your most visited brand touchpoints
- Brand guidelines last; once everything else is in place, document it so they stay consistent
At grafx.lab, we help businesses across Zimbabwe build complete brand identity systems from logo and guidelines to messaging and digital rollout. If this checklist revealed gaps you’re not sure how to fill, get in touch and let’s talk.