Branding · 12 March 2026

Logo Design Checklist for Small Businesses

Questions Malaysian SMBs should answer before commissioning a logo — formats, lockups, revisions, and file handoff.

Branding
Platform tools, print specs, and hosting options change. Confirm current vendor requirements and budget before committing to a layout or file format.

A logo project fails quietly when the brief is vague and the handoff is incomplete. Malaysian small businesses often ask for “a nice logo” on Monday and need a bunting artwork by Friday — without agreeing on colours, languages, or file types. This checklist helps you commission a mark that survives print shops, embroidery vendors, and social crops.

Before you hire anyone

  • [ ] Trade name locked — Spelling matches SSM registration and bank account if applicable.
  • [ ] Primary language — Malay, English, or dual-line lockup decided.
  • [ ] Industry clarity — Designer sees your actual products or services, not only a mood board from Pinterest.
  • [ ] Competitor scan — Note what to avoid visually so you do not blend into the same icon set.
  • [ ] Budget and timeline — Realistic for concept rounds plus file pack delivery.

Creative direction questions

  • [ ] Three adjectives describing desired personality (e.g. modern, warm, precise).
  • [ ] Three adjectives describing what to avoid (e.g. childish, aggressive, cliché).
  • [ ] Colour preferences with reasoning — not “blue because favourite colour” unless personal brand.
  • [ ] Symbol versus wordmark preference — icon optional for many service SMBs.
  • [ ] Cultural or religious sensitivities for your audience.

Deliverables to specify in writing

  • [ ] Primary logo (colour).
  • [ ] Reversed logo for dark backgrounds.
  • [ ] Monochrome black and white versions.
  • [ ] Icon-only mark if applicable (app, avatar).
  • [ ] Clear space and minimum size rules.
  • [ ] Colour specs: hex, CMYK, Pantone if needed.
  • [ ] Vector source files (AI, EPS, SVG) plus PNG exports.

Revision process

  • [ ] Number of concept directions in round one (often 2–3).
  • [ ] Number of revision rounds included.
  • [ ] How feedback is submitted — one consolidated email beats five WhatsApp threads.
  • [ ] Who has final approval internally — avoid committee design by endless forward chains.

Production tests before final sign-off

  • [ ] Print on desktop laser at small size — still readable?
  • [ ] View on phone at 48px — detail survives?
  • [ ] Mock on signboard photo or storefront template.
  • [ ] Send embroidery vendor a one-colour version for stitch count estimate.
  • [ ] Check contrast on both light and dark backgrounds.

Legal and ownership

  • [ ] Contract states you own final approved artwork.
  • [ ] Stock elements licensed for commercial use.
  • [ ] Designer retains no exclusive right to resell your custom mark.
  • [ ] Optional trademark search — especially if expanding nationwide.

After delivery

  • [ ] Files stored in owned cloud folder, not only on designer’s drive.
  • [ ] Staff told which version to use on invoices versus social.
  • [ ] Added to upcoming brand identity one-pager.

Red flags when evaluating designers

  • Portfolio is all mockups, no real client names or live links.
  • Cannot explain print versus web export.
  • Promises unlimited revisions without scope.
  • Delivers JPEG-only logo on “final” day.

When to postpone a logo project

If your business name may change after partnership talks, or you have not decided product line, pause. A RM redo hurts more than waiting a month.

Logos are not magic. They work when surrounded by consistent service and repeated exposure. This checklist ensures the mark you pay for functions in Malaysian real-world production — not only on a designer’s Behance grid.

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