Fido Rebrand
November 7th, 2008
Design: Bos
Client: Fido Solutions Inc., Montreal, PQ.
Date: 2008

(apologies for the lo-res screen grab, fido’s press & media section is woefully under-populated)
For years Fido and Rogers were the only two cellular providers running GSM networks in Canada (Bell and Telus run CDMA networks). In 2004 Rogers bought Fido and became Canada’s sole GSM provider. Perhaps due to the public outcry at Rogers’ new monopoly status, the Fido infrastructure was left relatively independent and untouched — the brand, however, evolved.
It seemed for a time as if Rogers was attempting to turn Fido into their boutique brand while widening the Rogers brand’s reach across families, suburbanites, and the lower-middle class. Over the last three years Fido/Rogers has invested significantly in revamping Fido stores with sleek black leather furniture, dark hardwood floors, and other shiny, ‘urban’ design elements. They’ve also been running a very ‘metropolitan’ campaign, positioning Fido as the ‘city’ phone, with ‘city’ plans, for young urban professionals — in stark contrast to Rogers come-one-come-all, broad strokes campaigns.
Perhaps the clearest and most recent example of this dichotomy would be the two brands’ handling of the iPhone launch last July: Fido stores are still plastered with iPhone banners and displays, with the front page of fido.ca completely redesigned to match the black and silver colour scheme of the phone. On the other hand Rogers, having been publicly trounced over it’s over-priced plans — the very same plans which Fido customers made few complaints about — put relatively little focus on the iPhone post-launch.
All this in spite of the fact that the two brands carry relatively similar phones with relatively similar plans — a real testament to the power of branding.
However, something a little strange happened this week: Rogers/Fido, presumably under increasing pressure from Telus’s budget brand Koodo, and Bell’s budget-and-near-forgotten Solo brand, did a complete 180 and rebranded Fido with ultra simple No Name Brand inspired black-helvetica-on-yellow graphics, and a tagline of ‘giving low prices a good home’.
As a designer uncertain about how the economy will affect my practice, it’s certainly reassuring to see a company use design to differentiate down in the market instead of seeing design as a way to differentiate up. But one has to wonder if it was wise to walk away from all of the time and money invested in turning Fido into a luxury brand when Rogers could just as easily have spun off a low-cost brand just as Telus and Bell did.
Fido has suddenly gone from being Rogers’ urban/luxury brand to an unabashedly budget brand — but will it still be boutique?
There’s a case to be made that the young, hip, boutique crowd that this and other low-budget providers are targeting will probably be the worst hit by the downturn; especially given that they’ve grown so accustomed to living beyond their means that when told to tighten their belts they get confused by the fact that their new skinny leg japanese denim jeans don’t have belt loops.
Perhaps budget is the new boutique.
Although, in our current economic crisis the notion of boutique budget — combining stylish brand elements with superfluous services at prices that, while lower than average, should still be seen as luxury expenditures during a recession — is the branding equivalent of Marie Antoinette’s oft-quoted (but factually inaccurate) ‘let them eat cake’.
It will be interesting to see if these boutique budget brands really do offer substantial savings or if, just like the Fido/Rogers brand dichotomy, it’s all just an expensive wolf in a penny-pinching sheep’s clothing.
I guess only time will tell.
-John Ryan
Entry Filed under: Advertising,Brand,Graphics,Logo
11 Comments Add your own
1. Todd Falkowsky | November 7th, 2008 at 09:39
Great insight, interesting post!
We will have to wait and see how the economic downturn will affect the “Design Thinking” world.
Hopefully clients will recognize that brand design is a powerful ally in their weathering and prospering in tough times (the unemployment numbers released this morning seem to indicate that the Canadian markets will be ok).
Thanks for the great post.
TF
2. David R | November 7th, 2008 at 09:48
It’s like Don Watts and Koodo Mobile had a baby… but, like, with a dog sperm donor.
Blech.
3. Sarah | November 7th, 2008 at 10:28
I kind of like it…
But you’re right about it being a huuuuge departure.
I can’t even imagine how they’ll implement it in their stores. Especially that one in the Eaton centre that they JUST RENOVATED. It’s all mid-century modern looking with teak and black leather, and this is veeeery no name brand.
It’ll be like mixing a west end loft with a Mississauga bulk food barn.
4. michael erdmann | November 7th, 2008 at 10:36
I don’t get the thinking…
You’ve got a an urban customer base, seemingly content to pay higher prices for a pretty package (or at least the same prices, but without complaint)… and now that there’s a down turn in the economy these same urbanites will WANT something that’s dressed like a back to school flyer (without the faintest touch of hipster irony… like say koodo)?
Shouldn’t the challenge be conveying the new lower priced services in a way that aligns with their aesthetic attitudes. Budget boutique makes sense, but if it looks like everyone else then by definition it ain’t boutique. I’d be more convinced if they pushed the budget look harder, so the brand stood out by virtue of it’s raw cheapness. This just looks like Best Buy and company.
5. Josh | November 7th, 2008 at 21:00
The old logo has always been something of an eyesore.
6. Taylor S | November 8th, 2008 at 14:17
This new logo is more of a step sideways than a step up from the old logo.
The brand in general works. But it really feels like they walked away from what was becoming a solid brand experience. The newly renovated Fido stores are one of my favorite electronics stores. They’re almost like little cellular Apple stores.
I agree with other posters: this new brand is more best buy and bulk barn than apple or fido.
7. Britt | November 9th, 2008 at 23:59
Goodness, no. I loathe this.
8. The CANADIAN DESIGN RESOU&hellip | November 10th, 2008 at 10:11
[...] Here’s the Fido logo before the recent rebrand. [...]
9. TraiaN | December 1st, 2008 at 17:11
I like the new brand of Fido. And the new plan prices are ok, too. The website is much clean now, it will make navigation very clear. Perhaps they should have hired an internet marketing company to take care of the migration to the new website. Fido did one mistake w.r.t. their online presence. Fido doesn’t know 301 redirects is the article I wrote about the missing 301 redirect.
10. The Parkdale Poster Lady &hellip | January 13th, 2009 at 22:03
[...] tons of great articles on design and branding – and all Canadian! (Check out this article on Fido’s rebrand. Hmmm….) I am sitting in a strange position on my living room floor. It is making my butt [...]
11. Fido Doesn’t Play N&hellip | March 2nd, 2009 at 17:44
[...] is, to put it mildly, unhappy with Fido (they apparently rebranded–who knew?). He’s a user of PhoneTag, a voicemail-to-text service with which we fell in [...]
Leave a Comment
Some HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>
Trackback this post | Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed