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November 7th, 2025

Why So Many Rebrands Feel Bland

And What It Takes to Keep Character Alive

There’s a frustratingly predictable pattern in the world of branding: a beloved company announces a “modern refresh,” only to emerge looking like every other brand on the shelf. What once felt warm, textured, and full of life becomes flat, sanitized, and instantly forgettable. The logo still works; it scales, it passes accessibility, it sits neatly in a design system. But it doesn’t move you anymore.

Why does this keep happening? And more importantly, how do you modernize without stripping away the essence that makes a brand memorable? Let’s look at what drives this wave of “blanding,” and how thoughtful work, like the redesign of the Shakespeare fishing brand, proves there’s a better way forward.

“A rebrand shouldn’t feel like a uniform for your business—it should feel like a new set of clothes your brand can grow into.”

That line captures what too many rebrands get wrong. The goal of a redesign shouldn’t be conformity; it should be evolution. A brand should still feel like itself—just sharper, more confident, and ready for what’s next.

The Usual Suspects Behind the “Blanding” Trend

1. Corporate Risk Aversion

Most rebrands at scale are done by committee, and design-by-committee rarely produces brave ideas. When a project is filtered through dozens of stakeholders, legal teams, and regional divisions, what started as bold becomes watered down to the least controversial version possible.

The outcome isn’t something that people love, it’s something that no one hates. In the process, the spark of originality is replaced with soulless polish.

2. Digital-First Constraints

Brands today have to function everywhere: app icons, mobile banners, smartwatches, and vehicle wraps. A logo must perform as well at 16 pixels as it does on a billboard. That demand for scalability leads to simplification, and while that’s not inherently bad, it often flattens the charm and craftsmanship that once made logos feel human. Depth, shading, and storytelling get traded for clean geometry and sans-serif neutrality.

3. Global Neutrality and Cultural Flattening

As companies expand internationally, they often strip away regional character to avoid alienating a global audience. The Americana warmth of Cracker Barrel or the playful energy of legacy food brands gets swapped for something “safe” and “universal.”

But global neutrality can be a trap. The broader your brand tries to appeal, the less distinct it often becomes.

4. System Over Story

Rebrands are now about design systems, not logos. The brief isn’t “What story does this mark tell?” but “How does it scale across 600 touchpoints?”

Consistency becomes the goal, but when design systems take precedence over soul, the result feels more engineered than inspired. Many brands look like they were built to serve software, not people.

5. The Tech-Look Contagion

When brands like Google, Airbnb, and Spotify embraced flat minimalism, the aesthetic became synonymous with modernity. Suddenly, everyone, from insurance companies to fast-food chains, wanted to look like a tech startup. The result is an ocean of rounded sans-serifs and simplified marks that feel clean but indistinguishable.

What Happens When You Lose the Soul

This is the invisible cost of “modernizing” too far. When heritage details and tactile charm are stripped away, so is the emotional memory people associate with your brand. A logo isn’t just a mark; it’s a mnemonic trigger for trust, nostalgia, and recognition. Every subtle curve, stroke weight, or color tone tells a story. Remove those cues, and the brand becomes visually efficient but emotionally empty.

When Brands Get It Wrong and Right

Cracker Barrel—When Familiarity Is the Brand

Cracker Barrel’s recent attempt at a rebrand is a masterclass in missing the point. The company replaced its hand-drawn Americana logo and the iconic “Old Timer” figure with a minimal, geometric version meant to signal modern relevance. But customers didn’t see modernization, they saw erasure.

The backlash was immediate. Loyal patrons accused the brand of losing its soul, abandoning its rustic charm for a generic corporate identity. Within days, Cracker Barrel reversed course and reinstated its original logo. The lesson is clear: when your identity is built on familiarity and nostalgia, stripping away those cues doesn’t make you fresh, it makes you unrecognizable.

Shakespeare—A Rebrand That Respected Its Roots

Then there’s our reimagining of the Shakespeare fishing brand, a rare example of how to modernize without sterilizing. Shakespeare is a name with nearly a century of history, and for many anglers, its identity evokes nostalgia, craftsmanship, and time outdoors with family. Our challenge was to bring Shakespeare into the modern era while honoring that emotional lineage.

Instead of starting from scratch, we built on what was already loved. The redesign distilled the legacy logo into something sleeker, more versatile, and system-ready, but it retained the iconic script and colorway that anglers immediately associate with Shakespeare. The project extended beyond the logo to a full Visual Brand Language (VBL): cohesive patterns, materials, finishes, and packaging cues that translate across audiences and product lines.

The result is a brand that feels modern, capable, and approachable without losing its timeless energy. The new Shakespeare mark still carries a sense of play and craftsmanship, proof that you can evolve without erasing your DNA.

The Real Lesson: Modernization Shouldn’t Mean Sanitization

Rebrands that succeed understand that simplification doesn’t have to equal soullessness. The goal isn’t to make your brand “look new,” it’s to make your story feel relevant again. Shakespeare works because it honors continuity, not by clinging to the past, but by treating heritage as a design asset rather than a constraint.

When you design from a place of memory, your audience feels it. They don’t just see a new logo; they see a familiar friend that’s grown with them.

A Playbook for Rebranding Without Losing Character

Principle In Practice
Start from identity, not trend. Begin by rediscovering your brand’s essence, what it means to people, before studying what’s “in style.”
Preserve emotional signifiers. Keep certain shapes, colors, or gestures that carry nostalgic weight. They’re not decoration; they’re emotional cues.
Design with layers, not flatness. Create a brand identity system that can flex, minimal in digital spaces and expressive in print or product.
Build consistency through story, not sameness. Cohesion comes from narrative alignment, not identical grids.
Simplify with intention. Remove what clutters, not what characterizes.
Honor the heritage. Use your history as a foundation, not something to escape from.

Final Thought

A good rebrand doesn’t erase history; it refines it. It updates how a story is told without changing the story itself. The best design work, like BOLTGROUP’s Shakespeare project, remembers that brands aren’t built in design systems or pitch decks. They live in memories, associations, and moments of connection.

Modernization should make those connections stronger, not simpler. When done right, a rebrand isn’t the death of character, it’s its renewal.

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