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Unicef Brand Book

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1
Brand
Book
and Brand Manual
Version 2.0
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
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Over the course of our 70-year history,
our name has evolved, our logo has
changed and our mission has grown
from reaching children in need after
World War II to reaching children
everywhere. One thing has remained
constant and true: Our commitment
to promoting the rights and
improving the lives of the world’s
most vulnerable, disadvantaged
children. Our new brand strategy,
UNICEF, for every child, reflects
this commitment and will help
harness the power of UNICEF to
achieve more results for children.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
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for every child, hope
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
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for every child, education
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
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for every child, dignity
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This Brand Book outlines the new global UNICEF brand strategy
for the entire organization, in compliance with the Global Regulatory
Framework. The accompanying Brand Manual version 2.0 includes
preliminary guidance to help you adapt it to everything we do, in
every country where we work.
This Brand Book may be used by all UNICEF teams and National
Committees, in conjunction with contractual terms and agreements,
to guide suppliers in producing materials for UNICEF. The Brand
Team welcomes questions and suggestions for improvement
to the brand guidance and brand assets.
Please contact the Brand Help Desk: [email protected]
For access to the online Brand Book and Manual, containing live
links to references, please visit http://bit.ly/UNICEF-brand-book
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
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Contents
Our Brand (Who we are)
For every child...................................................
Our story...........................................................
UNICEF in 60 words or less..............................
Why a new brand strategy?..............................
More than a tag line: UNICEF, for every child....
Our brand principles..........................................
Brand Manual (How we look)
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10
11
12
14
15
Graphic visual guide
Our visual identity.............................................
Logo signature..................................................
Colour...............................................................
Fonts.................................................................
Brand statement...............................................
Dos and Don’ts.................................................
Publications ......................................................
Video.................................................................
Photography......................................................
Social media......................................................
Web..................................................................
Slide presentations and stationery....................
Branded material and signage...........................
Campaigns........................................................
Photo credits.....................................................
NEXT PHASE
Full fundraising toolkit and editorial
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
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30
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37
41
44
52
55
57
60
63
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Our Brand
WHO WE ARE
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For every child
Whoever she is.
Wherever he lives.
Every child deserves a childhood.
A future.
A fair chance.
That’s why UNICEF is there.
For each and every child.
Working day in and day out.
In 190 countries and territories.
Reaching the hardest to reach.
The furthest from help.
The most excluded.
It’s why we stay to the end.
And never give up.
View brand videos here
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
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Our story
UNICEF was established in the aftermath of World War II to help
children whose lives and futures were at risk – no matter what
country they were from. The only thing that mattered to UNICEF was
reaching every child in need. What mattered was achieving results.
Today, with conflicts and crises around the world threatening and
displacing millions of children, and millions more facing poverty,
deprivation, violence, exploitation and discrimination, achieving results
for children matters more than ever – and achieving them for every
child is still UNICEF’s driving force.
We bring 70 years of field-tested expertise, a network that spans the
globe, a passion for innovation and a commitment to making every dollar
count. Impartial and non-political, we are never neutral when it comes
to protecting children’s rights and safeguarding their lives and futures.
We work day in and day out, in 190 countries and territories, and
some of the world’s toughest places, to reach the children who are
most at risk and most in need.
We work to save their lives. To defend their rights. To keep them
safe from harm. To give them a childhood in which they’re protected,
healthy and educated. To give them a fair chance to fulfil their
potential — so that someday, they can help build a better world.
And we never give up.
UNICEF, for every child.
Read UNICEF’s Mission Statement here
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UNICEF in 60 words or less
The following passages explain why UNICEF is for every child –
for use in all materials, including print, digital and social media.
Long form
UNICEF works in some of the world’s toughest places, to reach
the world’s most disadvantaged children. To save their lives.
To defend their rights. To help them fulfil their potential.
Across 190 countries and territories, we work for every child,
everywhere, every day, to build a better world for everyone.
And we never give up.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Short forms
UNICEF works in some of the world’s toughest places to save
children’s lives. To defend their rights. To help them fulfil their
potential. And we never give up. UNICEF, for every child.
UNICEF works in 190 countries and territories to save children’s
lives. To defend their rights. To help them fulfil their potential.
And we never give up. UNICEF, for every child.
UNICEF works relentlessly to save children’s lives, defend their
rights and help them fulfil their potential. And we never give up.
Read UNICEF Annual Report here
Read Results for Every Child here
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for every child, a childhood
Why a new brand strategy?
UNICEF – the United Nations Children’s Fund – is one of the
world’s most trusted and respected organizations – and the leading
organization for children.
We are very well known by our name and our logo – with a global
brand awareness of 93 per cent. These iconic assets evoke our status
as the only children’s organization mandated by the United Nations
General Assembly and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
But to increase our impact, we also need to be better known for our
lifesaving, life-changing work for every child: UNICEF’s efforts on the
ground in 190 countries and territories to defend the rights of every
child and to drive change for the most disadvantaged, vulnerable and
excluded children in every society.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
UNICEF’s new brand strategy powerfully conveys the essence of
everything we do, instantly and consistently identifying UNICEF as the
organization driving change for every child. We will measure our success
in strengthening our brand against three key performance indicators:
• UNICEF is immediately associated by the public with our
relentless work for children, especially the most vulnerable
• UNICEF is increasingly regarded as an effective organization
that achieves results for children
• UNICEF is building on its strong reputation as a trusted and
credible organization that can be counted on to deliver
As the new UNICEF Strategic Plan 2018–2021 makes clear,
strengthening our brand is a key change strategy to deliver on our
mission, in pursuit of our shared vision of a world in which the rights
of every child are realized and every child has a fair chance in life.
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The new brand strategy is also an integral element of the new Global
Regulatory Framework, which supports better organization-wide
coordination and consistency.
Across our entire organization – in every office, every country, every
region and every National Committee – we are one UNICEF, and we
have one global brand. We are all responsible for delivering on our
mission, and it is up to each of us to use the unique power of our
brand to help drive change for every child.
UNICEF’s new brand strategy was developed over an 18-month
period in consultation with nearly 1,000 UNICEF and National
Committee staff members. Their contributions helped make the
brand strategy truly representative of our organization, reflecting
the many facets of our work for every child. It was approved by
UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake in May 2016.
for every child, every right
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More than a tag line: UNICEF, for every child
The Strategic Plan pursues a vision of realizing the rights of
every child and does so by starting with the most deprived,
because a focus on equity accelerates progress towards
achieving the rights of all children.
– UNICEF Strategic Plan 2018–2021
Like our Strategic Plan, UNICEF’s new brand strategy responds to the
call of the 2030 Agenda to “leave no child behind” – supporting our
equity focus, across our entire organization, to drive change for the
most disadvantaged children.
At the heart of the new brand strategy is the new brand signature,
UNICEF, for every child.
More than a tag line, it is the embodiment of UNICEF’s DNA, true to the
purposes and principles of our founding more than 70 years ago and
truly reflective of the changing, challenging environment in which we
work today.
‘for every child’ echoes our universal mandate to protect the rights
of children everywhere – and embodies our mission’s dictate to give
greatest priority to the most disadvantaged children.
It is a rallying cry for all of us, and for all those who share our vision of a
world in which every child has a fair chance.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
The key to our new brand strategy is also its modularity. The brand
statement, ‘for every child’ is just the first half. The second half
includes the words that enable us to showcase the scope and scale of
our work for children in 190 countries and territories … to illustrate the
challenges they face … and to highlight the hopes we have for them.
This modularity enables an almost infinite range of adaptability across all
platforms and for all audiences – a critical capacity, given the magnitude
of UNICEF’s programmes, operations and audiences around the world.
As the visual guide following this section demonstrates, our new brand
statement is complemented by our new visual signature, which includes
compelling images of individual children in full colour, most often looking
directly into the camera, framed or highlighted with UNICEF’s signature
cyan blue. These elements are designed to create a more direct,
immediate connection with viewers.
Together, these mandatory, signature elements create a unified,
unique brand presence that instantly identifies UNICEF – highlighting
everything we do, in every country where we work.
The examples included in this book – some already in use across our
organization – illustrate the power of the new brand strategy.
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Our brand principles
10 ways UNICEF’s new brand strategy supports our work for every child
1 I We are one UNICEF. From Uganda to Uzbekistan, from Uruguay to
the United States, UNICEF is for every child. We have one global brand
strategy that instantly identifies us, creating a powerful brand presence
that evokes everything we do, across our entire organization.
Read more about our brand repositioning here
2 I We are champions of children’s rights. UNICEF is the only
organization mandated by the United Nations General Assembly and
guided by the Convention on the Rights of the Child to promote the
rights and well-being of children everywhere – and our brand strategy
demonstrates this unique responsibility to every child.
6 I We are results-focused. UNICEF is on the ground, working with
our partners every day to get things done for children – and our brand
strategy demonstrates our daily hands-on efforts and the impact we
are having on children’s lives.
Read For every child, results here
7 I We are trusted. UNICEF has 70 years of experience working with
our partners to save and improve the lives of children around the
world – and our brand strategy emphasizes our expertise, projecting
our confidence, competence, and capacity.
Read For every child, hope: UNICEF @ 70
Read 25 Years of the Convention on the Rights of the Child here.
3 I We work for every child, everywhere. UNICEF has an unrivaled
reach, on the ground in 190 countries and territories with a vast network
of partners – and our brand strategy is designed to be adapted across the
entire organization.
4 I We are child-focused. UNICEF puts children first – and our brand
strategy always puts children front and centre: their faces, their situations,
their stories.
8 I We engage and inspire. UNICEF never loses hope for the world’s
children and our brand strategy always points to solutions, inviting
others to join us in driving change for every child.
9 I We care. UNICEF believes that all children, whatever their
circumstances, have the right to be treated with dignity and
compassion – and our brand strategy embodies our respect, never
portraying children as objects of pity, and always showing UNICEF’s
concern for their well-being.
Read about the Graphic visual guide here
5 I We are equity-focused. UNICEF’s mission is to reach every child,
giving priority to the most disadvantaged children – and our brand
strategy highlights the urgent challenges they face and our efforts to
reach them.
Read For every child, a fair chance: The promise of equity here
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
10 I We never give up. UNICEF takes on the toughest challenges,
working in some of the world’s toughest places – and our brand
strategy highlights our relenteless determination to reach every child.
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for every child, love
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for every child, safety
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for every child,
clean water
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A true brand is alive, constantly evolving
to meet the needs of changing times.
While adopting these guidelines is mandatory –
how you adapt our new brand strategy is up to you.
Make it your own.
for every child, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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Brand Manual
HOW WE LOOK
Graphic visual guide
Across our entire organization, we have one mission – and one
global brand strategy to help us achieve it. Part of the Global
Regulatory Framework, UNICEF, for every child is designed to
powerfully convey everything we do, in every country where we
work, by every UNICEF team and National Committee.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
The graphic visual guide provides direction on the key graphic
elements of the new brand strategy. It also includes guidance
across multiple brand touchpoints. The next phase will include
a full fundraising toolkit and guidance on editorial.
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Our visual identity
UNICEF’s visual identity comprises a
set of iconic elements that make us
immediately recognizable.
Our logo signature
Our logo and tag line must remain
consistent and have a strong presence.
Our colour
We are proudly UNICEF Blue and
show it in everything we do.
for every child, a childhood
Our brand statement
Our brand statement ‘for every child’
introduces a topic.
Our font
Our official font is Univers LT Pro and
we should use this whenever possible.
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Logo signature
The combination of the
UNICEF logo and tag line
makes up our complete
signature.
Logo
Tag line
Logo signature
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Logo signature
Our logo must be applied
consistently to all our UNICEF
projects for global visual
recognition.
HORIZONTAL LOGO
The stand-alone logo is only
used in cases where size
becomes an issue for legibility,
and in partnership contexts.
VERTICAL LOGO
DO NOT USE OLD
OR INCORRECT
LOGO VERSIONS
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Logo signature
The ideal treatment for our logo
is inside a cyan container .
This helps reinforce the
relationship between our
logo and our brand colour and
enhances legibility when placed
over photographs and graphics.
Recommended version
Logo signature aligned from bottom
of container suitable to be anchored
at the top right corner. (see next page)
Alternative versions
Logo signature
aligned from top of
container
Logo signature
centred in container
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Logo signature
centred in short
container
Horizontal logo signature centred in container
Logo signature centred
in circular container
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Logo signature
These are the ideal placements for the
cyan container logos when being used
in design collateral.
These placements enhance consistency
and legibility, especially when placed
over images and graphics.
Recommended
use
Alternative
use
Recommended placement
These guidelines apply to different
formats (portrait, landscape, square, etc.).
(Logo anchored on top right corner)
Recommended
placement
Recommended
placement
Recommended
placement
(Logo anchored
on top
right corner)
(Logo anchored
on bottom
right corner)
(Logo anchored
on top
right corner)
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Logo signature
EXAMPLES IN
OTHER LANGUAGES
FRENCH
SPANISH
RUSSIAN
ARABIC
COUNTRY SIGNATURES
ARGENTINA
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Colour
We are proudly UNICEF blue.
We show it in everything
we do; behind our logo, on
signature images and when
working in the field.
UNICEF blue (cyan 100%)
is how we are instantly
recognized.
UNICEF blue
PANTONE® Process Cyan
CMYK C100 / M0 / Y0 / K0
RGB R0 / G174 / B239
HEX/WEB 1CABE2
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Colour
Applying a bluewash effect to some of our
images visually reinforces our focus on every child,
symbolizing UNICEF’s presence and capacity to act
on behalf of children everywhere.
This visual treatment is a special effect we
encourage you to apply when appropriate to
emphasize brand, the child and our staff. We use a
bluewash over the image but leave the subject in full
colour to emphasize the focus on the subject.
See library of images here
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
See how to apply bluewash here
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Colour – Secondary
While our primary colour is UNICEF blue, we also use a selection
of secondary colours to support our design and messaging,
and to complement our use of UNICEF Blue and logo containers.
PANTONE®
356
C97/M22/Y100/K9
R0/G131/B62
00833D
PANTONE®
376
C55/M3/Y100/K0
R128/G189/B65
80BD41
PANTONE®
7548
C0/M25/Y100/K0
R255/G194/B14
FFC20E
PANTONE®
1505
C0/M72/Y100/K0
R242/G106/B33
F26A21
PANTONE®
485
C5/M100/Y100/K0
R226/G35/B26
E2231A
Secondary colours are useful in special situations such as emergency
responses, calls to action, text boxes in reports and presentations,
containers around statements in social media and digital posts, and
graphic treatments such as infographics and backgrounds.
PANTONE®
221
C31/M100/Y53/K20
R150/G26/B73
961A49
PANTONE®
2613
C70/M100/Y20/K7
R107/G30/B116
6A1E74
PANTONE®
Warm Grey 1
C14/M14/Y17/K0
R216/G209/B202
D8D1C9
PANTONE®
Cool Grey 9
C55/M47/Y44/K10
R119/G119/B122
777779
PANTONE®
Black
C63/M62/Y59/K94
R45/G41/B38
2D2926
PANTONE®
7685
C90/M80/Y0/K0
R55/G78/B162
374EA2
SAMPLES
SOUTH SUDAN FAMINE
1 MILLION MALNOURISHED CHILDREN
Social media post with busy background
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Campaign assets using photography
Campaign assets using graphics
Urgent announcements using black as a
background colour
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Fonts
RECOMMENDED
Univers LT Pro is the font
of our logo and the primary
typeface used by our brand.
It should be used wherever
possible; we encourage UNICEF
offices to acquire the font for
ongoing use.
Univers LT Pro
Light Light Oblique Roman Roman Oblique
Bold Bold Oblique Black Black Oblique
ALTERNATIVES
Arial can be used when
Univers is not available.
Arial
Aleo can be used where
a serif font is needed to
highlight content, such as
pull-out quotes.
Aleo
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Regular Italic Bold Bold Italic
Regular Bold
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Brand statement
STANDARD
TYPE-SIZE SHIFT
BAR CONTAINER
for every child, results
for every child,
for every child,
results
The brand statement can be featured in one line
or stacked on multiple lines, but ‘for every child’
should always remain on the same line.
A type-size shift can be used
to highlight the focus word(s).
A bar container can be used
to highlight the focus word(s).
This is most suitable for social
media and digital use.
FOR EVERY CHILD,
RESULTS
FOR EVERY CHILD,
FOR EVERY CHILD,
RESULTS
for every child,
results
When suitable, the brand statement can
be written in caps. Avoid using a mixture
of lower and uppercase in the same statement.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
results
RESULTS
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Dos and don’ts
for every child, a childhood
for every child, a childhood
do
•
Anchor logo signature container at the top
right corner.
•
Centre Brand statement in Univers LT Pro bold
Use photo in original colours (if not using
bluewash treatment)
for every
child,
a childhood
for every child, a childhood
x
•
for every child, a childhood
don’t
•
Floating container
•
Logo signature container over the child
•
Brand statement in a font other than Univers LT Pro
•
Brand statement in a colour other than white
•
Break the ‘for every child’ in Brand statement
•
Completely bluewashed image
•
Brand statement over face of child or logo
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Publications
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From flagship reports and major global publications to series and
one-off editions or brochures, UNICEF’s published works are unified
by the consistent use of our logo, typefaces, colour palette and images.
Applying our brand guidelines when developing covers, layouts,
infographics and data visualizations is key to ensuring that our
publications support the visual signature of our brand identity.
Covers
Publication covers are essential to our distinctive visual brand.
Consistency in the use of photography, colours, typography and the UNICEF
logo on every cover helps us build a unified body of published works.
Ideally, all publication covers should feature a single, strong photograph,
placed as a full bleed image (extending to all four sides of the cover).
A good cover conveys a strong message through its simplicity.
Occasionally more than one photograph may be preferred, but the use
of collages, mosaics, or photomontages is to be avoided.
A single, UNICEF-branded bluewash image is preferred for flagship
reports, campaign-related publications, and other publications
showcasing UNICEF’s intellectual leadership.
Titles and any subtitles or series titles should use the Univers font,
in Light, Roman or Bold weights; in UPPER CASE or Title Case, with
subtitles in Sentence case. When using a bluewash photo or cyan
background, all text should be in white. In other cases, UNICEF blue
may be preferred for cover text.
All covers should prominently feature the UNICEF logo and tagline,
ideally using a white logo and tagline inside a cyan container. This may
be placed at the top or bottom of the cover.
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Back covers
Publications with an ISBN should include this on the back cover as well,
with an optional barcode added for printed works that will require external
distribution services.
Back covers should feature the UNICEF logo, contact information
for the section producing the work, copyright information, and other
identifying information (such as the International Standard Book
Number), as appropriate.
The ‘for every child’ manifesto can also be featured on the back cover or
inside back cover, in white text on a UNICEF blue background or blue text
on a white background.
The correct copyright notice for UNICEF publications should read:
© United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)
[month and year of publication]
For ever y child
Whoever she is.
For ever y child
Whoever she is.
Wherever he lives.
Wherever he lives.
Ever y child deser ves a childhood.
Ever y child deser ves a childhood.
A future.
A fair chance.
That ’s why UNICEF is there.
For each and ever y child.
A future.
A fair chance.
That ’s why UNICEF is there.
Working day in and day out.
For each and ever y child.
In 190 countries and territories.
Working day in and day out.
Reaching the hardest to reach.
The fur thest from help.
In 190 countries and territories.
The most lef t behind.
Reaching the hardest to reach.
The most excluded.
The fur thest from help.
It ’s why we stay to the end.
The most lef t behind.
And never give up.
The most excluded.
It ’s why we stay to the end.
And never give up.
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Interior design
Wherever possible, all publications should be designed by a
professional graphic designer or company, using the main UNICEF
font, Univers Pro, for all body text and headings. Designers must be
provided with the colour palette and logos in all language versions that
they will be creating.
Publication series
To unify editions that form part of a publication series, additional title
information, such as series title, year or place of publication, can be
included on the cover or below the logo.
Other colours from the UNICEF palette, including tints of UNICEF
blue, may also be introduced conservatively to identify specific series.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Our primary colour, UNICEF blue (cyan), should be featured
predominantly throughout our publications. UNICEF blue can be
complemented by other colours from our secondary palette when
designing infographics, data visualizations and other design elements
used within publications.
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Video
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On-screen elements guide
UNICEF produces powerful videos that highlight the range of our
work, provoke debate, and inspire engagement and support for our
work. As with all branded products, videos should be consistent with
the brand guidelines and support our brand identity.
Subtitles - Subtitles should be in white with a slight black outline in
Roboto Medium at size 90 in Adobe Premiere. To increase legibility,
apply a foreground to transparent linear black gradient behind the text.
Roboto fonts and Black Gradient included in Toolkit
Lower Thirds - Lower thirds should consist of the person’s name
in Roboto Medium Uppercase and, below it, the person’s title in
Roboto Light Lower Case.
If the person featured in the video is a child, then their title should
almost always be their age (e.g. “13 years old”). Children are normally
only identified by their FIRST NAME.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Font sizes are not prescribed but rather left at the discretion of the
editor to ensure aesthetics. It is recommended that the font size of the
person’s title be substantially smaller than their name.
The lower third should be in white without an outline, unless the color
of the background renders a thin black outline necessary.
Informational / floating text - Informational text refers to text
slates offering information about the story.
The prescribed font is Roboto Medium, size 100, in white or UNICEF blue.
For emphasis or if the background shot renders text unreadable you
may choose to highlight words and phrases with a blue background
strip. Strip can also be animated.
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Always use UNICEF blue HEX Color #03B6F0.
On certain occasions, font size can be adjusted to avoid covering
important elements of a moving image, including a face or other
important visuals that help tell the story.
Closing - The video should end with the UNICEF video end tags
appearing over a black screen. The transition from the final shot of the
video to the UNICEF end tag is at the editor’s discretion.
All the endtags included in Adobe Premier toolkit Project
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Deliverables / Naming & titling protocol
Please provide all below files and name them exactly as described:
Video files per below:
Paperwork files per below:
• Location of Shoot_Subject of Shoot_MIX_HD (this is your final
edit with music, titles, sound all mixed down)
• Location of Shoot_Subject of Shoot_MIX_ transcript (this is the
detailed transcript of your final edit)
• Location of Shoot_Subject of Shoot__INT_HD (this is your final
edit with split channel sound – interviews, natural sound, music all in
separate trucks - NO subtitles NO on-screen text)
• Location of Shoot_Subject of Shoot__BROLL_Shotlist (this is
your shotlist of every take used / please include timecodes next to each
new take / please include a short description of the storyline)
• Location of Shoot_Subject of Shoot__BROLL_HD (this is the
extended 8-10 min footage used in your edit, please include natural
sounds on every take)
• Location of Shoot_Subject of Shoot_INTERVIEW_X_Transcript
this is the full transcript of the interview(s) / please include name and title
of person interviewed)
• Location of Shoot_Subject of Shoot _INTERVIEW_X (this is the
extended version of every interview that was used in your edit / where
X please replace with name of person on screen)
Sending files via the web
Here are a few popular ftp applications.
REMINDER:
All of the above edits (files) should be exported as H.264 (mp4) 1080 HD
https://filezilla-project.org
https://cyberduck.io
http://panic.com/transmit
Web Based File Transfer Services
As an alternative option you can use your browser to transfer files.
www.wetransfer.com
www.dropbox.com
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
41
Photography
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
42
© UNICEF/UN0144599/Brown
© UNICEF/UN0119963/Brown
Since our founding in 1946, UNICEF’s brand identity has been
represented powerfully through photography of children. Putting
children at the centre of everything we do includes using their images
to tell their stories – and ours.
The essential contextual element in the photography is the inherent
dignity of all children, including when they are in distress or in need of
special protection. To the extent possible, imagery should capture the
dignity of the subject and maintain alignment with UNICEF’s values.
© UNICEF/UNI174109/Hallahan
© UNICEF/UNI193944/El Baba
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
© UNICEF/UN057347/Almang
43
Dos and don’ts
Do
Don’t
x
•
DO represent children in a dignified, respectful manner. Children
are never hopeless, nor are they passive victims. Our images
convey a spirit of respect and optimism that reflects UNICEF’s
core vision, mission and values.
See more here.
•
DON’T manipulate, add or remove content to change the meaning
the photo conveys. No composite photographs. Photographs may
be cropped, and photographs may be flipped as long as there is no
writing in the photograph.
See more here.
•
DO embrace diversity and inclusion, featuring children from all
backgrounds, including children with disabilities, and maintaining a
balance of gender and cultural identifications. Avoid stereotypes.
See more here.
•
DON’T use photographs for commercial purposes. See more here.
Photographs are reserved for use by UNICEF and our partners
to promote, advance and defend the rights of children.
See more here.
•
DO protect the identities of children who are victims of sexual
exploitation and those charged with or convicted of a crime.
Protect the identities of any children if being identified puts them
at risk of reprisal.
See more here.
•
DO use lead ‘iconic’ photographs that are consistent with both
the real context in which the image was made -- whether positive
or negative, general or specific -- and the content it supports.
Accompanying text should be consistent with both the context and
content of the photograph.
See more here.
•
DO obtain informed consent, and use written releases as possible.
See more here. Use credit lines for photographs, e.g., © UNICEF/
UN062441/LeMoyne.
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Social Media
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45
Best practices for social media posts
UNICEF’s social media presence
powerfully conveys our work to reach
every child in a way that encourages
sharing and engagement by our
supporters. Social media posts should be
developed following all brand guidelines.
Visually led
Story and character driven
Use high-quality and compelling images,
ideally focused on an individual(s).
Feature a compelling narrative. Focus on a
‘hero’ character who is facing a challenge.
Emotion
Newsworthy
Speak like a real person
Sharability and relatability
Would someone not employed by the
United Nations say this?
Content that evokes positive or negative
emotion is the most engaging and sharable.
Feature content that is in the news or being
talked about. Join a conversation that’s
already happening in the news/social media
and be present for subsequent dialogue.
People share social media content that they
love or agree with, are shocked or surprised by.
see info on digital labs here
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46
Qualities of top performing posts
Top performing social media posts encompass
a wide range of content, but certain qualities
tend to drive traffic. These include:
1. A positive tone
3. Features a bold statement
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
4. Content is newsworthy or topical
2. The individual is camera facing
5. Content is emotional
47
Dos and don’ts
x
Don’t
Nearly 1 in 200
children are refugees
Don’t cover individuals in photos with logo or text
Don’t cover more than 20 % of a photo with text.
The asset will underperform on platforms such as
Facebook.
#foreverychild
#foreverychild
#foreverychild
Do
Do feature images with no overlaying copy so that
the image is not obscured.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Do use the #foreverychild hashtag in caption when
appropriate.
Do feature the image copyright on every asset.
Keep it very small but still legible.
48
Social media profiles
YouTube
for every child, hope
Twitter
Cover
image
Profile
image
for every child, hope
Cover
image
Profile
image
LinkedIn
for every child, hope
Facebook
Cover image
When possible, display a
current UNICEF campaign
(e.g., #childrenuprooted,
#earlymomentsmatter,
#endviolence, etc.). If there
is no active campaign, use
brand image (as displayed).
Profile image
UNICEF/for every child logo
lock-up in white on cyan
background. “for every
child” can be translated into
the language predominantly
used in your market or
region, using the downloadable Photoshop template.
See templates for cover and profile images here
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Cover
image
Profile
image
Instagram
Profile
image
49
Social media posts examples
For photos and videos
Photo
Photo
It is not necessary to
feature the UNICEF
logo in posts, as it
is seen in the profile
image.
A CHILD
IS A CHILD
It is encouraged to
feature the brand
statement in caption:
#foreverychild
See Page 29
for a guide
to secondary
colors.
Video
Photo
A quote asset
featuring
a bluewashed
image.
The logo signature
UNICEF | for every
child should appear
on the end frame of
all videos.
Animated logo assets
can be found here.
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50
Social media posts examples
For text, infographics and factographs
Factograph
It is recommended to
use photographs in
posts, as they perform
best.
Nearly
1 in 200
children are refugees
If a strong image is not
available, or if there
is a lot of copy, use a
UNICEF brand color as
a solid background.
See Page 27 for a
guide to brand colors.
Infographic
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Text
51
Messaging categories
Brand / general
Quote
for every child,
a fair chance
Facts and figures
Emergencies and fundraising
“
MALNUTRITION
IS A SILENT THREAT.
Nearly 1 in 200
children are refugees
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Anthony Lake
UNICEF Executive Direcctor
For very urgent
announcements,
you can choose black
as an alternative
background color, and
red to highlight
certain words.
Only use these every
once in a while!
52
Web
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This section provides an overview of the new UNICEF.org platform,
including the global site, regional and country office sites, and all
sites that live within the new content management system. This also
provides guidance on best-practices for sites being built outside the
UNICEF.org platform.
Logo Signature
On global sites, the UNICEF logo signature is placed consistently
on the upper left (or upper right in languages that read right-to-left).
On regional, country, or campaign sites, the logo lockup will include
the logo signature along with the name of the country, region, or
campaign.
This logo lockup is automatic in the new UNICEF.org platform, and
recommended for any subsite built outside of the microsite system.
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54
Brand photography on the website
Photography is, literally, the ‘hero’ of the new site. Most
templates feature a large hero image area the top of the page,
including landing pages, and content pages, such as articles and
programmatic content.
The use of bluewash photos is recommended on high profile pages
that showcase UNICEF’s work at large. These types of pages are
generally landing pages—found in the top navigation—or pages
built for specific branded campaigns or initiatives.
Once you get a little deeper in the site and the content becomes
more specific to a program, topic, or story, we recommend using
representative photography that illustrates the context of the page’s
program, topic, or story.
When using photography below the hero area, no matter what
type of page, it is recommended that that UNICEF’s representative
photography be used, rather than a bluewashed photo.
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55
Slide Presentations
and Stationery
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56
Slide presentations and stationery play an important
role in reinforcing UNICEF’s brand identity. The
use of these templates and the adaptation of
these examples is recommended, especially when
recognizing or facing external audiences.
Bulletin template
Letterhead template
Thank
you
Ms PLEDGE DONOR
1 best supporter Avenue
10000 UNICEFLAND
PowerPoint Presentation template
See templates here
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Thank you / welcome package
Business card template
Branded Material
and Signage
58
Best practice for branded material and signage
•
Branded signage should be kept as simple as possible.
•
Bluewash images are preferred for branded material.
•
Any text should just be limited to a clear brand statement or
a minimal call to action.
•
Use a large container logo over images. Use block blue
if just displaying a UNICEF logo or Partner logos in your
signage.
•
Be sure to use photographs that have a high-enough
resolution for the final artwork size so your image is sharp.
Conference room wall decal
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Window display
59
Retractable
banners
eduaction
Posters
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
See templates here
60
Campaigns
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Campaigns
National and global campaigns should also be developed using the
guiding principles provided throughout the brand book, as well as
assets available on our ICON and WeShare pages. The Children
Uprooted campaign is a good example of an on-brand.
Campaign elements from Children Uprooted:
Out-of-home advocacy
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Poster / Social media post
62
Poster / Social media post
Out-of-home advocacy
Facebook cover photo
#ACHILDISACHILD
NO MATTER WHAT
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63
Photo credits
Cover I © UNICEF/2016/Lister
In 2016, a girl from Merih Senay primary school in Tigray, Ethiopia,
attends a UNICEF Child Friendly Space for children displaced
by drought.
Page 10 I © UNICEF/UN043576/Lister
In 2016, Thi Binh sits with her brother in Hua Ngai Commune in Viet Nam.
They both attend Hua Ngai Primary School, built in the commune to
give remote villages and ethnic minorities access to quality education.
Page 2 I © UNICEF/UN069007/Abimeri
In 2013, UNICEF’s Abed Elmajeed Noaimi lifts a Syrian refugee boy
in Za’atari refugee camp, Jordan.
Page 11 I © UNICEF/UNI134411/Sokol
In 2012, a team of measles and rubella vaccinators use a hand-drawn
ferry to transport a jeep across an icy body of water in Mongolia.
Page 3 I © UNICEF/UN074437/Dormino
In 2012, abandoned by her mother, Maria Luisa stands near a
window in a residential care centre in Panama Province, Panama.
Page 12 I © UNICEF/UN074373/Kljajo
In 2016, Lara, a refugee from the Syrian Arab Republic on the move
to Germany, stands in front of a train in Croatia.
Page 4 I © UNICEF/UN074420/Knowles-Coursin
In 2017, a student writes on the chalkboard of his classroom in
Galkayo, Somalia.
Page 13 I © UNICEF/UN074457/Gilbertson VII Photo
In 2015, volunteer Kinan Kadouni, and the boy he is carrying, both
refugees from the Syrian Arab Republic, laugh amid other newly
arrived refugees in Greece.
Page 5 I © UNICEF/UN074428/Haviv
In 2005, girls leave a camp for displaced people to gather firewood
in Darfur, Sudan.
Page 16 I © UNICEF/UN074383/Zehbrauska
In 2016, Douglas Neftali holds his infant son Santiago in El Salvador.
Page 9 I © UNICEF/UN074393/Al-Issa
In 2017, in the Syrian Arab Republic, Saja, 13, plays with her football.
She lost her leg in an attack two years ago.
Page 17 I © UNICEF/UN074434/Kamber
In 2017, a four-year-old boy stands in the charcoal production yard
where his mother works in the Côte d’Ivoire.
If you have any questions about this document,
please contact the brand help desk: [email protected]
For access to brand guidance, resources and assets,
please visit the ICON page.
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
Page 18 I © UNICEF/UN043450/Lister
In 2016, Ainazik, 5, washes her hands in Kyrgyzstan.
Page 19 I © UNICEF/UN074454/Panday
In 2015, mothers wait to immunize their under-five children
in Gorkha District, the epicentre of the earthquake in Nepal.
Page 28 I © UNICEF/UN03520/Takyo
In 2015, a toddler is screened for malnutrition in Ghana.
Page 28 I © UNICEF/UN071861/Al-Issa
In 2016, in western Aleppo, (left) UNICEF Representative in
the Syrian Arab Republic Hanaa Singer meets with a woman
and child displaced by recent attacks and fighting.
Page 28 I © UNICEF/UN043576/Lister
In 2016, Thi Binh sits with her brother in Hua Ngai Commune
in Viet Nam.
64
Prepared by the Brand Section, Division of Communication
UNICEF
3 United Nations Plaza
New York, NY 10017, USA
[email protected]
www.unicef.org
© United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)
December 2017
UNICEF Brand Book and Brand Manual Version 2.0
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