When a brand speaks
in fragments, people don’t listen — they scroll. With a clear brandbook, your voice shows up the same in every slide, screen, and store shelf — instantly recognizable, even without the logo.
Everyone’s making
it up as they go.
No shared rules means
no shared results.
Design breaks across platforms.
What works on Instagram fails
in a pitch deck.
Hard to apply,
hard to remember.
Good design gets lost without structure.
Doesn’t hold up next
to competitors.
The identity doesn’t reflect
the actual value.
Not every brandbook needs the same depth. Pricing scales with brand complexity,
team size, asset count, and delivery needs — not fluff for fluff’s sake.
We've worked with Toimi on two projects now, and both times the result was spot on. Timelines were realistic, communication was clear, and the team handled all details without us having to chase.
They didn't just ship features — they explained trade-offs, suggested improvements, and really thought about long-term use. Felt like an extension of our team.
Fast, professional, and no overcomplication. Our landing page went live on schedule and performed better than expected.
Easy to work with, thank you!
Didn’t find what you were looking for? Drop us a line at info@toimi.pro.
Cost depends on project scope, depth of documentation, and number of application examples required — a focused brandbook covering logo usage rules, color system, typography, and core application examples starts approximately from a few thousand dollars, while comprehensive brand guidelines spanning verbal identity, photography direction, environmental applications, and multi-channel usage standards across print, digital, and physical formats are priced higher. Baytown's client base ranges from independent contractors and local service businesses to industrial suppliers managing brand consistency across procurement relationships with ExxonMobil, Covestro, and the major tenants of TGS Cedar Port Industrial Park — where brand application spans vehicle fleets, facility signage, safety equipment, digital platforms, and corporate proposal materials simultaneously. Exact pricing is discussed individually after reviewing your project brief.
A focused brandbook — logo rules, color palette, typography, and primary application examples — typically takes 3–5 weeks after the visual identity is finalized. A comprehensive brand guidelines document covering the full identity system, verbal tone, photography direction, and multi-channel application standards runs 6–10 weeks. For Baytown businesses preparing to onboard a new marketing agency, launch a website, or roll out branded materials across a vehicle fleet or facility signage program, we build the timeline around your activation date from the start.
Industrial contractors, petrochemical service companies, logistics operators, healthcare organizations, and growth-stage businesses scaling their operations are the most frequent clients. Industrial contractors and equipment suppliers competing for approved vendor status at ExxonMobil, Covestro, and Chevron Phillips need brandbooks that ensure visual consistency across every touchpoint a procurement team encounters — from the proposal cover to the vehicle on site to the safety vest worn by field crew. Without a formal brandbook, each application decision is made independently — producing the gradual visual inconsistency that signals organizational fragmentation to corporate procurement evaluators. Logistics companies at Cedar Port and AmeriPort need brandbooks that travel cleanly to signage vendors, vehicle wrap producers, and digital agencies without requiring repeated briefings for each new application.
A complete brandbook covers logo usage rules — clear space requirements, minimum sizes for each reproduction context, approved color variants for light and dark backgrounds, and misuse examples showing common errors to avoid; color palette with Pantone, CMYK, RGB, and HEX specifications for each approved color; typography system with font hierarchy, size relationships, and pairing rules; iconography guidelines where applicable; photography and imagery direction covering style, subject matter, and composition standards; and primary application examples across the touchpoints most relevant to your business. For Baytown industrial clients, application examples typically include vehicle wrap layout, hard hat and safety vest logo placement, proposal cover and document template, site signage specifications, and digital profile formatting — the real-world contexts where brand consistency matters most in the industrial corridor.
The terms are often used interchangeably, but there is a practical distinction. A brandbook typically covers the full brand story — positioning, values, personality, and visual system — in a format designed to be shared broadly including with new hires, subcontractors, and partners. Brand guidelines focus specifically on the technical rules for applying the visual identity correctly. For a Baytown industrial contractor onboarding subcontractors and vendors simultaneously — where each party needs to apply your brand to different physical and digital materials — a combined document that covers both the story and the technical rules is more operationally efficient than maintaining two separate references that different audiences need to cross-reference.
Yes. We audit your existing brand assets — logo files, color history, typography usage, and any previous guidelines — identify inconsistencies and undocumented decisions, and build a coherent brandbook from what exists while making recommendations where standards are missing or contradictory. For established Baytown businesses that have operated for years without formal brand documentation — accumulating inconsistent logo versions, unofficial color variations, and typography choices that differ across materials — this process surfaces the inconsistencies that have been quietly undermining brand credibility with procurement teams and clients. The output is a brandbook your team, subcontractors, and vendors can apply immediately.
The process starts with an asset audit and a structured brief covering how your brand is currently applied across physical and digital touchpoints, where inconsistency creates the most friction, and which vendor types — print shops, vehicle wrap producers, digital agencies — need to use the brandbook most frequently. Documentation is developed in a shared Figma workspace so your team reviews standards in realistic visual context rather than abstract descriptions. For Baytown business owners and operations leads managing active industrial or service businesses alongside the brandbook project, review rounds are structured at defined points with consolidated feedback cycles rather than open-ended revision loops that extend the timeline without improving the output.
Final delivery includes a designed PDF optimized for sharing with vendors, subcontractors, and stakeholders — formatted for both screen viewing and print reproduction — an editable source file so your team can update the document as the brand evolves, and a packaged asset library containing all approved logo files, color swatches, and font references in organized, labeled folders. For Baytown industrial businesses whose brand assets are used by multiple vendors simultaneously — a print shop, a vehicle wrap producer, a web agency, and a signage contractor all working from the same brandbook — the asset library structure ensures each vendor accesses the correct file version for their specific reproduction method without requiring a design interpretation step. You own all delivered materials outright at project close.