Most sports teams invest real time and money into a brand identity — logo, colors, typography — and then watch it slowly erode because there's no document that tells anyone what to do with it. The jersey printer interprets the logo their own way. A parent volunteer makes a banner using the wrong font. A sponsor uses an old version of the mark. Without a brand guidelines document, your brand degrades a little with every handoff.
A brand guidelines document fixes this. It's not a complex deliverable — for most sports clubs, 8–15 pages is plenty. But it needs to exist, it needs to be shared, and it needs to contain the right information.
Section 1: Logo system
The logo section should show every approved mark in your family: primary, secondary/icon, and wordmark. For each one, include:
- Clear space rules — the minimum empty space that must surround the logo. Express it as a multiple of an element within the logo (e.g., "clear space equals the height of the letter I in the wordmark").
- Minimum size — the smallest the logo can appear and still be legible. State in both pixels (for digital) and millimeters (for print and production).
- Approved color variants — full color, one-color dark, one-color light, reversed (white on dark).
- Misuse examples — show 4–6 things not to do: stretching, recoloring, adding drop shadows, placing on a busy background. People follow examples of what not to do more reliably than abstract rules.
Section 2: Color palette
List every color in your palette with all four values: HEX, RGB, CMYK, and Pantone PMS. Include both Coated and Uncoated PMS variants if you use both types of production.
Also document:
- Primary vs. secondary — which colors are dominant and which are accents. State approximate usage ratios (e.g., "primary color: ~70% of any composition").
- On-dark and on-light — which colors work on dark backgrounds and which on light ones.
- Contrast requirements — note any minimum contrast ratios for text legibility. Useful if volunteers are creating content with your brand colors.
Section 3: Typography
Document your three type roles: headline, body, and numbers. For each, include:
- Font name and foundry
- Download or license link (or note if it's a Google Font, which is free)
- Approved weights
- Primary use cases (e.g., "body font: game programs, website copy, social media captions")
Add a system font fallback for each role — what to use when your primary font isn't available. This is important for situations like email templates, where custom fonts often don't load.
Section 4: Usage rules
The usage section answers practical questions that come up repeatedly: Can the logo go on a dark background? Can we use our secondary color for large areas? What fonts can we use if we don't have access to the brand font?
Structure this as a series of approved and not-approved examples. Include:
- Approved logo/background combinations (with color swatches)
- Co-branding rules — how your logo appears alongside a sponsor logo
- Photography style guidance if you're producing photos or video
- Social media template guidance
Section 5: Production specifications
This section is the most directly useful for vendors and is often omitted. It should include:
- Jersey spec sheet — logo position, number style, font, and placement for each jersey variant
- Embroidery thread codes — Madeira or Isacord codes for each color (converted from Pantone)
- File inventory — a list of all logo files available, their formats, and which to use for what
- Vendor contacts — optional, but a list of approved or preferred vendors saves time for club officers and removes a barrier to consistent production
Format and distribution
Publish your brand guidelines as a PDF. Keep a live "master" version somewhere accessible (a shared Google Drive or Dropbox folder) and update it when your brand evolves. Include a version number and date on the cover.
Distribute it proactively — don't wait for someone to ask. Send it to every jersey manufacturer, graphic designer, sponsor, and club volunteer who creates anything with your name on it. When you bring on a new board member or committee chair, it should be in their onboarding materials.
Keeping it short enough to be used
A 60-page brand standards manual makes sense for a professional franchise with a full marketing department. For most clubs, it's a barrier — nobody reads it, and nobody follows rules they never read.
Target 8–15 pages. Lead with the logo section (the most-referenced). Keep the tone practical and direct. Use visual examples more than prose explanations. If you can fit a rule in a table instead of three paragraphs, use the table.
A concise, well-designed guidelines document that gets shared and used does more for your brand consistency than a comprehensive document that sits in a folder untouched.
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