AOL's decision to rebrand as Aol. takes a bad brand and makes it worse

By Joe Wilcox | Published November 23, 2009, 6:06 PM

Not since AT&T gobbled up Cingular and rebranded as at&t with that ugly Death Star-like logo has a company erred so far from sensibility. The new AOL brand, Aol., is coming soon to frighten you. AOL's attempt to be hip is anything but. Not that AOL, distributor of a billion CD coasters, was ever cool. The service may have been the biggest online community of the 1990s, but it was never hip. Nor will the lame rebranding make it so.

AOL previewed the new brand identity overnight ahead of its unveiling on December 10th, for the company's spin-off from Time Warner. By measure of big tech sites and Twitter, the rebranding is a total fail before even being officially launched.

Giga OM's Om Malik opined: "The new logo fails to capture what is going to be a smaller, nimbler AOL, one that is represented by a collection of smaller, iconic brands such as Engadget and Joystiq. AOL should ask for its money back!"

NBC Washington's Jim Iovino blogged: "Give those image consultants a year's worth of dial-up and a few thousand AOL CDs packed away in the Dulles campus boiler room. And yes, they're officially calling the logo 'aol-dot'. Dot-what you ask? Good question. We'd suggest 'dot-lame,' but whatever."

Designer Daily blogger Mirko Humbert likes the basic lower-case logo and period, but still gives it a fail: "Unfortunately, there are many chances that you won't even notice the nice changes to the logo since it also features some horrible background images."

AOL Rebranding

The logo was a big topic on Twitter today, too. Some random tweets:

Web designer Will Ayers: "AOL's new branding + identity is nothing short of a complete disaster. Wow. Speechless."

FASTforward blogger Paula Thornton: "And in lower case it is now subjected to pronunciation. How would YOU pronounce aol? : )"

Business Insider writer Alaska Miller: "Iterate, get trolled, re-iterate. Ad nauseum. Maybe now AOL can finally compete. Good on them. TS on the shareholders, though."

Web developer Bruce Clark: "AOL, the world is crying for you. How in the world did you ever seriously consider this...much less make it real?"

Marketer Doug Chavez: "Does anyone else think the new Aol logo looks like it was designed by a 5th grader?"

The branding announcement comes at a strange juxtaposition. AOL execs are on the road trying to woo investors to next month's public offering, while also looking to lop 2,500 heads from the 6,000 payroll. You've got to wonder who would want to leave a company right before a spinoff. I lived in Washington, D.C., when an earlier incarnation of AOL went public and turned even the lowliest of employees into instant millionaires. Surely this past isn't lost on the AOLers looking at the big exit sign.

AOL is giving employees some untoward exit options. Last week, All Things Digital's Kara Swisher blogged:

AOL is offering those who 'volunteer' to leave the company now a departure package that ranges from three to nine months of pay, compared to one to four months for employees laid off in the first quarter of next year. It's a depressing rock-and-a-hard-place choice. An AOL spokesperson confirmed the offer.

Say, AOLers, if the new brand is any indication of things to come, maybe you should take the money now and run. But use that rebranding as bargaining chip for 12 months pay with benefits and a bunch of cheap AOL shares. You can look for reemployment at leisure instead of going down with the good ship Aol., which can't be all that good for you. How cruel is it to take voluntary departures until December 4th, only to trot out the big public offering days later? The point: AOL's execution problem is much bigger than just the rebranding.

Wait. Now when is that public offering again? Officially, it's December 9th. But according to Silicon Alley Insider's Nicholas Carlson, AOL stock could start trading as early as tomorrow under "when issued" trading rules. Sure enough, there's an 8-K filing dated November 20th explaining AOL's plans.

Can you come up with a better brand for AOL than Aol.?

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

Sounds petty but it would have been better to rebrand AOL to aol rather than Aol.

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The idiotic look on the man that just flipped on the right in the last 5 seconds of the video sums it up perfectly.

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what video?

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These must be the same people that came up with "New Coke" and "Kitchen Fried Chicken".

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Sorry that was Kitchen Fresh Chicken

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Kitchen Fried Chicken actually sounds tasty.

Like Mom said with a smile, "Here you go son, battered chicken today, fresh from my deep fryer!"

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maybe same people that came up with the "windows 7 launch party" lol, that tops it all

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1. Swims with the fishes
2. Heavy metal
3. Down the toilet
4. It's an infection
5. Too scary to even think of.
6. Parkinsons. Too morbid? Then Gordian knot.

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maybe he tried texting it on an iphone and it came out like... Aol. instead of aol(space)

iphone users will get it*

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and we care how AOL brands it's name, why?

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let me explain... why do we care about a brand that has pretty much completely changed it's focus,AOL is not in the public eye anymore, heck they are not even the same company they were back in the 90s. They just exist. If anything the re-branding is about freakin' time. Whether the new branding works or not. Get over it. The old AOL we continue to make fun of doesn't exist. Time to stop beating a long dead horse about they're choices.

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America On Lag! =)

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Wow this is just like Elvis, ITS DEAD ALLREADY!!! Someone please just bury this brand and never let its stinking carcass be seen again? AOL was bad 15 years it was bad 10 years ago, STILL bad 5 years ago. It sucks please move on with another product.

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It's like the cheap wh*** renaming herself "Candy".

Still not as disgraceful as NetZero.

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NetZero.. what was their tagline.. Leader of the Free World....They still offer free dial-up bit only up to 10 hours a month.

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"Not since AT&T gobbled up Cingular and rebranded as at&t with that ugly Death Star-like logo"

It's only like Death Star when you draw it like Death Star, with the dimple. Actually, It's a 3-d representation of a globe. You know: "Your world, delivered." It's an update of the logo that AT&T has used for years. I've never heard anybody complain about "sensibility" until now. It's immediately recognizable. If it really looked like a Death Star, I'm sure George Lucas would be all over it.

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For the love of God, somebody put this company out of its misery. AOL (or Aol. or whatever you're going by nowadays), you've had a good run and you've been an important part of American history, but the time has come to ride off into the sunset.

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I can tell you who will be one of the 2500 people that will be laid off comes Dec. 10th and Time Warner / AOL split....

ALL of the AOL, a.o.l. or aol. art department....

Maybe rebrand the name as ""ALL"", which could account for ALL that will be laid off?

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They would have done better with "Lol".
It's time for AOL (Aol) to just die and go away.

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would of done em better if they changed it to the way alot of people type it, simply 'aol'

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I can't be the only person to think it now looks like a dyslexic person trying to spell Owl.

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I still can't get over seeing "Aol." and thinking "a-hole."

They've turned it from acronym to word, but the word doesn't work as a company name. "aol." would have been better, but I'd also argue that the period is plain silly.

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