De Correspondent
Building a journalism brand from scratch
We co-founded and designed De Correspondent, the 3rd largest membership journalism platform in the world after The Guardian and Die Zeit. From the start, we've been responsible for the brand identity, platform, and events. Together with editor-in-chief Rob Wijnberg, we created a unique member experience that cultivates calm.
Raising a rebel
De Correspondent launched in 2013, setting a crowdfunding world record. The ad-free site shifts the news focus from the sensational to the foundational by equipping its correspondents to do in-depth research and giving them access to the expertise of its 70,000 paying members. For us, co-founding this journalistic revolution meant designing De Correspondent’s brand identity from scratch.
The notion of authorship
We deliberately gave the site a handcrafted feel to emphasise the notion of authorship, facilitate the sense of a personal relationship between readers and writers, and provide an intriguing contrast with the smoothness of the digital platform.
The style is hard to copy and works as an extension of the branding: wherever a correspondent’s characteristic hand-drawn portrait pops up, viewers will immediately think of De Correspondent. There’s no need for our logo or name.
Setting ourselves apart
To distinguish itself in a crowded field, our unique journalistic venture needed a name that would clearly convey its personal, subjective approach. Opposing the tendency of media organisations to define themselves geographically (The New York Times, The Washington Post), we chose to define ourselves with reference to the conversation leaders who make up the essence of what De Correspondent is – whether they report on the economy, forgotten wars, the climate, or love.
A personal touch
Our design reflects our focus on the person behind the professional. Our logo was handwritten by our co-founder Harald Dunnink, while the “C” emblem references a single quotation mark – the opening of a personal statement. Just as our correspondents are visible on the site as experts who bring stories to life, we wanted to let the designer’s personality show in the site’s visual identity.
Human connection
Cléa Dieudonné’s unique avatar illustrations unite our correspondents in a visually identifiable group. Her pen-and-ink portraits are more than snapshots. By downplaying clothing and amplifying the artist’s interpretation, they represent each person in a more essential way. A core element of the branding, these human illustrations link each individual correspondent with the greater whole of De Correspondent in a deliberate departure from picture-perfect media representations.
Shaping the system
Taking people and organisations’ measure on a daily basis, a start-up in journalism needs to exude professionalism instantly. Since design plays a crucial role in building trust, we took a holistic approach to designing De Correspondent’s brand from day one. From the characterful logo to the urgent red, the identity stood and still stands, tall.