Candler School of Theology

A Big Change for Change Makers

Quick Overview

The Background

Candler School of Theology is a pillar of Emory University, and is renowned for the quality of theological education they provide. They partnered with us to take that level of renown, and clarify it into a distinctive brand and enhanced web experience that would position Candler to connect with the brightest minds in their field.

Visit https://candler.emory.edu/

Get to the Heart of It

What makes Candler special? It’s a meaningful place to those who know it well, but even they struggled to explain its essence. We had to find the difference and put it into words.

Stand Out

The visual brand needed to jump of the page, while still honoring core components of the Emory University brand. In a space where many competitors play it safe visually, we were looking for a way to shine.

Get Organized

For the Candler team, a well documented brand was as important as a strong one. On the website, we had to both organize the front end navigation to make it easier for users, and implement new systems on the back end that would save the marketing team headaches.

01

Research & Strategy

To build a great brand, you have to truly understand how it exists off the page. Our research took us far and wide, from reviewing the competition’s messaging, to conducting focus groups with current students, faculty and staff, surveying a diverse cross-section of the current student body and alumni, and even visiting campus to experience Candler through the eyes of a student.

At the end of the research phase we had an incredible picture of Candler – we just had to find the details that made that picture so special.

Understanding What Students Want

The end goal here was to identify what made Candler stand out to students — we figured the best way to figure out why a student would choose Candler was to talk to students who had chosen Candler. Here’s what we heard.

An Intentionally Diverse Audience

We heard repeatedly that one of Candler’s great strengths was the diversity of its community; a diversity that the institution has intentionally built. Audiences with very different backgrounds can be a messaging pain point – we determined it was best embraced as a core messaging pillar.

 

Out of the Ivory Tower

The other thing we found that made Candler feel so unique was the way it sent students into the world. Students are asked to bring their own experiences into the classroom, as valuable context for their academic studies — then, they’re asked to take those big ideas they study in the classroom into context in the real world, and apply them to multitudes of service.

 

A Position Built On Change

We wanted to position the new brand around those key elements of Candler that excited students, faculty and staff the most. In the end, it all boiled down to two things: the optimism of the community that each individual could make their own impact, and the fact that a Candler education actually enabled that type of unique impact. With our new rallying cry of “Go, Make Your Change,” we refined the brand platform and set the foundation for an exciting new visual identity.

Making the Message Stick

We had a strong new central message that was authentic to Candler and their audiences. But with so many audiences, and so many touchpoints for them, we had to ensure that the messaging translated.

02

Visual Identity

With the new positioning as our guide, we began working to further distinguish the visual brand from the competition. The new identity needed to balance a serious academic focus with the warmth of our community, and bring the idea of  “Making Change” to life.

We had learned a lot about Candler through research and strategy, but to land on an impactful visual concept we boiled it all down to three core truths.

The Ripple Effect

The resulting visual concept centered on the people who make up the Candler community, and the positive change that they create around them. We wanted to take the idea of the ripple, which could have felt cliche, and give it enough of a modern spin that it felt like a true expression of the Candler brand.

Translating the Campus Experience

When we visited campus, there were certain architectural details we felt particularly inspired by. We knew we wanted to represent the intangible feeling of being at Candler in our visual identity. Cannon Chapel serves as a central meeting place for every student at Candler. We reimagined familiar elements of the chapel itself as accent pieces for the new brand.   We pick that up as a accent to add texture to specific layouts, and as a nod to those who know and love Candler.

The distinctive arch shape in the chapels facade became a framing element for inspiring photography in marquee locations.
The grooves in the concrete walls of the chapel form a striking geometric pattern.
We got extra lucky — our visit happened to be a beautiful day that filled the campus

Enriching the Palette

In order to stay connected to Emory University’s brand, the primary color palette was kept intact – instead of a drastic overhaul, we bolstered the palette with several warm accent colors that gave the system more flexibility, warmth and and a modern feel. We focused on identifying type styles that would feel academic without feeling stuffy — finding that balance led us toward styles that are favored by book publishers, but that still had the flexibility to make an impact on web applications.

With all this brand work in place, we turned to creating a comprehensive style guide that would feel useful for the whole Candler team. We didn’t want it to collect dust — so we worked with them to outline exactly which guidelines would be most useful, where there team would benefit from the most instruction, and even the right language to use in that instruction.

03

Website Design

While we were tackling the breadth of the brand project, we were also working on bringing that new brand to life on a website that was built to both engage and serve a number of audiences. We started with detailed wireframes that focused on all the different types of content that needed a home, and the larger architecture system that would help categorize them all.

Bringing The Story to Life

The Candler experience is so rich, we knew that words alone wouldn’t do it justice. When we outlined the page titled The Candler Experience, a key landing page in the Admissions section of the site, we planned for an immersive visual moment that would play perfectly alongside the strong messaging we’d developed.

Incorporating Candler’s Voices

Our findings during strategy showed the vibrancy of the people that make up the Candler community. We wanted their voices to be featured all over the website, sharing their unique experiences in their own words.

Connecting Students to their New Mentors

We also found that prospective students (and potential faculty members) found a lot of value in the Candler faculty. These are some of the best theological scholars in the country — we wanted to create a highly functional directory that felt like more than a list of contact info.

A Path For Anyone

Candler prides itself on leaving room for its students to forge unique paths for themselves. We found in our research that no matter how unique their path to impact, each Candler student’s goal ultimately was to make an impact. While that became the core of our messaging, we created content on the website that showed just how flexible a Candler education could be. Ultimately, we made it easy for students to envision both the tangible and intangible experience of being at Candler, while making the site easy to navigate.

The degree directory made it quick and easy to browse degree options, while supporting detail pages spoke to the specific experience offered in each degree program.
Working with the Candler team was an incredibly rewarding experience. They really saw the value in getting a better understanding of their brand, of pushing themselves creatively, and of creating a website that was easy for everyone to use. The level of strategic collaboration we were able to have was a dream — and the work shows that level of care.
Chandler Robertson, Strategist