Kind Bar
Long have granola bars been a recurring character in the role of a healthy snack in lunch boxes, vending machines, convenience stores, coffee bars and in the grocery store checkout lane. But recently, granola bars have taken a lot of flack for being, in a lot of cases as high in sugar, fat, salt, additives and preservatives as the candy bars they were replacing.
Enter Kind, an all-natural bar with ingredients you can see and pronounce that not only tastes good, but is good for you. I like Kind bars, and while I admire the fact they can show their product confidently through a clear package, I knew there was a package more, well, kind.
Be that as it may, Kind’s nothing-to-hide ideology manifests itself in short ingredient lists and clear packaging. Kind uses modern science to make a granola bar the right way, with ingredients that can be seen and pronounced—you know, the way it used to be made.
Kind's customer:
- 18-35, Millennials
- Urban
- Active
- Student/busy professional
- Health-conscious
- Seeking something than the candy bar/bag-of-chips snack
Philosophy:
- Nothing to hide. Ingredients you can see & pronounce.
- No additives or preservatives
- Candy bar replacement.
- A granola bar that is actually healthy and not just a candy bar in health-food clothes.
- “Eat food, not too much, mostly plants” —Michael Pollan
Slogan:
- A snack that tastes good and is good for you. Just enough to keep you going, but won’t slow you down. Be kind to yourself!
Kind is:
- Mindful
- Engaged
- Different
- Strong
- Convenient
- Positive
- World-Wise
- Encouraging
- Energetic
- Outgoing
- Empathetic
Kind is not:
- Holier than thou
- Aloof
- Derogatory
- Macho
- Cumbersom
- Negative
- Pretentious
- Patronizing
- Sales-y
- Tacky
- Wimpy
There were also a few opportunities to do something better.
The straight lines and all-caps typography is better suited to a box of Wintel software than it is for a tasty, healthy snack. First, I sought to give the emotionally-charged word 'Kind' a makeover befitting of kindness, warmth and personability.
First, Kind's massive and ever-expanding range of flavors and categories was disjointed, complicating the split-second decision making process of choosing a snack on the go. Even the most health-conscious consumers make their snack choices based on flavors. Underscoring Kind's integrity, I lettered the logotype by hand, and paired it with illustrations insipired by fruit crate labels and tattoos.
Thanks for stopping by!