Miami Herald

Burger King overhauls its look by updating retro designs

Miami-based Burger King teamed with a New York ad agency to create its first major rebranding since 1999.

- BY HOWARD COHEN hcohen@miamiheral­d.com

Miami-based Burger King thinks the way to remake its image visually is to revisit the year when man walked on the moon and musicians played at Woodstock.

The spirit of 1969 is coming back to the fast-food joint famed for its Whopper.

Feeling groovy?

The back-to-thefuture concept includes a new logo that swaps out the 1999 logo created in the company’s last major rebranding. That one has a circular blue swish around an off-center, popping burger icon. The new one is a somewhatup­dated take on the 1969 version. It once again sports a centered, flat burger in ketchupred color on a spicy

mustard-colored bun that reads “Burger King.”

There’s also new packaging with fonts in custom serif typeface called “Flame” and retro colors.

Customers should see the new visuals on wrappers and menu boards rolling out starting this month, but they could take time to hit your local BK. The digitalmed­ia update is already live. BK has already revamped its Twitter page.

The company touts the new logo as “out with the old, in with a new classic” that shows, well, a look at a squishy Burger King logo that 1970s kids might remember.

Over the next few years, Burger King aims to roll out the new design at restaurant locations worldwide.

The BK typeface reboot, designed by the Jones Knowles Ritchie ad agency in New York, mirrors the early ’70s typeface Cooper Black, according to a report in Fast Company.

That imagery — in eyepopping green, brown, red and burnt orange in shapes not unlike the burgers contained within the wrappers — could have boomers feeling flashbacks.

“Design is one of the most essential tools we have for communicat­ing who we are and what we value, and it plays a vital role in creating desire for our food and maximizing guests’ experience,” Raphael Abreu, Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal head of design, said in a statement. Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal owns Burger King.

“We wanted to use design to get people to crave our food.”

Of course, you can’t eat the wrappers, no matter how appetizing they may appear.

According to BK, the new look is the first complete company rebrand in more than 20 years and is geared to “authentica­lly represent Burger King values.”

The move is also an attempt to make Burger King more competitiv­e among its challenger­s in the fast-food business. According to Restaurant Business’ chain restaurant report rankings of the 250 top such companies in the U.S. in 2020, Burger King is in fifth place, with year-over-year sales growing at 2.7% from 2019. This compares to McDonald’s 4.9% and Chick-filA’s 13%— the biggest jump in the Top 5.

That puts the Miami powerhouse behind its longest rival, McDonald’s, which held the top spot, but finds BK beaten by Starbucks, Chick-fil-A and Taco Bell.

Beyond the longstandi­ng “Have It Your Way” M.O., this “playfully irreverent” retro-modern jolt means “a commitment to digital-first expression and recent improvemen­ts to taste and food quality, through the removal of colors, flavors and preservati­ves from artificial sources from menu items, as well as an ambitious pledge to environmen­tal sustainabi­lity,” the company said.

The new minimalist logo aims to represent the times and pay homage to the brand’s 67-year-old history.

And nope, this doesn’t yet include the return of another ’70s favorite, the Yumbo hot ham sandwich. BK briefly brought the Yumbo back in a promotiona­l push in 2014, without its original Styrofoam packaging.

 ?? Burger King ?? Some Burger Kings will get a modern redesign starting in 2021, according to the Miami-based fast-food chain, which has launched its first major rebranding since 1999.
Burger King Some Burger Kings will get a modern redesign starting in 2021, according to the Miami-based fast-food chain, which has launched its first major rebranding since 1999.
 ?? Burger King ?? Burger King’s first major rebranding since 1999 brings retro imagery and colors to its food wrappings and restaurant designs.
Burger King Burger King’s first major rebranding since 1999 brings retro imagery and colors to its food wrappings and restaurant designs.
 ??  ?? Burger King wants ‘to use design to get people to crave our food.’
Burger King wants ‘to use design to get people to crave our food.’

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