Over the last two years, I’ve traveled through a succession of university archives—aesthetically gorgeous and teeming with deep insights—where I studied the papers of twentieth century visionaries, innovators, and creators.
One of them was Paul Rand (1914-1996), a giant of twentieth century graphic design, whose papers are housed at Yale University.
Rand was the preeminent logo designer of his day. He created the iconic logos of IBM, UPS, and dozens of other companies. He was an admired friend of Steve Jobs. His former students recount him as an expansive thinker who connected prehistoric cave art and Renaissance sculptures to modern industrial design.
Paul Rand. Source: Library of Congress, public domain photograph.
One aspect of his success? He treated design as an all-encompassing skill, not mere decoration.
“To design is much more than simply to assemble, to order, or even to edit,” Rand wrote in his book Design, Form, and Chaos. “It is to add value and meaning, to illuminate, to simplify, to clarify, to modify, to dignify, to dramatize, to persuade, perhaps even to amuse.”
Rand’s tenets go much further than design. They endure today for anyone setting out to communicate their ideas as a business leader, to be known for their contributions. Here at Alembic Partners, his work is a cornerstone to our craft.
Paul Rand’s advice for the creator, the visionary, the founder:
“Don’t try to be original. Just be good.” Business leaders must focus on quality and substance rather than chasing genius, brilliance, or fleeting trends. Excellence of execution must be your priority over novelty.
“The imagination takes the slightest hints and turns them into revelations.” Rand was a proponent of intuition as the source of creative decisions. He believed that intuition was a sense, akin to sight or smell, that could be honed, refined, and developed. Your imagination, not data alone, transforms simple ideas into beautiful insights.
“Design is the silent ambassador of your brand.” Think about everything you post or publish, whether on social media, in articles, videos, books—but look beyond words alone. Is your voice consistent? Do you send a coherent message? Does your audience grasp who you really are?
“Simplicity is not the goal. It is the byproduct of a good idea and modest expectations.” As a business leader, you must strive to present complex ideas in straightforward ways. Your audience must be able to grasp your concepts without much thought.
“Design is the fusion of form and content, the realization and unique expression of an idea.” Your ideas as a business leader must be compelling, and your delivery must be equally strong. The way you present your idea is just as important as the idea itself.
If you found this helpful, and would like to consider working together, please feel free to contact us with a summary of your idea at [email protected]. At Alembic Partners, we ghostwrite books and thought leadership campaigns for CEOs, business leaders, founders, and investors.