主流连锁品牌的视觉系统与演变趋势

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Visual Systems and Evolution Trends of Mainstream Chain Brands

不是每家店都长一样,而是每家店都让你认得出。

一、为什么先看主流品牌?

在讨论“怎么做”之前,先看“做对了什么”。

成功的连锁品牌,不是靠运气开遍全国的。它们有一套可复制的视觉系统——既能保证“千店一面”的品牌识别,又能实现“千店千面”的本地适应。

以下分析六个主流连锁品牌,覆盖餐饮、零售、咖啡、茶饮、便利店、酒店六个业态。

二、六个品牌的视觉系统拆解

案例一:星巴克 —— “第三空间”的视觉体系

维度做法为什么有效
统一性绿色美人鱼Logo、暖木色调、绿色围裙全球统一识别,看到就知道是星巴克
灵活性每家店融入当地建筑特色(天津百年银行店、成都宽窄巷子店)每家店都是“目的地”,不是“复制品”
核心资产美人鱼Logo、绿色、木质元素、咖啡文化符号不变的是“符号”,变的是“载体”

一句话:星巴克 = 一个Logo + 一套材质语言 + 无限的地方化表达。

数据:全球超过38000家门店,消费者走进任何一家,3秒内确认“这是星巴克”。

案例二:麦当劳 —— “金色拱门”的视觉统治力

维度做法为什么有效
统一性金色拱门Logo、红色背景、明确的点餐动线极致的视觉识别,高速公路上就能看见
灵活性不同国家菜单看板不同、店面风格不同(伦敦黑金店、北京王府井中式店)核心符号不变,氛围可调
核心资产金色拱门、红+黄色彩、套餐编号系统符号足够简单,足够有力

一句话:麦当劳 = 一个超级符号 + 一套色彩系统 + 极致的重复。

数据:全球超过40000家门店,金色拱门的识别度仅次于十字架。

案例三:海底捞 —— “服务即视觉”的体验系统

维度做法为什么有效
统一性红色品牌色、Hi字Logo、等位区、美甲台、围裙统一的“服务触点”设计
灵活性不同城市的等位小吃不同、店面风格有差异核心体验不变,在地化内容可调
核心资产“Hi”符号、红色、服务仪式(甩面、变脸)视觉符号+行为符号双重锁定

一句话:海底捞 = Logo + 色彩 + 服务仪式的标准化。

数据:全球超过1400家门店,消费者对“Hi”符号的识别率超过90%。

案例四:喜茶 —— “灵感”驱动的视觉进化

维度做法为什么有效
统一性饮茶小人Logo、极简黑白、插画风格年轻、有调性、有辨识度
灵活性每家店都是“概念店”(黑金店、Pink店、LAB店)每家店都是话题,激发分享欲
核心资产饮茶小人、极简插画风格、材质实验风格统一,形态多变

一句话:喜茶 = 一个IP形象 + 一套插画语言 + 无限的空间实验。

数据:小红书“喜茶打卡”相关笔记超过100万篇,每家新店开业都是城市热点。

案例五:7-Eleven —— “便利”的视觉效率

维度做法为什么有效
统一性红橙绿条纹、7-Eleven字体、收银台动线极致的识别效率,从街头一眼认出
灵活性不同国家商品陈列不同、鲜食品类不同货架可调,但品牌色和动线不变
核心资产红橙绿条纹、数字7、收银台位置色彩和数字是识别核心

一句话:7-Eleven = 一个色彩条纹 + 一个数字 + 一套动线标准。

数据:全球超过85000家门店,全世界门店数最多的连锁品牌。

案例六:亚朵酒店 —— “属地文化”的视觉策略

维度做法为什么有效
统一性亚朵紫、摄影作品、阅读区、属地早餐统一的“人文”调性
灵活性每家店的摄影作品是当地的、早餐是当地的、书籍是当地的核心体验不变,内容就地取材
核心资产亚朵紫、摄影、阅读、属地文化调性统一,内容属地

一句话:亚朵 = 一个色彩 + 一个文化主题 + 在地内容填充。

数据:全国超过1000家酒店,中高端酒店满意度连续多年第一。

三、六个品牌的核心特征汇总

品牌识别核心主色彩可变维度统一靠什么灵活靠什么
星巴克美人鱼Logo绿建筑风貌、材质Logo+绿色+木质在地建筑特色
麦当劳金色拱门红+黄店面风格、菜单板拱门+红黄国家/文化适配
海底捞“Hi”字符号等位区、服务细节Hi+红色+服务仪式在地小吃、店面风格
喜茶饮茶小人黑白+点缀每家店都是概念店小人+插画风格空间实验
7-Eleven数字7+条纹红橙绿商品陈列、货架条纹+7+动线国家/品类适配
亚朵摄影+阅读属地文化内容紫色+摄影+阅读在地摄影、在地早餐

四、他们做对了什么?——五个核心发现

发现说明案例
1. 有一个“雷打不动”的识别核心无论怎么变,核心识别元素不变星巴克的美人鱼、麦当劳的拱门、7-Eleven的条纹
2. 色彩是第二识别语言色彩比图形更快被识别星巴克的绿、麦当劳的红黄、亚朵的紫
3. 统一的是“规则”,灵活的是“内容”框架不变,框架里的东西可以变亚朵的摄影是当地的、喜茶的店是概念店
4. 可变维度被提前定义不是“随便变”,是“在框架内变”星巴克的建筑可变,但Logo位置和绿色不变
5. 核心资产被系统化管理所有门店调用的核心资产是同一套六个品牌都有统一的Logo、色彩、字体库

五、连锁品牌视觉系统的演变趋势

过去十年,连锁品牌的视觉系统经历了三代演变。每一代都在解决前一代的核心矛盾。

第一代:标准化复制(2010-2015)

特征做法问题
统一图纸一套图纸开遍全国完全不考虑当地条件
统一供应链指定唯一供应商成本高、本地无法参与
总部强管控所有决策总部做反应慢、加盟商怨气大

代表:早期快餐连锁、经济型酒店。

核心问题:太僵。一家店在一个城市成功了,直接复制到另一个城市——但城市不一样、人群不一样、供应链不一样。

第二代:模块化组合(2015-2020)

特征做法突破
模块化设计提供“乐高式”模块,门店按需组合灵活性大幅提升
指定标准不指定供应商,指定性能标准成本下降,本地供应链参与
分级管控总部定规则,区域做选择决策效率提升

代表:第二代茶饮品牌(喜茶、奈雪)、中端酒店。

核心突破:不再“一刀切”,而是“一个框架,多种组合”。

第三代:动态生长(2020-至今)

特征做法突破
视觉基因总部提供“品牌基因”,门店“表达”统一性不靠“一模一样”,靠“长得很像”
属地化内容核心资产统一,内容本地取材每家店都有“在地感”
系统化交付视觉资产存于系统,门店随时调用迭代成本低、执行不走样

代表:亚朵、星巴克臻选店、喜茶LAB店。

核心突破:从“总部设计一切”到“总部定规则,门店做表达”。

三代演变对比

维度第一代(复制)第二代(模块)第三代(生长)
统一性来源一模一样同一套模块同一套基因
灵活性几乎为零有限组合无限表达
总部角色设计者框架制定者规则+资产提供者
门店角色执行者选择者表达者
成本结构高(统一采购)中(标准+本地)灵活
迭代方式推翻重来模块级更新持续生长

六、正在发生的四个新趋势

趋势一:数字化店招

LED屏、动态灯光正在取代静态招牌。同一套模板,不同时段不同内容——白天是品牌展示,晚上是氛围灯光,活动期间是促销画面。

好处:统一性(模板统一)+ 灵活性(内容可换)的矛盾被技术化解。

趋势二:员工即媒介

工装不再是“制服”,而是“移动广告位”。Z世代的店员穿着好看的工装自发拍照发小红书——工装本身就是品牌内容。

案例:某茶饮品牌的围裙设计成了打卡点,员工穿着它拍照,比官方海报传播还广。

趋势三:门店即内容

品牌不再把门店当作“销售点”,而是当作“内容生产点”。每家新店都是一次品牌事件,设计得足够特别,用户会自发传播。

案例:喜茶的每家概念店都是小红书爆款,开业即刷屏。设计费不只是装修成本,还是营销预算。

趋势四:系统即底座

所有门店调用的核心资产——Logo、色彩、字体、模板、工程文件——都存于一个在线系统。总部更新,门店同步;新店开张,直接下载;加盟商不会用错,因为系统不给他错的机会。

案例:星巴克全球门店的门头规范,都从一个中央系统调取。不是设计师画完发邮件,是系统里有一套“门头生成器”。

七、对品牌设计者的启示

启示说明
先定不可变的,再设可变的没有不可变的框架,灵活性就是混乱
核心资产要足够简单简单到在高速公路上、在50米外都能被识别
可变维度要提前划界告诉执行者“什么可以变、什么不能变、变的范围是多少”
趋势要提前布局数字化店招、员工即媒介、门店即内容——这些不是未来,是现在
系统是这一切的底座没有系统,统一性和灵活性都是空话

八、结语

连锁品牌视觉系统的演变,清晰地指向一个方向:

从“总部设计一切”,走向“总部提供基因,门店生长表达”。

  • 第一代:一模一样
  • 第二代:模块组合
  • 第三代:基因生长

不变的是识别核心,变的是表达方式。不变的是品牌资产,变的是承载载体。

这就是连锁品牌视觉系统的过去、现在和未来。

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English Version

Visual Systems and Evolution Trends of Mainstream Chain Brands

Not every store looks identical, but every store lets you recognize the brand at a glance.

Part One: Why Look at Mainstream Brands First?

Before discussing “how to do it,” let’s examine “what they did right.”

Successful chain brands don’t expand nationwide by luck. They have a repeatable visual system — one that ensures both “thousand-store consistency” in brand recognition and “thousand-store individuality” in local adaptation.

The following analysis covers six mainstream chain brands across six sectors: coffee, fast food, hot pot, tea drinks, convenience stores, and hotels.

Part Two: Visual System Breakdown of Six Brands

Case 1: Starbucks — The Visual Grammar of the “Third Place”

DimensionPracticeWhy It Works
ConsistencyGreen siren logo, warm wood tones, green apronsGlobally consistent recognition — you know it’s Starbucks
FlexibilityEach store融入 local architecture (e.g., Tianjin historic bank branch, Chengdu Kuanzhai Alley store)Every store is a “destination,” not a “copy”
Core AssetsSiren logo, green, wood elements, coffee culture symbolsWhat stays the same are the “symbols”; what changes are the “carriers”

In one sentence: Starbucks = one logo + one material language + infinite local expressions.

Data: Over 38,000 stores globally. Walk into any one, and within 3 seconds you know it’s Starbucks.

Case 2: McDonald’s — The Visual Dominance of the Golden Arches

DimensionPracticeWhy It Works
ConsistencyGolden arches logo, red background, clear ordering path极致 visual recognition — visible from the highway
FlexibilityDifferent menu boards by country, different store styles (e.g., London black-and-gold store, Beijing王府井 Chinese-style store)Core symbol不变,atmosphere adjustable
Core AssetsGolden arches, red+yellow color system, meal number systemSymbols simple enough, strong enough

In one sentence: McDonald’s = one super symbol + one color system +极致 repetition.

Data: Over 40,000 stores globally. The golden arches are the second most recognized symbol after the cross.

Case 3: Haidilao — An Experience System Where “Service Is Visual”

DimensionPracticeWhy It Works
ConsistencyRed brand color, “Hi” logo, waiting area, nail salon, apronsUnified design of “service touchpoints”
FlexibilityDifferent waiting snacks by city, variations in store designCore experience不变,localized content adjustable
Core Assets“Hi” symbol, red, service rituals (noodle pulling, face-changing)Visual symbol + behavioral symbol双重锁定

In one sentence: Haidilao = logo + color + service ritual standardization.

Data: Over 1,400 stores globally. Consumer recognition of the “Hi” symbol exceeds 90%.

Case 4: Heytea — Visual Evolution Driven by “Inspiration”

DimensionPracticeWhy It Works
ConsistencyDrinking figure logo, minimalist black/white, illustration styleYouthful, tasteful, recognizable
FlexibilityEvery store is a “concept store” (black-and-gold, pink, LAB)Every store is a talking point, sparking sharing
Core AssetsDrinking figure, minimalist illustration style, material experimentationStyle统一,forms多变

In one sentence: Heytea = one IP character + one illustration language + infinite spatial experimentation.

Data: Over 1 million Xiaohongshu posts tagged with “Heytea check-in.” Every new store opening becomes a city hotspot.

Case 5: 7-Eleven — The Visual Efficiency of “Convenience”

DimensionPracticeWhy It Works
ConsistencyRed-orange-green stripes, 7-Eleven字体,checkout counter path极致 recognition efficiency — spotted from the street at a glance
FlexibilityDifferent product displays by country, different fresh food categoriesShelves adjustable, but brand colors and path不变
Core AssetsRed-orange-green stripes, the number 7, checkout counter placementColors and number are the识别 core

In one sentence: 7-Eleven = one color stripe + one number + one path standard.

Data: Over 85,000 stores globally — the most stores of any chain brand in the world.

Case 6: Atour Hotel — The Visual Strategy of “Local Culture”

DimensionPracticeWhy It Works
ConsistencyAtour purple, photography, reading area, local breakfastUnified “cultural” tone
FlexibilityEvery store’s photography is local, breakfast is local, books are localCore experience不变,content sourced locally
Core AssetsAtour purple, photography, reading, local cultureTone统一,content local

In one sentence: Atour = one color + one cultural theme + local content filling.

Data: Over 1,000 hotels nationwide. Customer satisfaction among mid-to-high-end hotels ranks first for many consecutive years.

Part Three: Core Characteristics of the Six Brands — Summary Table

Brand识别 CorePrimary ColorVariable DimensionsWhat Ensures ConsistencyWhat Enables Flexibility
StarbucksSiren logoGreenArchitecture, materialsLogo + green + woodLocal architectural character
McDonald’sGolden archesRed+yellowStore style, menu boardArches + red/yellowNational/cultural adaptation
Haidilao“Hi” symbolRedWaiting area, service detailsHi + red + service ritualsLocal snacks, store design
HeyteaDrinking figureBlack/white + accentEvery store a concept storeFigure + illustration styleSpatial experimentation
7-ElevenNumber 7 + stripesRed/orange/greenProduct display, shelvingStripes + 7 + pathNational/category adaptation
AtourPhotography + readingPurpleLocal cultural contentPurple + photography + readingLocal photography, local breakfast

Part Four: What Did They Do Right? — Five Core Discoveries

DiscoveryExplanationCase Example
1. An “unshakeable”识别 coreNo matter what changes, the识别 core element不变Starbucks’ siren, McDonald’s arches, 7-Eleven’s stripes
2. Color is the second识别 languageColor is recognized faster than formStarbucks’ green, McDonald’s red/yellow, Atour’s purple
3. What’s统一 are the “rules”; what’s flexible is the “content”Framework不变,what fills the framework can changeAtour’s photography is local; Heytea’s stores are concept stores
4. Variable dimensions are pre-definedNot “change anything,” but “change within a framework”Starbucks’ architecture can change, but logo placement and green不变
5. Core assets are systematically managedEvery store calls on the same set of core assetsAll six brands have统一 logo, color, and font libraries

Part Five: The Evolution of Chain Brand Visual Systems

Over the past decade, chain brand visual systems have gone through three generations of evolution. Each generation solves a core矛盾 of the previous one.

First Generation: Standardized Replication (2010-2015)

FeaturePracticeProblem
Uniform blueprintsOne set of drawings for all stores完全不考虑 local conditions
Uniform supply chain指定单一供应商High cost, no local participation
Headquarters controls everythingHeadquarters makes all decisionsSlow response, franchisee resentment

Representatives: Early fast-food chains, economy hotels.

Core problem: Too rigid. A store succeeded in one city, so they copied it exactly to another — but the city was different, the people were different, the supply chain was different.

Second Generation: Modular Combination (2015-2020)

FeaturePracticeBreakthrough
Modular designProvide “Lego-like” modules, stores组合 as neededFlexibility significantly improved
Specify standardsSpecify performance standards, not specific suppliersLower costs, local supply chain participation
Tiered managementHeadquarters sets rules, regions make choicesImproved decision efficiency

Representatives: Second-wave tea brands (Heytea, Nayuki), mid-tier hotels.

Core breakthrough:不再 “one-size-fits-all,” but “one framework, multiple combinations.”

Third Generation: Dynamic Growth (2020–present)

FeaturePracticeBreakthrough
Visual genesHeadquarters provides “brand genes,” stores “express”Consistency doesn’t rely on “identical,” but on “looks like family”
Localized contentCore assets统一,content sourced locallyEvery store has a “sense of place”
System-based deliveryVisual assets stored in a system, stores access on demandLow iteration cost, consistent execution

Representatives: Atour, Starbucks Reserve stores, Heytea LAB stores.

Core breakthrough: From “headquarters designs everything” to “headquarters sets rules, stores express.”

Comparison of the Three Generations

DimensionFirst Generation (Replication)Second Generation (Modular)Third Generation (Growth)
Source of consistencyBeing identicalUsing the same modulesSharing the same genes
FlexibilityNearly zero有限 combinationsInfinite expressions
Headquarters roleDesignerFramework setterRule + asset provider
Store roleExecutorChooserExpresser
Cost structureHigh (unified procurement)Medium (standard + local)Flexible
Iteration methodStart overModule-level updatesContinuous growth

Part Six: Four Emerging Trends

Trend 1: Digital Storefronts

LED screens and dynamic lighting are replacing static signage. The same template, different content for different times — brand showcase during the day, ambient lighting at night, promotional graphics during campaigns.

Benefit: The矛盾 between consistency (统一 template) and flexibility (changeable content) is resolved by technology.

Trend 2: Employees as Media

Uniforms are no longer just “work attire” but “mobile ad space.” Gen Z employees wearing attractive uniforms spontaneously take photos and post them on Xiaohongshu — the uniform itself becomes brand content.

Case: A tea brand’s apron became a photo spot. Employees posted photos wearing it, which spread more widely than official ads.

Trend 3: Stores as Content

Brands不再 treat stores as mere “sales points” but as “content production points.” Every new store is a brand event. Design it distinctively, and users will spread it spontaneously.

Case: Every Heytea concept store is a Xiaohongshu hit. Opening day is a trending topic. Design fees are not just renovation costs — they’re marketing budgets.

Trend 4: System as Foundation

All core assets called upon by every store — logos, colors, fonts, templates, engineering files — are stored in an online system. Headquarters updates, stores sync. New store opening? Download directly. Franchisees can’t make mistakes because the system doesn’t give them the chance.

Case: Starbucks’ global storefront standards are all retrieved from a central system. Not “designer draws and emails,” but a “storefront generator” in the system.

Part Seven: Implications for Brand Designers

InsightExplanation
Define what can’t change first, then what can changeWithout an unchangeable framework, flexibility is chaos
Core assets must be simple enoughSimple enough to be recognized from a highway, from 50 meters away
Variable dimensions must be pre-definedTell executors “what can change, what can’t change, and the range of change”
Start布局 for trends nowDigital storefronts, employees as media, stores as content — these are not the future, they are the present
System is the foundation of everythingWithout a system, both consistency and flexibility are empty words

Part Eight: Conclusion

The evolution of chain brand visual systems points clearly in one direction:

From “headquarters designs everything” to “headquarters provides genes, stores grow their own expressions.”

  • First generation: identical
  • Second generation: modular组合
  • Third generation: gene-based growth

What doesn’t change is the识别 core. What changes is the mode of expression.
What doesn’t change is the brand asset. What changes is the载体 that carries it.

This is the past, present, and future of chain brand visual systems.

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