Put some colour on your plate
Goodfood was already the leading brand in the Canadian food delivery market, but they had bigger plans. They were on a mission to change how Canadians shop for groceries. Standing out wasn’t enough; they needed to stand apart.
They deliver high-quality meals that arrive quickly and are easy to prepare. Still, they go a step further by making hard to source ingredients and products easily available and reasonably priced.
Quake brought this mission to life with a brand language as colourful as their food. The result is a fresh and distinctive brand that retains the existing equity and seamlessly integrates its digital and physical assets.
Scope:
- Strategy,
- brand design,
- content system,
- campaign design,
- packaging design,
- livery,
- motion graphics,
- video,
- innovation,
- employee communications,
- office design.
The delivery vans, boxes, and bags were redesigned to be as tasty and colourful as the food inside. In addition, we created different versions to combat the bias that meal kits didn’t offer variety.
Exquisite meals that are simple enough to be a part of everyday life.
Illustration FTW
Food photography is vital to a meal delivery brand, but it does make it difficult to stand out. Quake created an illustration system that marries the tradition of botanical woodcuts with the bold character of vector art, creating tasty illustrations that are unlike any of our meal kit and delivery competitors.
The bold illustrations stand out, scale to OOH and digital, and work with beautiful photography.
Content System
Goodfood isn’t just a grocer; they’re a source of inspiration and knowledge. Quake created brand assets and a modular content system that allowed Goodfood to easily publish across multiple channels without having to redesign the layout, reset the type or recrop the assets.
A grid system was created with images and type retaining their relational sizes to be scaled and used in a “plug and play” manner.
The system has enough variety to keep things fresh without taxing the content teams needlessly.