MacNeela’s Tree Service: Making the Right Audience Fit Visible
The goal was not to invent a new identity. The goal was to identify who MacNeela’s already speaks to and highlight that visually. We rebuilt the logo as a badge system that reads clearly on trucks, apparel, and social while keeping the client’s full chainsaw requirement.
2 weeks
From discovery to production files
Logo and badge system
Built for trucks, apparel, and social
Full chainsaw required
Literal, not abstract
Before and After
Before
- Functional but generic identity
- Weak visual hierarchy
- Small tree graphic doing most of the signaling
- Family name not strongly emphasized
- Limited recognition across trucks, apparel, and social
After
- Clear badge style identity
- Strong hierarchy led by the MacNeela’s name
- Trade forward chainsaw symbol reinforcing the service
- Balanced composition built for distance readability
- Consistent mark across trucks, apparel, and social
The Situation
The existing logo communicated “tree service,” but it did not communicate trade credibility, an established tone, or who the company was for. The brand needed a mark that reads clearly in the real world and holds up across every touchpoint.
- Readable on truck doors and equipment
- Works on apparel and small placements
- Consistent look across social media
The Insight
MacNeela’s already appeals to practical, middle income homeowners who value competent work over showmanship. The strongest asset was the family name. It sounds established, generational, and rooted. The redesign’s job was to make that identity visible.
The Strategy
Message hierarchy
- MacNeela’s as the primary anchor
- Tree Service as category clarity
- Phone number present for conversion, clearly third
Constraint integration
The client required a full, literal chainsaw in the logo. The design challenge was keeping it unmistakable without letting it overpower the family name.
The Execution
A circular badge system was selected because it feels established, reads clearly at a distance, and scales cleanly to apparel and social avatars. The background shape evolved into a stump cross section to ground the mark in trade reality, not decoration.
The Result
Field impact
- Middle class neighborhoods responded with more confidence
- Customers connected trucks, apparel, and online presence as one cohesive brand
- The crew appeared clean, skilled, and established without looking overly invested
Social proof
- “Sick logo.”
- “What we need on the hats.”
- “This is awesome.”
Community Response
When the new MacNeela’s mark was shared publicly, the response was immediate. Customers and friends of the business reacted positively and quickly connected the new identity to merchandise and future branding.
- “Hell yeah, sick logo.”
- “What we need on the hats.”
- “Keep up with the good work.”
Closing thought
Branding is not about inventing a new identity. It is about identifying who the company already speaks to and amplifying that visually. MacNeela’s did not change who they serve. The redesign made it easier for the right customers to recognize themselves in the brand.
Honest note. If we do a v2 later, the next improvement would be simplifying the small tree icons and tightening type and palette cohesion.
