When advertising stops meaning anything, there’s Elvis
The Challenge
Elvis operates in a moment where advertising has lost its authority. Trust has eroded, attention has fragmented, and entertainment has absorbed much of the cultural role advertising once held. As agencies, studios and production models collapsed into one another, the category became harder to read. The risk for Elvis was not invisibility, but misinterpretation. Without a clear point of view, the brand risked being understood only through its output, not through the thinking that shaped it.

Unlock
The tension was not between advertising and entertainment, but between seriousness and play. Our core insight was that Elvis does its best work when it holds opposing forces in balance. Structure and spontaneity. Rigour and expression. Care and energy. Entertainment connects when it is taken seriously, and seriousness only works when it feels alive. This reframed Elvis from a content-led creative company into a studio defined by judgement and intent.



Create
We articulated this belief as a single organising idea: The Elvis Frame of Mind. A mindset rather than a category, designed to guide decision-making rather than describe output. The identity system was built to behave, not decorate. Typography, colour and language were designed as one integrated system, capable of moving between editorial restraint and cultural expression without losing coherence. The marque functions as both a sign of authorship and an active framing device, while a circular motif provides a structural way to frame, connect and organise ideas. Black and white establish authority and clarity, with accent colours introduced sparingly to signal energy and expression where needed.
Become
This system allows Elvis to show up differently across audiences, platforms and moments while remaining recognisable. It supports commercial work without flattening it, and cultural work without overstating it. Technology plays a supporting role, enabling flexibility and responsiveness rather than defining the brand. The identity holds under pressure, adapting to context without fragmenting or becoming performative.



Unmistakably Elvis
Elvis is now recognised by how it thinks as much as by what it produces. The brand signals seriousness without stiffness and entertainment without excess. It competes through judgement rather than volume, and through clarity rather than noise. Elvis operates from a clear frame of mind, one that balances intent with energy, and structure with freedom. Entertainment, taken seriously.





Scope
Brand Strategy & Positioning
Brand Framework Development
Audience & Cultural Insight
Brand Identity Systems
Art Direction & Visual Language
Narrative and Verbal Identity
Digital Experience Design
Motion and Brand Dynamics
Studio NARI team
Executive Creative Director
Senior Designer
Designer
Angel Bantu
Junior Designer
Motion
Thiago Pinho
Motion
Project Manager
Joe Osborne
Strategy
Client team
Josh Green
Chief Creative Officer
Lucy Freedman
Chief Growth Officer
Matt Sanders
Head of Design
Laura Melville
Head of Delivery & Integrated Production