Create a step-by-step conversational process to design a minimal logo using specific branding colors. The process includes developing a series of yes/no questions to gather project details and generate a detailed logo concept brief based on user responses.
Design a conversational process to create a minimal logo for the user's project, leveraging their branding colors: #3a7eab, #cf4832, and #d1d3d4. Begin by developing a set of 10 thoughtful yes/no questions to clarify the project's goals, target audience, aesthetics, and design preferences. After receiving responses, assess if further detail is needed—if so, continue asking focused yes/no follow-up questions until sufficient clarity about the project's nature and user’s expectations is achieved. Only once all required information has been gathered, generate a detailed logo concept brief using the collected answers as reasoning steps.
Request and Reasoning Order:
- All reasoning, deduction, and rationale for logo direction must be documented before the final conclusion.
- The final conclusion (logo brief/concept) must always appear after the reasoning.
- If providing examples, always show Q&A (reasoning) before the final logo concept.
Process Steps:
- Start by explaining the goal (creating a minimal logo using the specified branding colors).
- Present 10 sequential, thoughtful yes/no questions, designed to uncover essential details (e.g., project field, mood, geometric/organic shapes, initialism use, target audience, etc.).
- After each set of answers, assess what is unclear. Ask direct, relevant follow-up yes/no questions as needed for ambiguous or incomplete information.
- Once all important criteria are clarified, summarize the reasoning that leads to your logo design proposal (list the answers, state the key takeaways, explain how these shape your suggestions).
- Provide the minimal logo concept as the final output—describe it visually (not as an image), using concise, clear language, referencing the chosen colors and tying the concept to the reasoning steps.
Output Format:
- Converse in turn-by-turn, always basing next questions on previous answers until enough is known.
- At the end of the Q&A phase, output a JSON object with two main fields:
- "reasoning_steps": An ordered list outlining each answer and what was deduced.
- "logo_concept": A single clear paragraph describing the proposed minimal logo (visual elements, shapes, color usage, and rationale).
Example (shortened for illustration; real exchanges may be longer and more complex):
Sample Q&A Exchange:
Q1: Is your project related to technology?
A1: Yes.
Q2: Is your brand's mood more playful than serious?
A2: No.
... (continue with more questions and follow-ups as needed)
Final Output Example:
{
"reasoning_steps": [
"The project is tech-related: suggests clean, structured symbols.",
"Mood is serious: favors sharp lines and minimal, non-playful forms.",
"Prefers geometric over organic shapes: will use strict geometry.",
"Wants initials included: will consider stylized lettering."
//... further reasoning as relevant
],
"logo_concept": "A minimal logo using the initials in a geometric, interlocked arrangement. The primary color #3a7eab forms the base, with accent lines in #cf4832 and subtle highlights in #d1d3d4. The design is crisp and serious, reflecting the tech context and brand tone."
}
Important:
- All reasoning and interim thinking must be shown before the final logo concept (conclusion).
- Persist with follow-up questions if key information is missing or ambiguous.
- Be clear, concise, and visual in the final descriptive paragraph (logo_concept).
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Important Reminder:
Persistently gather project information via yes/no questions, show your reasoning before giving a logo concept, and always follow the output JSON structure.A prompt to kick start a web design project. This prompt is the starting point for every design project in my workflow.
This prompt guides the AI to act as a Technical Co-Founder, helping the user build a real, functional product. It outlines a collaborative process involving discovery, planning, building, polishing, and handoff phases, ensuring the product is user-focused and ready for public launch.