Industrial Design – Studio

Brand Extension
Study: DJI

Applying a Brand’s Identity into new frontiers

How does one take DJI’s brand’s identity and apply it to a completely new portable heater product segment that they have not explored in before?

Project Duration

January 2022 – April 2022

Course

IDES2302A

Design Processes

Secondary Research, Market Analysis, Physical Sketching, Computer Aided Design, 3D Printing

Software

Illustrator, Sketchbook, Solidworks, Keyshot

Section A

What makes DJI… DJI?

Brand Analysis Document

This served a purpose to understand the underlying principles of their brand identity, allowing the group to interpret it and apply it to their respective projects more concisely

Analysis Group

Annas Mahgoub, Zach Rodgers, Stefen Acepcion

Section B

Design Requirements

  • No larger than 4″ x 6″ x 8″
  • Design must have a grille rated to IP30, include a specific fan (OD8020) and heater core (MSH-1050M-70S PTC),
  • Air outlet is 120% the area of the air inlet due to heat expansion of air.

Section C

Design Ideation and Synthesis

Overall Goal

One of the most integral aims to this explorative phase is finding a form that best suits as an extension of the Ronin line, this was achieved through several considerations and ideation

The Final Approach

This portable heater is primarily aimed at photo and video editors, that need extra heat near their desks while doing work.

Form

The Ronin line has a fluid integration of 2 opposing form philosophies, the resulting sketches explore integrating those into the resulting product

Section D

Design Definition and Prototyping

With the design forms sketched out, the resulting design was defined using that data as long as further drawing from the brand analysis.

it was then designed in Solidworks, then printed using PLA on an FDM printer.

Section E

Definitive Design

Section F

Project Debrief

Opportunity to carry out a product design process based off of an existing brand identity.

Brand Analysis

While a defined set of colours, forms, shapes and the logo make a big part of a brand’s identity to be known on the product, one can not simply create a product that fits their brand with those elements.

A brand’s value, market characteristics, and goals make a larger difference in ensuring an especially new market segment product to be closely associated with its brand.

Working with technical constraints

Having a project that has several defined constraints allowed me to delve into the experiences of designing around existing, hard set components, enabling processes such as determining priorities between practicality, ergonomics, form, and safety considerations in a design.