BRAND GUIDELINES - OVERVIEW

The City of Temple brand standards include the City of Temple logos and colors that identify and represent our organization. These elements will only be used according to the standards provided or by permission of the Marketing & Communications Department.

Our brand standards are simple, easy to uphold, and help ensure we’re all pushing in the same direction to amplify our organization and our community.

Our brand guidelines consist of rules and regulations governing the proper design, use, reproduction, and applications of the City of Temple brand across a variety of mediums. These guidelines outline color and design options, font selection, and tips on how to enhance our design while boosting the brand to the highest level. A helpful Do This, Not That section provides answers to many questions regarding what is and is not acceptable.

For any questions regarding the City of Temple brand standards or guidelines, contact us:

CITY OF TEMPLE
MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT
2 N Main Street, Suite 209
Temple, TX 76501
254.298.5605

LOGOS

REQUIREMENTS

Before downloading our logo, please be sure to follow our basic rules:

  • Comply with our Brand Guidelines.
  • Don’t alter the shape, proportion, color or orientation of the logos.
  • Keep the colors the way they are, and only as they appear.
  • Provide at least as much padding around the logo as what we’ve displayed below. This helps our logo appear clean and uncluttered.

HORIZONTAL (PRIMARY)

There are two acceptable versions of the City of Temple logo. The horizontal version will be used in most instances and is the preferred layout. If the horizontal version does not fit the article on which it is displayed, the stacked version will be used in its place.

Our brand seeks not only to convey quality and professionalism, but also to build on Temple’s history and heritage. The logo capitalizes on the shape of the star, which represents the idea of freedom and American ideals. Reinforcing this notion is the color scheme of navy blue and rich red. Logo use by non-city entities must be approved by the City of Temple Marketing & Communications Department.

Download the City of Temple Logos below.

STACKED

STAR ELEMENT

Under special circumstances and to give us the opportunity to look really awesome, using the star element from the logo is acceptable in some designs.

Using the star, without the T, as a design element is appropriate for furthering our identity. However, the star element will never be interchangeable with the logo. As with everything regarding the brand, any designs utilizing this element must be approved by the Marketing & Communications Department.

SIZING

Temple’s logo is composed of two elements: the main identifying letterforms, City of Temple, and the graphics consisting of the T inside the star. To ensure that its integrity is not compromised, no alterations should be made to any part of the logo’s form or structure.

The minimum size for printing the horizontal logo is 1.5” wide, and the minimum size for printing the stacked logo is 0.75” wide. Each use of the logo will be proportionally sized to the dimensions of the media on which it is displayed. If size of the logo must be smaller, approval must be given by the Marketing & Communications Department.

SPACING

Give that logo some space! For example, if we create a 6 x 9” postcard, there will be at least 0.5” around the logo. This allows the logo to be visible and keep its fresh, modern look. Do not push any elements up to the very edge of the logo.

DEPARTMENTS

In order to organize our visual communication, the mark for each department has been created to show consistency within our brand. Each department, or sub-brand, of the City will have its own wordmark combined with the standard City logo.

The official arrangement displays the hierarchy of the City with the department below with each department being just as important as another. By keeping the departments’ branding so closely related to the City, each department benefits from the brand recognition that allows overall consistency and impact of the brand.

OTHER ACCEPTED LOGOS

Other City logos have been updated to reflect the new City brand. Some entail their own brand guidelines that should be reviewed as well.

COLORS

PRIMARY PALETTE

The colors shown are approved colors for City designs that can be incorporated alongside the official logo. Keep in mind these colors are for design use only, not the actual logo. When using 4-color separation, the red or blue may appear different from the Pantone swatches. In this case, working with the printer to adjust the colors to obtain a close as possible match to the Pantone number will take place.

Dark Red

#B21D37
178, 29, 55
0, 84, 69, 30

Dark Blue

#213267
33, 50, 103
68, 51, 0, 60

SECONDARY PALETTE

A variety of shades of red may be used for design purposes. Grey (Black at 40%) may be used at any range between 20 & 80%. Cyan may be used at any range between 20% & 100%.

Light Red

#ED1A3B
237, 26, 59
0, 89, 75, 7

Gray

#A7A9AC
167, 169, 172
3, 2, 0, 33

Cyan

#40C8F4
64, 200, 244
74, 18, 0, 4

White

#FFFFFF
255, 255, 255
0, 0, 0, 0

Typography

Temple’s wordmark is the proper name City of Temple. Words are in the typeface of Gotham, using the Medium and Black fonts. The logo is a graphic that will not be altered, recreated, separated, or used except in its approved, official form.

DESIGNER FONTS

GOTHAMMEDIUM DESKTOP

Aa

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
1234567890(,.;:?!$&*

GothamMedium
Weight: 400
Style: normal

GOTHAM-BLACK DESKTOP

Aa

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
1234567890(,.;:?!$&*

Gotham-Black
Weight: 900
Style: normal

GOTHAM

Medium
Black

ERNESTINE PRO

Light & Italic
Regular & Italic
Demibold & Italic
Bold & Italic

AVENIR

Light & Oblique
Book & Oblique
Heavy
Bold

MONTSERRAT

Light
Regular
Medium
Semibold
Bold

BASKERVILLE

Regular & Italic
Semibold & Italic
Bold & Italic

CHARTER

Roman & Italic
Book & Italic
Black & Italic

Download the City of Temple Fonts below.

UNIVERSAL FONTS

ARIAL WEB

Aa

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
1234567890(,.;:?!$&*

Arial
Weight:
Style: italic

Aa

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
1234567890(,.;:?!$&*

Arial
Weight: 400
Style: Normal

Aa

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
1234567890(,.;:?!$&*

Arial
Weight: bold
Style: Normal

USAGE

CSS
font-family: "Arial", sans-serif;

DO THIS, NOT THAT

It is extremely crucial to understand the correct things to do with our logo, but it is equally important to understand what not to do. As you prepare to communicate on behalf of the City of Temple, ask yourself,  “Is this consistent with the way our brand should be experienced and am I representing it well?”

Here are examples of the goods and bads when it comes to showcasing our brand to our residents and the world.

1. Do NOT rotate the logo.
2. Do NOT add a shadow, glow, or unofficial color effect to the logo.
3. Do NOT stretch, distort, or skew the logo.
4. Do NOT add unofficial imagery on or next to the logo.
5. Do NOT put the logo in a bounding box or on poor color backgrounds.
6. Do NOT alter the City logo in any way unless following the logo brand standards.

PRINTING

Do not print any images or files that are NOT determined print ready by the Marketing & Communications Department.

WEB

Do not put unnecessary information on web ads. Web images and ads will always follow universal guidelines of clean, uncluttered, simple design, sometimes with a call-to-action.

Remember that web ads are interactive and will bring the viewer to the website with proper details.

WRITING FORMAT

The way we write and type information displayed to the public is also a form of branding. The following guidelines are set to allow the best readability in web and printed mediums.

  • When displaying a web address for City of Temple, the world wide web (www.) prefix will not be used. Only display the address as templetx.gov
  • This same practice will be used for hashtags: #templetx not #TempleTX
  • Letters in the web address will be all lowercase or all caps, depending on design. Do not mix lowercase and caps letters.
  • Complicated website addresses may use a redirect. Please contact the Marketing & Communications Department to request a URL redirect.
  • Color and type guidelines for web and print display will follow the same guidelines as the City logo.
  • Writing dimensions for print or digital display are universally understood as width x height (wxh).
  • In general writing, punctuation is very important in presenting a professional voice. Proofreading and editing is required.
  • Do not put a space between your text and punctuation, for example, do not write: I love going downtown !
  • After punctuation, such as a period, do not double space. For example, do not write: That shop is open. Let’s go!
  • Addresses will be written as: 2 N Main Street for use in design work; no periods after abbreviations. Any other format styles must be approved by the Marketing & Communications Department.
  • When writing out days of the week, only write as: Monday - Friday (not M-F, etc.). A space should always separate each side of the dash.
  • Time will be written as 8am - 5pm, 8:30am - 4:30pm (not 8 a.m. or 8 am, etc.). A space should always separate each side of the dash.
  • Phone numbers will be written with dashes only on the City website: 254-298-5000. In all other instances, phone numbers will be written with periods: 254.298.5000
  • Dates should be written without the suffixes: st, nd, rd. They should be written only as: November 15, 2020.

CORPORATE IDENTITY

When it comes to displaying the logo and when and when not to use it, these guidelines will help organize any confusion within our new branding guide.


The logo will be used on all mailing materials, handouts, social media profile images, uniforms, vehicles, stationery, and any other medium where it isn’t obvious that it is from an entity of the City. If a flyer requires many logos showing several departments, the standard City logo will be used with a message stating the departments involved.

HANDOUTS

SOCIAL MEDIA & MAILERS

BILLBOARDS & POSTERS

Static and digital billboards are handled on a project-by-project basis. Depending on the event and where the billboard is located, the Marketing & Communications Department will make the final decision on whether or not the City logo or department logo will be included alongside the required information.

Legibility is the most important aspect of a billboard. That is why inclusion of the City logo and other details are only applicable if they are legible.

STATIONERY

The City of Temple stationery design ensures continued proper use of the branding guidelines. The basic stationery system consists of the business card, notecard, letterhead, and envelope. Keeping it simple creates uniformity and ease of use.

Sub-brands of the City may have their own branded stationery.

BUSINESS CARDS

Business cards can seem insignificant, but they can be the first impression in directing a person to our brand and voice. Its design, print quality, finishing and paper stock convey the City’s personality and values.

The City of Temple will allow two versions of business cards for employees. All cards are standard 3.5 x 2” business cards.

The City of Temple business card order form allows employees to choose their template, fill out their information in an Adobe PDF Fillable Form, and send their order form directly to the printer.

NOTECARDS

The City notecard is a blank card meant to be used for handwritten or typed notes. This card includes the star element on the front, blank inside, and City logo on the back.

LETTERHEADS

The City letterhead will stay consistent throughout every department under the City. The Marketing & Communications Department will provide the template for each department.

ENVELOPES

The standard City envelope is sized as a #10 envelope. The look and specs for the envelope will be standard throughout all City departments. Again, options include a simple version and a stylized version.

TEMPLATES

Brand standards will be adhered to when developing flyers, posters, and other templates to ensure a consistent look and feel of the Brand. Final approval will be given by the Marketing & Communications Department.

SIGNAGE

Standard City signage will be provided per the Marketing & Communications Department. These directional signs are the standard for signage at a City event. Clean and simple allow the viewer to attain any information in five seconds or less.

All small and large print posters will follow an appropriate hierarchy of information.

PRESENTATIONS

PowerPoint presentations given on behalf of the City may be presented with the following templates:

FLYERS

Posters and flyers can be an effective tool if executed properly. Remember that less content makes for a more visually appealing design, therefore allowing more viewers to thoroughly read the information.

This template is an editable PDF. Final look and information must follow the Writing Format section of this booklet and must be approved by the Marketing & Communications Department before print or digital distribution.

DOOR HANGERS

The door hanger template is set up for door to door distribution.

This template is an editable PDF. Final look and information must follow the Writing Format section of this booklet and must be approved by the Marketing & Communications Department before print or digital distribution.

SIGN-IN & SCHEDULE

The sign-in sheet/class schedule is a generic schedule that any facility may use for sign-in information, fitness classes, activity classes, etc.

This template is an editable PDF. Final look and information must follow the Writing Format section of this booklet and must be approved by the Marketing & Communications Department before print or digital distribution.

INVITES

The invite is a digital invite most often sent through email. A special request can be submitted for print distribution. If needed for print, contact the Marketing & Communications Department.

This template is an editable PDF. Final look and information must follow the Writing Format section of this booklet and must be approved by the Marketing & Communications Department before print or digital distribution.

OFFICIAL DISPLAYS

Official imagery of the City logo appears on entry doors of official buildings and on official vehicles. As with any instance, the logo will appear clear and in its appropriate color scheme of two-color or all white forms.

For custom vehicle wraps, approval must always go through the Marketing & Communications Department.

MERCH

Merchandise and uniforms will display the City logo or department logo in two-color or all white form unless otherwise approved by the Marketing & Communications Department.

Logo placement on any other part of a shirt must be approved by the Marketing & Communications Department.

SWAG

The City logo will always maintain a clear area around it when applied to other forms of swag. Promotional items will be in good taste to further our brand and image.

All swag designs must be approved by the Marketing & Communications Department.

CORPORATE IDENTITY

Digital presence is more important now than it ever has been. That’s why it’s imperative to create a compelling presence and image on social media and online. Our digital visitors will develop their opinion based on our look, behavior, and convenience on the internet.

The digital brand may be used only according to the guidelines provided or by permission from the City of Temple Marketing & Communications Department.

SOCIAL MEDIA

#consistencyiskey

All social media profiles will have a unifying profile image across all platforms to reinforce brand awareness and allow users to immediately recognize us online. As iterated previously, logos will not be used on individually posted graphics, only as the profile image.

EMAIL SIGNATURE

Brand consistent email signatures provide additional recognition of the City and the departments.

The email signature uses the logo to first show who we are, and also uses the employees’ information to end the email in a professional statement. The approved universal font Arial is used. The email signature is not to be recreated, adjusted, or replaced.

See Marketing & Communications Policies for additional information regarding email signatures.

DIGITAL IDENTITY

The City of Temple website is another crucial part of our image where our online presence will match the hard work we’ve done to create a cohesive brand.

Web design and ease of navigation are crucial to providing services and other important information to our residents in the most convenient way possible.

EMPLOYER BRANDING - OVERVIEW

The City of Temple is a great place to work alongside great people, and we aim to be an employer of choice. Our employees are proud to work here, and our City offers much more than candidates imagine. Therefore, we believe it’s important we tell everyone what it’s really like to work for the City of Temple through this employer branding guide.

In an increasingly competitive market, our reputation as a good employer influences candidates’ choice to work for us. A strong employer brand helps us to stand out to attract the best candidates for the job while also reducing hiring costs and lowering turnover rates.

When we work as one, our voice is heard beyond just the name of our organization. By presenting ourselves as a consistently great place to work, we allow our organization to succeed in every area. The City of Temple’s talent attraction messaging strategy will help audiences to learn more about who we are and what we stand for as well as by how we communicate our brand consistently across all channels.

WHAT IS IT?

A brand is how your audience feels about you – it is a visual, emotional and physical representation of your business or entity. An employer brand is how your organization appears to potential hires. It is the most important (non-financial) factor people consider when applying for a job.

To understand our employer brand, it was imperative we first understood our workforce and how best to convey our brand, as it aligns with those who are dedicated to the City. An effective and data-driven marketing strategy to attract and recruit qualified candidates to careers in the City of Temple starts with knowing the individuals that make up the City’s workforce.

Through knowing our own people, we can better understand the identity, strengths and values of our employer brand. Employer branding consists of a systematic, accurate method of measuring the interests and needs of our diverse and dynamic workforce.

With this, the City of Temple’s employer brand reflects the experiences and stories of our employees and our reputation as an employer. It is directly connected to our brand and shares the same values and vision. Through consistent messaging and visuals, our employer brand enables potential employees to truly understand what it’s like to work for and live in our great City.

WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?

By telling an authentic story about who we are as an employer, we attract those who share our mindset, our values and are motivated to contribute to our success. This means we hire and retain more committed people and who are more likely to fit our organization culture. Our employer branding helps to establish purpose and makes employees feel part of something bigger.

Our employer branding also allows us to connect with our existing employees to understand how they genuinely feel about working here. Employees who feel they are treated well and are proud to be part of our organization are our brand ambassadors. They create good impressions through word of mouth, which helps us attract new candidates and ultimately improve our employer brand.

Most importantly, a strong employer brand supports our goal to become top-of-mind employer for candidates by strengthening our reputation as a great place to work and encouraging top talent to choose us over others.

OUR EMPLOYER BRAND

EMPLOYER VALUE PROPOSITION

The City of Temple is a dynamic organization that is leading the way toward a better Texas. We are a team-driven workforce that is committed to improving our community and providing exceptional service without exception.

KEY THEMES & PERSONALITY ARCHETYPES

At the City of Temple, we want our employees to work for and with great people. So, to position ourselves accordingly and to ensure we continue to attract and retain the right talent, we’ve developed a strong, genuine employer brand. Our employer brand describes us as an employer and is based on our values, our community promises, and our overall strategy.

To develop this brand, we surveyed our workforce to gather valuable insight into who we are to help distinguish what sets us apart from other cities and identify what makes us special as an employer.

Through this survey, we identified three key themes about working for our City:

1) Strong Teamwork/Family Environment
2) Service Driven Organization
3) Strong Opportunities for Growth

We also concluded that City of Temple’s two personality archetypes (using Aeker-Jungian marketing) were:

1) Regular Person/Everyperson
2) Caregiver

Personality Archetypes Breakdown:

Regular Person
Regular Person seeks connection and is supportive, faithful and down-to earth. They are part of the team and blend in as a “supporting actor.” They have ordinary solid virtues and are friendly, humble and empathetic. There is no pretension in Regular Person. You might hear this archetype say, “One of the sincerest forms of respect is actually listening to what another has to say.”

An organization with this archetype is focused on serving the general public. It offers services and products that can be used by the average consumer. It strives to make its offerings available to the widest audience at reasonable prices while maintaining quality and style that competes with higher end brands. It is there to support its consumers; it is on their side. It is commonly an ambassador for humanitarian causes.

Caregiver
The Caregiver wants to make a difference. They are more concerned about helping others than for their own benefit. They are selfless and do not need anything in return. They want to protect others from harm and prevent any danger or risk from threatening others’ happiness. The Caregiver is compassionate, nurturing and generous. Also known as: the saint, mother, altruist, supporter.

An organization with this archetype conveys security, support and caring to its consumers. It helps its consumers feel nurtured without patronizing them, while softly appealing to their conscience.

These personality archetypes represent the overall feel and brand that our City embodies. They give us an idea of who our City attracts and what these attracted individuals believe is the City of Temple’s brand.

Overall, careers and job positions appeal to the general public as service for the general public. Any person can apply for a position with the City and will likely have many options of career paths to choose from. Consecutively, the work is marketed as for the broader community of Temple, TX, and as such, will help and serve those in their neighborhoods and environment.

Through this same employee survey, we were able to identify the City's brand personality as one of selflessness, altruism and change-orientation. The workforce stresses the opportunity to make a difference for their community as a top priority in their jobs and careers. They also said working with the City feels like a family and noted that growth within the City is possible.

This illustrates how compassionate and team-driven our workforce is.

OUR VALUES

The City of Temple’s top values, as identified by our own workforce, were customer satisfaction, accountability, teamwork, communication and community building. This aligns closely with the City’s core values: commitment, innovation, accountability, integrity and collaboration.

We communicate all of these values to our workforce and our community through our words and our actions, and now through our employer branding.

OUR HISTORY

Established in 1881, Temple is located between Austin and Dallas on the I-35 corridor and offers the best of both worlds: the conveniences of big-city dwelling with the atmosphere of a small town.

A home to visionaries and dreamers who saw the fulfillment of their aspirations, Temple offers a bright future to those fortunate enough to live within this community of growth and opportunity.

Career opportunities thrive in Temple. Temple is the place to find a lucrative job in an affordable, safe and welcoming community.

The City of Temple believes that our employees are our most valuable resource. Our employees take pride in the services they provide to the residents and businesses of our community. We believe our employer brand must meet the particular needs and expectations of all of them: from janitors to police officers to city administrators.

CREATIVE CONCEPT

CAMPAIGN ELEMENTS

Through our insightful workforce research study, we began to develop taglines, key messages and creative concepts to emphasize what the City stands for and is proud of and to help promote our organization to prospective candidates.

However, an important first step in finalizing our creative concept was to share different style schemas and messages with a focus group of City employees to see which of the proposed designs and messages aligned with their beliefs, departments and/or careers.

We uncovered that our team enjoyed bright, eye-catching colors on marketing materials versus our typical darker tones. The City's workforce also preferred ad imagery that highlighted action shots and work being displayed to convey a more natural, team-building, interactive tone.

The City's workforce also gravitated towards key messaging that aligned with "Community" such as: "Serve Your Community" and "Improve Our City for Our Community." However, and rightfully so, each department selected unique messaging that aligned with their organization (and some reworded their own messaging).

This notion of unique messaging was helpful in adapting our employer branding communications–to help us cater to these different needs and expectations accordingly. By adapting visuals and wording we learned we can focus on the attributes that matter to each target group and interpret them so that the candidates feel addressed.

Thus, we ensure that our messages about what it means to work at the City resonate with everyone.

MESSAGING

Our target groups each have different motivations and needs that align with their beliefs, departments and/or careers. With all of this information, we developed the following taglines and key messages for our messaging strategy:

Taglines:

  • Leading the Way
  • Work Reimagined
  • A Career That Cares
  • We Make It Happen
  • Do What Matters

Key Messages:

  • A Career with Advancement Opportunities
  • Work You Can Be Proud Of
  • A Career with Competitive Pay, Great Culture and Excellent Benefits!
  • Let’s Build A Better Temple Together

As you can see, we aim to communicate with each target group in a way that’s relevant to them and supports their respective aspirations. Our tone of voice is always positive, inspiring and relatable.

The Everyperson archetype appeals to the average person and how attainable a job is at the City. Not only are there various choices of careers for everybody, but these careers are for anybody. The Everyperson archetype does not target one specific type of individual; it targets a blanket appeal so as to include all skill types in the marketing content. The City’s goal is to encourage the target candidate to see themselves as part of the Temple team, as well as to instill the idea that the candidate will be a viable asset to the City’s workforce.

By eliciting themes of pride, joy, mission and teamwork, we address our target audience directly. The taglines highlight how important the meaning of working with Temple is and the difference your work can make. The call-to-action of working for the City is connected to feelings of pride in the potential and future work of the attracted candidate.

The Caregiver archetype appeals to a sense of community and how an individual can inspire change for the better. Our goal is to promote a sense of progress in a wholesome and collaborative way. By highlighting the idea of togetherness and belonging for all, this marketing personality is achieved.

The target audience will ideally be attracted to work that matters in a family-oriented sense. The City’s attraction will then align with candidates who see a job as more than just a means-to-income; rather, the candidates envision a community-oriented workforce in a field that allows the satisfaction of being part of the reason people call Temple, TX home.

AD HEADLINE FORMULA

OUR HEADLINE FORMULA (v1): “YOU CAN BE PROUD OF”

Our “You can be proud of” headline formula is applied to our main employer branding communications. By eliciting themes of pride, joy, mission and teamwork, we address our target audience directly. This headline highlights how important the meaning of working with Temple is. The call-to-action of working for the City is connected to feelings of pride in the potential and future work of the attracted candidate. And by directly addressing “YOU” in this headline, we emphasize that it’s our employees who are the key to our success while encouraging the target audience to apply.

The Everyperson archetype appeals to the average person and how attainable a job is at the City. Not only are there various choices of careers for everybody, these careers are for anybody. The Everyperson archetype does not target one specific type of individual; it targets a blanket appeal so as to include all skill types in the marketing content. The City’s goal is to encourage the target candidate to see themselves as part of the Temple team, as well as to instill the idea that the candidate will be a viable asset to the City’s workforce.

OUR HEADLINE FORMULA (v2): “IMPROVE OUR CITY FOR OUR COMMUNITY”
The Caregiver archetype appeals to a sense of community and how an individual can inspire change for the better. This additional headline formula achieves this goal by using the inclusive possessive pronoun, “our,” in order to show the City’s team-driven orientation. The Caregiver archetype that was indicative of the personality of Temple’s workforce is expressed through the action word, “Improve.” Our goal is to promote a sense of progress in a wholesome and collaborative way. By highlighting the idea of togetherness and belonging for all, this marketing personality is achieved.

Using “Improve Our City For Our Community” in ad copy allows careers and jobs that focus on service and cityscapes to emphasize the appeal to city morale. The target audience will ideally be attracted to work that matters in a family-oriented sense. The City’s attraction will then align with candidates who see a job as more than just a means-to-income; rather, the candidates envision a community-oriented workforce in a field that allows the satisfaction of being part of the reason people call Temple, TX home.

LAYOUT ELEMENTS

The City’s brand withholds a modern and clean image, and therefore, design elements and photos used in any medium of marketing must be high-quality, aesthetically pleasing and professional.

Our layouts are well structured, never crowded and have a clear visual order. Our designs showcase real, diverse photos of our workforce with bright, eye-catching brand colors, clear calls-to-action, and logo variations that stand out.

IMAGERY

As shown in the Brand Guidelines, the City of Temple expects employees to adhere to our core values — commitment, innovation, accountability, integrity, collaboration — we also hold high expectations for our photography.

The images used in our recruitment communications highlight our diverse workforce in action and focus on how YOU (the individual) can make a difference by working for the city and community. The team member(s) in each photo are actual employees, and more often than not, are shown looking engaged, confident and prideful to help inspire a new workforce. These images make it easy for the viewer to see people they relate with and help correlate the imagery to the corresponding message(s).


COMMUNICATION CHANNELS

The way we communicate with potential employees is not limited to our job ads and career page. We want to connect with applicants on the broadest level, so we share our employer brand in a variety of ways.

WEBSITE

Website

  • The City of Temple website is another crucial part of our image where our online presence will match the hard work to create a cohesive brand. Web design and ease of navigation are crucial to providing services and other important information to our residents in the most convenient way possible.

SOCIAL MEDIA

Add us on social media!

#cityoftemple, #workwithus #publicworksweek2022, #templestrong

OTHER CHANNELS

  • Digital advertising
  • Email signatures
  • Email marketing
  • Public relations
  • Job fairs
  • Print materials
  • Swag/Merch
  • City office buildings and vehicles

CONTACT US

CITY OF TEMPLE
MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT
2 N Main Street, Suite 209
Temple, TX 76501
254.298.5605

ASSETS FOR DOWNLOAD

BROCHURE TEMPLATES

SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS & ADS

VIRTUAL CAREER FAIR BACKGROUNDS

GUIDELINES

As part of the City of Temple’s marketing efforts, we are launching an authentic brand ambassador program to help generate positive buzz for the City in a relatable way, with the ultimate goal of encouraging prospects to want to live and work for our beloved City.

More information coming soon!

Download the City of Temple - Brand Ambassador Guidelines below.