Rockinghorse Brand Guidelines - 2022

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Rockinghorse Children’s Charity

Brand Guidelines

Children’s Charity

Welcome to Rockinghorse Children’s Charity

Welcome to Rockinghorse Children’s Charity. Our aim is to create a world where children are healthy and happy. Rockinghorse Children’s Charity support sick and disabled children across Sussex. We support babies, children and young people, along with their families, at The Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital and The Trevor Mann Baby Unit in Brighton and all of the specialist children’s wards and baby units throughout Sussex.

Originally set up in 1967 by Dr Trevor Mann, we are the official fundraising arm of the Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital including the Trevor Mann Baby Unit.

Since then, we have supported nearly a million children with lifesaving medical equipment, support for parents and families, environments and spaces for children and additional staff.

About these guidelines

The Rockinghorse Children’s Charity brand is our identity and helps our stakeholders differentiate us and our services from other organisations within the sector.

This document gives guidance on how the Rockinghorse identity should be portrayed. It avoids the confusion brought about by inconsistent messaging and means that we can strengthen our brand and continue to raise our charity.

It also means that Rockinghorse Children’s Charity can be easily identified and allows us to deliver our goals more effectively.

It is worthwhile familiarising yourself with these guidelines and sharing them with external partners that may benefit from the information included.

Our name

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity should always start with a capital letter and be used in association with the Rockinghorse Children’s Charity statements.

Our name is often written inaccurately.

The correct use of our name is:

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity or Rockinghorse

Please do not use any of the following itterations:

• The Rockinghorse

• The Rockinghorse Charity

• The Rockinghorse Appeal

• Rocking Horse Appeal

• Rocking Horse

• Rocking Horse Charity

• RCC

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity is singular, for example:

‘Rockinghorse Children’s Charity believes that children should be allowed to be children,’ or ‘Rockinghorse Children’s Charity uses donations from the local community to fund their work.’

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity vision, mission and values

Vision: A world where children are healthy and happy

Mission: First person – for use in internal marketing materials/website etc:

We do this by funding projects, programmes and people that enhance the care and support given by our incredible colleagues in the NHS.

We work in partnership with the UHSussex NHS Trust and other local charities to fund projects, programmes and people as well as helping young patients and their families.

We fund cutting edge equipment and facilities, support medical staff, innovative research and pioneering treatments, that make a difference to patients and their loved ones. We support developments that go above and beyond what the NHS can provide at present.

Mission: Third person – for use in external marketing/press releases etc:

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity does this by funding projects, programmes and people that enhance the care and support given by our incredible colleagues in the NHS.

They work in partnership with the UHSussex NHS Trust and other local charities to fund projects, programmes and people as well as helping young patients and their families.

They fund cutting edge equipment and facilities, support medical staff, innovative research and pioneering treatments, that make a difference to patients and their loved ones. They support developments that go above and beyond what the NHS can provide at present.

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity statements

When we talk about Rockinghorse Children’s Charity, we have four statements that vary in length to describe who we are and what we do.

These can be uesd for external facing audiences, websites and reports, wherever we need to explain our work to people who may not already be aware of us.

One sentence

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity supports babies, children, young people, and their families throughout Sussex.

50 words

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity support sick and disabled children across Sussex. We support babies, children and young people, along with their families, at The Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital and The Trevor Mann Baby Unit in Brighton and all of the specialist children’s wards and baby units throughout Sussex.

100 words

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity support sick and disabled children across Sussex. We support babies, children and young people, along with their families, at The Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital and The Trevor Mann Baby Unit in Brighton and all of the specialist children’s wards and baby units throughout Sussex.

Originally set up in 1967 by Dr Trevor Mann, we are the official fundraising arm of the Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital including the Trevor Mann Baby Unit. Since then, we have supported nearly a million children with lifesaving medical equipment, support for parents and families, environments and spaces for children and additional staff.

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity support sick and disabled children across Sussex. We support babies, children and young people, along with their families, at The Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital and The Trevor Mann Baby Unit in Brighton and all of the specialist children’s wards and baby units throughout Sussex.

We deliver and fund projects that enable doctors and nurse to do more. All of projects are led by the needs of children and young people and their families – the lifesaving medical equipment, the support for parents and families, the toys for children spending time in hospitals across Sussex, the environments and spaces that help children feel more at home when they are in hospital and additional staff to make sure children get the best possible care when they are unwell.

Originally set up in 1967 by Dr Trevor Mann, we have been supporting children for more than 55 years, and in that time, we have supported nearly a million children and their families. As the official fundraising arm of the Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital, including the Trevor Mann Baby Unit, we work with the NHS, charity partners and the Sussex community to ensure children can be children no matter now sick they are.

We do not receive any government, statutory or local authority funding and so we rely on the generous support of individuals, community groups, companies and trusts: people like you, who care about children and want Sussex to be a safe place for children to grow up.

250 words

Rockinghorse Children’s Charity fonts

We have four fonts that we use within Rockinghorse Children’s Charity. Each has a different use across internal and external platforms.

Love Ya Like a Sister

This is a free font (for not for profit organisations) which can be downloaded from Google Fonts. This font can be used as an accent font, for headings/quotes/phrases/to emphasise paragraphs.

Tw Cen MT

This is to be used for body text in marketing materials, printed material and PowerPoint presentations.

Love Ya Like a Sister

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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

Tw Cen MT

1234567890 !@£$%^&*()_=+

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

Formata

This is font us used in our logo and should be used for our strapline (Formata Bold) and any contact details on marketing materials.

Arial

This is our standard day to day font for use in letters, emails, envelope labels and general correspondence.

Formata

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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

Arial

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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

How we use these fonts

It is important that all communication materials that are produced are accessible to everyone, including those with sight or literacy issues. We adhere to the following guidelines:

• Paragraph text should always be a minimum of 11 point and header text should be a minimum of 13 point

• Small print text (used for disclaimers and our charity number). It should always be a minimum of 7 point, with small print header text at least 8 point

• Bold, italic or capitalised font should be kept to a minimum and only used as follows:

Colour

Setting text over images or blocks of colour should be used carefully as this makes it difficult for those with sight impairments, especially colour blindness, to read.

If you do need to set text over an image or block of colour there should always be a contrast (dark against light) between the text and background colour.

Bold font

This should only be used for headings or to highlight important words, such as our contact telephone number.

Italicised font

This should only be used to add emphasis to a word, to add clarity to an ambiguous sentence or for quotes. It should also be used when referring to the titles of books or films.

Underlined font

Never use underlined font. Underlining text can make it difficult to read for people with literacy or sight related issues to identify text.

Size

Style guidelines

Capitalised letters

Avoid capital letters where possible.

They should only be used at the beginning of sentences and for proper nouns (e.g. Rockinghorse), for job titles (e.g. Fundraising Manager) or for emphasis. Whole words or sentences should rarely be capitalised (unless important to the design).

Bullet points and numbered lists

Bullet points should be used when the order is not significant

• Always use rounded bullet points, indented

• Do not use full stops, unless the point is longer than one sentence

• There should not be an extra space between bullet points

• Always start bullet points with a capital letter

Numbered lists should be used when the order is important such as when referring to four categories or steps:

1. Go to the website www.rockinghorse.org.uk

2. Click on the ‘Donate’ button

3. Complete the form

Ampersands

Avoid the use of ampersands (&), unless referring to a book or film title. Do not use ampersands in our strapline or in job titles and headings.

Quotes

Quotation (“_”) marks should always be used.

Numbers

Numbers one to nine should be written as words. Numbers 10 or more should be written as numerals.

If you are referring to numbers below nine and more than 10 in the same paragraph, please stick to either numbers or words for consistency. For figures more than a thousand please insert a comma using the following format: 1,000 10,000 1,000,000

Date and time format

On all external communications, the date should be written in the following format: day/month/year. The date should always be written out in full on marketing materials but can be abbreviated on letters. Please note that Rockinghorse does not use a suffix after the number (5th, 22nd), the number should stand alone.

Correct date format: Tuesday 15 February 2012

15 February 2012

15/02/2012

Incorrect date format:

15th February 2012

15 Feb 2012

15.02.2012

Required information

Charity and limited company numbers

It is a requirement of the Charity Commission and HM Revenue and Customs that our registered charity number be shown on all official documents and marketing materials, which are used to inform or contact other people.

This should be displayed in small type (size 7 point) in the following format:

Registered charity number 1018759

The registered company number should also be displayed on official documents but doesn’t need to be on marketing materials. These include headed paper, financial documentation, legal documentation, invoices and the annual review/accounts.

This should be displayed in small type (size 7 point) in the following format:

Company limited by guarantee. Registered in England no. 2791054. Registered charity no.1018759.

Marketing materials

Design

The Marketing and Communications Manager is responsible for the creation of all marketing materials, whether that be in-house or engaging external contractors to create collatoral.

Timescales

Requests for any marketing material including leaflets, posters, postcards, promotional items and digital designs, must come through the Marketing and Communications Manager.

Requests should be made at least one week before the material is needed for non-printed items. For printed items, requests should be made three weeks before required, or as early as possible.

However, for larger documents and promotional material such as branded stationery, t-shirts and promotional material, requests should be made at least one month prior to when they are needed.

Images, quotes and case studies

Rockinghorse has to obtain permission from a number of sources to use photos and other images, including buying in images for promotional use.

If you wish to use an image, whether used previously or not, permission must be sought from the Marketing and Communications Manager to check that permission has been granted from the family and/or that it is appropriate for the context it is being used for and it is still current.

Rockinghorse Corporate logo

Primary Rockinghorse logo

Children’s Charity

Children’s Charity

The primary Rockinghorse logo is to be used on all material, internal and external, created by the charity.

Spacing

Green indicates clear space. The green area must be kept free of other elements.

Magenta indicates type and element alignment and boundaries.

The minimum required clear space is defined by the white boundary box around the logo design.

The blue text Rockinghorse logo can be used on a white and the white text version can be used on a dark background.

Secondary Rockinghorse logo

Proud to support

Proud to support

Incorrect use of the logo

Children’s Charity Children’s Charity Children’s Charity

Children’s Charity

Children’s Charity

Children’s Charity

The secondary ‘Proud to support’ Rockinghorse logo is to be used whenever supporters are holding an event in aid of Rockinghorse.

The use of this logo ensures that there is no confusion with official Rockinghorse events and those organised by external community or corporate supporters.

Don’t change the elements’ positions

Don’t stretch or distort the logo

Don’t change the colour of elements

All these examples are incorrect use of the Rockinghorse logo and are not permitted.

Our corporate image is our public facing perception and if it is seen to be weak, damaged or mistreated this affects the overall charities brand image.

This is very important to the strength of Rockinghorse as a public brand.

Rockinghorse colours

Corporate colours - primary

Pantone 660c

C.90 M.56 Y.4 K.0

R.10 G.109 B.175 # 0A6DAF

Corporate colours - secondary

Pantone 7404c

C.7 M.13 Y.100 K.0

R.241 G.209 B.19

# F1D113

Use of corporate colours:

The corporate colours are shown to the left and are divided into two sections, primary and secondary.

Primary colours are the main colours of Rockinghorse and are to be used in all publications, promotions and web projects. The primary colours can be used for typography, imagery and graphic elements.

Wording can be in blue but never yellow on white. This is due to accessibility issues. The legibility of the content is to be considered when designing for Rockinghorse at all times.

Secondary colours are to be used only for web projects or as an accent colour in print materials. They are supporting colours only.

Please be careful to use the correct colour breakdowns when designing for Rockinghorse to keep our brand consistent. If you have any concerns please contact the Marketing and Communications Manager.

Pantone 6c

Pantone 656c

C.0 M.12 Y.
K.097 R.8 G.7 B.5 #
37
080705
C.5 M.1 Y.0 K.10 R.218 G.227 B.229 #
DAE3E5
Rockinghorse Children’s Charity 13 Prince Albert Street Brighton East Sussex BN1 4HE Registered charity no: 1018759 Children’s Charity

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