5 Things to Check Before Hiring a Branding Agency

If you’re a small business owner or founder, your brand identity is one of the few things people judge you on before they’ve ever spoken to you. A weak logo or inconsistent branding can quietly cost you credibility — sometimes before a potential client even reads your pitch.

Which makes hiring the wrong agency an expensive mistake, not just an inconvenient one. You lose money, time, and momentum, and you’re often back at square one a few weeks later.

Here are the five things worth checking before you hand over a deposit — based on the questions that actually predict whether a project goes well.

1. Real Portfolio Work, Not Just Mockups

Anyone can show you a logo dropped onto a nice business card mockup. What you actually want to see is real, delivered client work — ideally with the client’s permission to be named, or visible on a platform like Behance or LinkedIn where the project history is verifiable.

What to ask: “Can you show me 2-3 recent projects, including the client’s industry and what they needed?”

Red flag: An agency that only shows generic template-style portfolio pieces with no client context, or refuses to share any verifiable past work.

2. A Clear, Written Revision Policy

This is the single biggest source of disputes between clients and agencies — not price, not even quality, but unclear expectations about revisions. “Unlimited revisions” sounds great until you’re on round 9 with no end in sight, and “a few revisions” sounds fine until you realize “a few” meant two.

What to ask: “How many revision rounds are included, and what happens if I need more?”

Red flag: Vague answers, or revision terms that only appear after you’ve already paid.

3. Realistic Turnaround Time

Fast delivery is genuinely valuable — but only if it’s honest. A logo delivered in 2 hours with zero discovery process is a red flag, not a selling point; it usually means a generic template, not something designed around your actual business.

What to ask: “What does your process look like between now and delivery?” A reasonable agency can explain their steps (briefing, concepts, feedback, refinement) even if the whole thing takes just 24–48 hours.

Red flag: No explainable process — just a promise of speed with nothing behind it.

4. Transparent, Upfront Pricing

You should know exactly what you’re paying and what’s included before you commit — not discover “extra” charges for stationery, file formats, or a second revision round after the fact.

What to ask: “Is this the full price, or are there things that typically get added on later?”

Red flag: Pricing that’s vague until after a “discovery call,” with no ballpark figure offered upfront. (Some complexity is normal for large rebrands — but for a standard logo or branding package, pricing should be clear from the start.)

5. A Direct, Responsive Communication Channel

When you have a quick question mid-project, you don’t want to be stuck waiting days for an email reply. Check how you’ll actually communicate with the team — and how fast they respond before you’ve paid anything, which is usually a good preview of how responsive they’ll be after.

What to ask: Message them with a real question before hiring, and pay attention to both the speed and the clarity of the response.

Red flag: Slow, generic, or copy-pasted responses pre-sale — it rarely gets better once you’re a paying client.

Putting It Together

None of these five checks take more than a few minutes each, but together they tell you almost everything about how a project with that agency will actually go — long before you’ve spent any money.

Here’s honestly how we approach each of these, if it’s useful as a reference point:

  • Portfolio: Real client work, visible on our Behance and LinkedIn, not just mockups.
  • Revisions: Clearly stated per package, before you order — see our branding packages page.
  • Turnaround: 24–48 hours for most logo and branding orders, with a real briefing step first.
  • Pricing: Fixed packages from $90–$500, no hidden add-ons.
  • Communication: Direct WhatsApp support — message us before you order and see for yourself.

Whoever you end up choosing, running through this checklist first will save you from the most common — and most expensive — branding agency mistakes.

How do I know if an agency’s portfolio is actually real?

Look for portfolio work hosted on independent platforms like Behance, Dribbble, or LinkedIn — not just images on the agency’s own website. Real client projects usually include context (the client’s industry, what they needed) rather than just a polished mockup.

What’s a reasonable number of revisions to expect?

It varies by package size, but most legitimate logo or branding packages include at least 2-3 revision rounds. Be cautious of “unlimited revisions” with no process described, and equally cautious of agencies that won’t commit to a number at all.

Is a 24-hour turnaround actually realistic for a quality logo?

Yes, if there’s a real briefing step beforehand. Fast turnaround becomes a red flag only when there’s no discovery process at all — that usually signals a generic template rather than a custom design.

Should I always choose the cheapest agency I can find?

Not necessarily. Price matters, but it should be evaluated alongside the other four checks in this post — portfolio, revisions, turnaround, and communication. A cheap project with no clear scope often ends up costing more in revisions, delays, or a redo.

What should I do if an agency won’t answer my questions before I pay?

Treat it as a preview of what working with them will be like. Slow or vague pre-sale communication rarely improves after you’ve already paid — it’s one of the clearest red flags on this list.

Want to see how we stack up?

Check our portfolio and packages, or message us directly with any questions — no pressure, no pushy sales calls.

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