A visual system for Innov8 Security — protecting homes and businesses across Hertfordshire and Essex. Trustworthy without being cold, capable without shouting. NSI accreditation front and centre, owner-led throughout.
The existing logo is strong — confident wordmark, distinctive electric blue "8", reads clearly at all sizes. We keep it as the brand anchor. On dark surfaces we use a knockout treatment. Minimum size: 24px tall. Clear space: roughly half the logo height all around.
Full indigo ramp gives flexibility for badges, hover states, subtle backgrounds, alternative dark surfaces. The 700 stop (#222076) is the anchor — exact match to the logo. Lighter stops earn their place in tags, info panels, and quieter backgrounds.
My recommendation is Option A — Electric Blue. It's already in the brand (the "8"), it gives the design genuine pop without introducing a new colour, and it carries that "alarm panel / live system" energy that subtly reinforces the category. The rest of this document uses Option A. If you'd like to see the system rendered with Option B or C instead, that's a quick swap.
We supply and install home and business security systems across Bishop's Stortford and the surrounding area — burglar alarms, CCTV, door entry and access control. NSI approved, owner-run, and properly accountable. If something needs sorting, you call us, not a call centre.
Primary uses indigo for weight and authority. Secondary outlined for less weighty CTAs. Ghost (with underline) for tertiary actions like phone numbers in nav. The electric blue is reserved for accents and highlights — not for main button surfaces, so it stays special.
The existing site already features the NSI Silver lockup prominently below the hero — that placement is good. The improvement here is consistency: applying the same mark to every key page (services, contact, maintenance) at a consistent size and visual treatment, and referencing the Silver tier specifically in copy where appropriate, since it carries meaning that "NSI Approved" alone glosses over.
Home and business intruder alarm systems. Texecom, Orisec, Ajax — installed properly, maintained reliably.
Learn about alarmsModern CCTV systems with remote viewing. Hikvision and Ajax. Useful evidence when you need it.
Learn about CCTVIcons shown as emoji placeholders — would be replaced with proper line-weight SVG icons in indigo or electric blue. The "01 / 03" mono numbers give the cards their "field manual" character.
"The lads who came round to install the alarms were delightful, and we can't recommend the company highly enough."
Home and business security systems across Bishop's Stortford and beyond. Burglar alarms, CCTV, access control and door entry — installed by an owner-run team you can actually get hold of.
The full system in action. The NSI eyebrow sits above the headline (not buried in footer). Electric blue picks out the key word in the headline and the trust pill. The right-side card pre-empts the implicit "what am I committing to?" objection — important for a category where people are wary of pushy sales calls.
"Innov8 Security is a market-leading provider of best-in-class security solutions, leveraging cutting-edge technology to deliver unparalleled peace of mind."
"We install alarms, CCTV and door entry systems for homes and businesses in Bishop's Stortford and the surrounding area. NSI approved. Owner-run."
"Our team of dedicated security professionals will work tirelessly to ensure your property is protected 24/7."
"If something needs sorting, you call us — not a call centre. We do the install, we do the maintenance, we know your kit."
Security businesses fall into two design traps. Trap one: shouty hi-vis maximalism — orange splashes, "24/7 PROTECTION" all-caps, stock images of padlocks. Reads as defensive and a bit desperate. Trap two: sterile corporate blue — generic stock photos, evenly-spaced features grids, all the personality leached out. Reads as faceless.
This direction sits between them. The existing logo gives us a confident indigo that carries authority without aggression, and an electric blue accent that adds genuine energy without needing to invent anything new. The cream base warms it up so the cool brand blues don't tip into "tech-cold". Mono labels add a precision detail that feels earned (NSI cert numbers, install dates) rather than performed.
A note on the NSI Silver mark: the current site already places it well, directly below the hero next to the introduction. That stays. What we add is consistency — the same mark, at the same size, in the same hierarchy, on every page that matters (services, maintenance, contact). And we reference "NSI Silver" in copy where it earns its place, rather than the more generic "NSI approved".
The owner being ex-army and a competitive obstacle racer shows up in the discipline of the layout — tight alignment, consistent rhythm, nothing extra — rather than in any literal visual reference. The character is in the restraint.
Next steps: confirm the accent direction (Option A, B or C), then prototype the first real page — homepage hero, services grid, NSI block — in production code that we can build from.