Skip to content
  • About
    • About
    • Advertise
    • Cookie Notice
    • Terms of Use
  • Design
    • Design
    • Architecture
  • Business
    • Business
    • Finance
  • Environment
  • News
  • Other
  • Philanthropy
  • Real Estate
  • Science
    • Science
    • Medicine
  • Tech
    • Technology
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Autos
    • Robotics

Mastercard Just Launched A Sonic Logo. Here’s What It Sounds Like

Source: Fast Company, Mark Wilson
Photo: Mastercard

With the voice shopping industry set to reach $40 billion by 2022, major companies are investing not just in how their brands look, but how they sound.

In 2016, Mastercard made headlines for releasing its first new logo in two decades. And this year, it announced it would remove its own name from the symbol. Now, the credit card company is pushing its brand even further into a new era by debuting a sonic brand identity.

A few days ago, the company announced the release of what amounts to its own soundtrack, a “transaction sound” that will play across mediums and platforms when users check out. Developed with what Mastercard describes as a group of “musicians, artists, and agencies from across the globe,” including Linkin Park’s Mike Shinoda, it’s a contemporary answer to the jingles of another era.

It’s also a reflection of the way branding has evolved in recent years. Today, brands need to have a distinct, recognizable identity not just in packaging, stores, or billboards, but across digital ads, apps, and podcasts–and newest of all, in a growing number of screenless interfaces, like Amazon and Google voice assistants. Brands, once purely visual tools, are weaving their way into the world around us–including what we hear.

“With voice shopping set to hit $40 billion by 2022, audio identities not only connect brands with consumers on a new dimension, they are tools enabling consumers to shop, live, and pay in an increasingly digital and mobile world,” the company’s announcement reads. Without a screen, you can’t see what Mastercard looks like–but you can certainly hear what it sounds like.

Mastercard isn’t alone in investing in sonic branding. Visa, one of its most direct competitors, is similarly trying to leverage sound to imbue its brand with trust. Coca-Cola has long managed a vast audio library of sonic identities for its various brands, sounds that can be heard in commercials and even the occasional Billboard 100 hit.

Sound and audio have long been valued by tech companies–just look at what went into developing Apple’s instantly recognizable text message sound–and developers and engineers seem to be putting even more emphasis on the auditory experience of their software. For instance, Prototyper recently launched an audio UI library to bring more sounds to interface easily, even if you don’t have the resources of an Apple or Tinder.

So just what does Mastercard sound like? To my ears, the company’s sonic “logo” is something akin to a folksy Coldplay cover. It starts like it’s drinking Budweiser in middle America, but quickly incorporates some ephemeral, optimistic world beat texturing–perhaps channeling Ed Sheeran through a synth.

Whatever you hear the next time you pay with your credit card, there’s certainly a hook. And with American credit debt rising apace, you probably haven’t heard the last of Mastercard, either.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Mark Wilson is a senior writer at Fast Company. He started Philanthroper.com, a simple way to give back every day.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90305949/mastercard-just-launched-a-sonic-logo-heres-what-it-sounds-like

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X

Newsletter Sign-up

Technology
  • GrandmaThe Art of Texting (Or Not): A Survival Guide for the Thumb Generation
  • LadderWould You Trust AI For Ethical Advice?
  • MetaMeta Pauses Controversial Staff Surveillance Program After Massive Data Leak
  • ChromeThis Is Why Your Ad Blocker No Longer Works On Chrome
  • Data CentersAs AI Expands, Erin Brockovich Taps Communities To Map Data Center Concerns
Philanthropy
  • Scott MuskOne Billionaire Builds. The Other Billionaire Brings A Chainsaw.
  • Against All OddsAgainst All Odds: Stories That Remind Us Humanity Is Doing Just Fine
  • Two SizesCharitable Giving: It’s True, Our President Does Have A Heart Two Sizes Too Small
  • Melinda GatesMelinda French Gates Is Donating $215 Million To Women’s Health
  • Pittsburgh PostA Journalism Nonprofit Saves A Legacy Pittsburgh Newspaper From Closure

Donate

Ventured delivers sharp, independent reporting on tech, business, real estate, and politics day in and day out — free of charge and free from corporate entanglements. If you value fearless journalism, original commentary, and content that answers to readers instead of advertisers, please consider supporting our work with a donation.

Transportation
  • VolkswagenVolkswagen To Slash 50,000 Jobs As Profits Plunge And Tariffs Bite
  • RobotaxisRobotaxis Could Be Coming To New York City… If They Clear The Political Minefield
  • CarsAmericans Hit The Brakes On Driving—And It Could Shift the Housing Market In Reverse
  • Classic CarLove Classic Cars? These Are The Most Retro Road Trips On Earth
  • Auto Safety8 Hidden Car Features That Will Change Your Driving Game
Real Estate
  • Trump TowerDo As I Say Not As I Did
  • ForeclosuresForeclosures Hit 7-Year High As Pandemic Relief Ends—Here’s Where Default Discounts Are Easiest To Get
  • JapanWhy Japan Has Millions Of Abandoned Houses
  • HomebuilderMajor Homebuilders See Rising Orders But Shrinking Profits As Incentives Squeeze Margins
  • HomeownershipHow Homeownership Helps Build Wealth
Finance
  • WealthFrom Lavish Luxury To Budget Bliss: The Rich, Famous, And The Rest Of Us
  • Safety NetThe Safety Net: What Other Countries Give Their Citizens That Many Americans Can Only Dream About
  • Musk BurryElon Musk Says AI Will Fund Government Checks For All And Working Will Be Optional. Michael Burry Sees A ‘Revolution’ First
  • GriftingPublic Dollars, Private Deals: Examining Military Costs, Presidential Projects, And Post-White House Business
  • Bezos TaxesBezos Argued It’s Unnecessary For Struggling Families To Cough Up Income Taxes In The Wealthiest Country In The World.
News
  • The Weekly SpillThe Weekly Spill (In Shorts)
  • The Weekly SpillThe Weekly Spill (In Shorts)
  • The Weekly SpillThe Weekly Spill (In Shorts)
© Copyright 2014-2026. Ventured is the Official Blog of Silicon Bay Partners.
Powered by WordPress