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WH Smith faces ridicule after rebrand likened to NHS logo

The rebrand trial has only been introduced in 10 stores across England but has met fierce criticism

Maryam Zakir-Hussain
Thursday 28 December 2023 08:02 EST
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How the new WH Smith logo looks
How the new WH Smith logo looks (Lewis Middleton/ X)

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WH Smith has been ridiculed after customers likened the company’s trial rebrand to the NHS logo.

The newsagent chain’s sign now reads “WHS” instead of WH Smith in 10 shops in England.

Customers have taken to social media to air their objections to the new signage, with one writing on X: “What is so annoying is that it takes just as long to say WHS out loud as WH Smith and so everyone usually calls it Smith’s for short. Which is the bit they’ve taken out of the branding. Terrible decision.”

Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, posted on X: “Some Marks & Spencer stores are branded M&S. It makes sense because people have always called it M&S. Very few have shortened WHSmith to WHS, so the rebrand doesn’t resonate. It also looks ugly and is too similar to the NHS logo. Waste of time and money!”

Another person wrote: “The worst rebrand I’ve ever seen. Just why?”

The rebranding comes after the retailer announced in April it would open another 120 shops after it almost doubled profits in a year thanks to the higher numbers of travellers at airports and railway stations.

The company reported a headline pre-tax profit of £143m in the year to August 31, compared with £73m a year earlier.

The results highlighted the firm’s heightened focus on travel stores compared with traditional high street sites, with travel bringing in a £164m trading profit compared with £32m from its high street arm.

Group revenues for the year increased by 28 per cent to £1.79bn, as it was supported by a 36 per cent increase in revenues through its UK travel business.

The rebrand has so far only been carried out in 10 stores with no guarantee it will extend to all shops.

A WH Smith spokesperson said: “With some customers telling us they aren’t always aware of the wide range of high-quality, great-value products we stock in our high street stores, we are testing new signage at a small number of locations, to localise our offer and highlight the key product categories customers can always find at WH Smith.

“This is a trial and only in 10 locations. There is no plan to roll this out to the rest of the estate.”

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