Brand

Founders should have a website and logo on their first day. We encourage building a website and creating a logo using AI. Choose whichever website hosting platform you are most comfortable with.

Using AI is the most efficient way to create your company logo. Don’t overthink the company logo—keep it simple. Your horizontal logo should work in narrow header spaces, and your stacked version should work in square social media profile spaces.

File formats needed:

  • SVG (vector, infinitely scalable, primary format)

  • PNG with transparent background (multiple sizes: 512px, 256px, 64px, 32px, 16px)

  • JPG for specific use cases

Four mandatory versions:

  • Full color (primary version)

  • Single color/black

  • White/reverse (for dark backgrounds)

  • Grayscale

Two layout options:

  • Horizontal (primary for web headers, business cards)

  • Stacked/vertical (for social media profiles, mobile apps, square spaces)

OCV Website Logo

To add your logo to the OCV website, we need a logo that meets the following requirements:

  1. Approximately 3:1 aspect ratio, horizontal layout.

  2. SVG preferred, transparent PNG accepted.

  3. Apply a #CFCECE fill or overlay

AI logo generation prompts

When prompting AI, insist on simple, clean designs that work at small sizes (favicons, mobile apps). If you can't quickly sketch the logo from memory, it's too complex. When prompting AI to create a company logo, consider including:

  1. Include specific keywords in the prompt:

    1. simple, scalable logo

    2. works in black and white

    3. minimal design with clear typography

  2. Include your industry/company name in prompts.

  3. Any significance or meaning behind the company name.

  4. Personality traits would you use to describe the company (adjectives, emotional/intuitive feelings the brand is expected to invoke). Include a few competitor examples.

Don't just pick the first result. Generate 10-20 options, then create the required variations of your top three choices before deciding.

You can refine your AI-generated logo using tools like Figma, Canva, or GIMP. Test scalability immediately. View your logo at 16x16 pixels (favicon size) and 200+ pixels wide. If key elements disappear or become illegible, simplify further.

Website content

The content of your website should be forward-looking. Build the website for the product you want to have in 6 months; your website will undergo many, many iterations over time. Aim to have a company website published in your first week or sooner. OCV will transfer any existing domain names to the founder.

The first version of your website may be a single page, but should include:

  1. Headline and description. The headline should explain your company in a few words. The description should explain what you do in 1-2 sentences.

  2. Value props and/or features. How does the product help its users, and what are the existing or planned features?

  3. Pricing. The pricing page is often the most visited because it quickly tells visitors what the company offers. Even if you’re not sure what you are selling or for how much, it’s a good exercise to start thinking about. The first version may be an hourly rate for support and services.

  4. Competitors. A simple and clear way to help people understand your business is to list the companies and technologies you replace. For example, GitLab’s Platform pagearrow-up-right lists each category it serves and which tools and technologies it replaces in each.

  5. About us and contact us. Include the company vision and mission, details about the open source project, a contact form, and team bios. It’s important that founders are included on the website and share their specific expertise. Include the founder's role in the open source project (creator, maintainer, contributor).

  6. Terms of Use. Use the template provided by OCV’s legal team.

  7. Privacy Policy. Use the checklist provided by OCV’s legal team.

One website for the project and the company

For companies that can maintain the original project namearrow-up-right, it’s best to keep the open source project and commercial company websites together rather than separate, if you can. Two different websites can confuse and require double the effort to maintain. Much of that effort will be duplicative.

Don’t worry about deprecating the existing open source project website. Instead, make the commercial company website a superset of the two. The commercial site should be the go-to destination for all communication and information. Eventually, the two websites may evolve into one, but that can happen over time. Doing everything all at once may alarm the community. It’s better if this is a gradual process that happens as the community gains trust in the commercial entity. People are a lot more receptive to change as long as the commercial company is consistently doing the right thing.

If combining the open source and company website isn’t an option, create a new website and include a link to the open source project repo in the website footer.

Terms of Use

Terms of Use, also known as Terms of Service, are a legal agreement between a company or website and its users that outlines the rules and guidelines for using the service. It's a legally binding agreement between the company or website and its users that protects both parties' interests.

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Terms of Use Template

Terms of Use Templatearrow-up-right

Provided by OCV’s legal counsel for OCV (open core) companies as of February 20, 2023. Companies must review and edit highlighted sections prior to releasing their Terms of Use.

Privacy Policy

A privacy policy tells visitors what information you collect from them and what you do with it. If you collect any personal information (emails, names, etc.), you need one. If should cover how you handle any personal information collected by the company from the website, products, and services. Not all privacy policies look the same—yours should match what your website actually does. Don't mention mobile apps if you don't have one, or talk about data collection of minors if your site isn't for kids.

With respect to the personal information that the privacy policy should cover:

  1. Who does the personal information concern?

  2. The relationship between the Company and the individuals whose personal information is collected. Is this personal information generally collected in a consumer context or in a business context?

  3. How does the Company collect or receive the personal information?

  4. For what purposes is the personal information collected, used, and shared?

List all categories of personal information that the Company collects.

Use the provided privacy policy templatearrow-up-right. Use the Coverage Checklist to determine which sections you need to include and which to eliminate.

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