Sound of Systems
Brand System v10.0 — Sonic Brand
Sonic
Brand
Direction
How GFS sounds across every touchpoint.
Sound is identity. From a 0.3-second notification ping to hold music, every audio element is designed to feel digital, clean, and unmistakably GFS.
Notifications
Hold Music
Voicemail
Audio Logo
01Sonic Principles3 Core Rules
Every sound in the GFS system is governed by three principles. If a sound does not meet all three, it does not belong.
Principle 01
Clean.
No clutter. No reverb tails. No layered harmonics. Each sound is a single, clear event. Like a well-organized cold chain — nothing extraneous.
Principle 02
Digital.
Not organic. Not acoustic. Synthesized tones that sound like technology, data, precision. GFS is a systems company — our sounds reflect that.
Principle 03
Brief.
Under 1 second for all UI sounds. Operators work fast. Sounds confirm, not interrupt. Get in, deliver information, get out. Like a signal pulse.
Test: If you can hum it, it is too long. If it sounds like it could come from a musical instrument, it is too organic. If you notice it after the third time, it is too loud. GFS sounds should feel like part of the interface — not separate from it.
02Notification Sounds6 UI Sound Descriptions
Six distinct notification sounds, each mapped to a specific event type. Designed to be distinguishable from each other even at low volume. All synthesized, all under 1 second.
Short digital ping, ascending attack with quick decay. Clean sine wave.
C5 note
Sine wave
Fast attack
Quick decay
Two-note ascending chime. First note resolves upward to the second — feels like confirmation and completion.
C5 to E5
Triangle wave
Major third interval
Single low tone with moderate sustain. Not aggressive or alarming — just a clear signal that something needs attention.
G3 note
Square wave (soft)
Gentle release
Double tap — two identical short tones in quick succession. Creates gentle urgency without panic. Like a polite knock.
A4 to A4
Sine wave
Repeated pulse
Soft bubble with rounded attack. Like a water drop — organic-feeling but still digital. Shortest of all notifications.
Rounded attack
Filtered sine
Subtle
Repeating pulse at 0.3-second intervals. Persistent but not irritating. Used for countdown completions and timed alerts (like Frost Line triggers).
B4 note
Repeating
0.3s interval
Fades after 5 repeats
Volume hierarchy: Default notification = 100% base volume. Success = 80%. Error = 90%. Warning = 95%. Message = 70%. Timer = 100% (it needs to be heard). All sounds respect system volume and can be individually disabled in user preferences.
03Hold Music DirectionStyle Guide for Phone System Audio
Hold music represents GFS in the caller's ear for extended periods. It must be calming without being soporific, professional without being generic, and distinctive without being distracting. The goal: the caller feels they are waiting in a well-run, modern organization.
- Ambient electronic
- Minimal, spacious arrangements
- Cool and calm tonal palette
- Subtle evolving textures
- Clean synthesized pads
- Minor keys preferred
- 70-90 BPM tempo range
- No vocals, no lyrics
- Corporate jazz
- Acoustic guitar / ukulele
- Pop song covers
- Classical orchestral
- Upbeat electronic / EDM
- Lo-fi beats with vinyl crackle
- Royalty-free stock music
- Anything with a melody you can hum
Reference Artists
Brian Eno
Tycho
Boards of Canada
Nils Frahm
Aphex Twin (ambient)
Stars of the Lid
Tempo
70-90 BPM
Slow enough to relax, fast enough to feel alive
Key
Minor
Dm, Am, Em preferred. Introspective, not sad
Duration
3-5 min
Seamless loop point. No jarring restart
Emotional target: The caller should feel like they are inside a well-designed space. Cool, competent, calm. Not entertained — but not ignored. The music says: "We are organized. Your call matters. Someone will be with you shortly."
04Voicemail Greeting ScriptIVR / Phone Tree Script
The phone greeting is often a caller's first interaction with GFS. It must be clear, efficient, and professional. Read at a moderate pace. Natural but not casual. The voice should be: adult, neutral American accent, medium pitch, warm but businesslike.
Thank you for calling Global Food Solutions.
1.5s
For shipment tracking, press 1.
For orders, press 2.
For billing, press 3.
To speak with a representative, press 0.
2s
Our office hours are Monday through Friday, 7 AM to 6 PM Eastern.
Script rules: No "Your call is important to us" — that is filler. No apologies for wait times in the greeting itself. State options clearly, with numbers before descriptions. Always end with hours and timezone. Pause markings are critical — they give the caller time to process.
05Podcast / Video IntroAudio Logo & Opening Line
The GFS audio logo and opening line for any podcast, video, or media content. The audio logo is 5 seconds. The tagline establishes authority and subject immediately. Together they say: this is GFS, and this is intelligence.
Opening Line (spoken)
"This is the GFS Signal — food supply intelligence from Global Food Solutions."
Duration: ~4 seconds · Same voice as IVR · Confident, not dramatic
Audio Logo Description (5 seconds)
Three ascending digital tones (C4, E4, G4) played as clean sine waves at 0.3s intervals. Each tone is 0.4s with a gentle fade. After the third tone, a low pad swell (C2) blooms underneath for 2 seconds, then fades. The spoken tagline begins as the pad reaches peak.
Visual sync: A dot-matrix globe assembles point by point in time with each tone. By the pad swell, the globe is complete and slowly rotating.
Usage: The audio logo plays at the beginning of all video content, podcast episodes, and webinars. The spoken tagline can be omitted for short-form content (under 60 seconds). The audio logo alone is sufficient for bumpers and transitions.
06Sound Waveform VisualizationCSS-Animated Audio Representations
Six CSS-animated waveforms — one for each notification sound. Each animation pattern matches the described audio characteristics. These can be used as visual indicators during audio playback or as decorative elements in the sonic brand documentation.
Color mapping: Default = Tufts blue. Success = Green. Error = Red. Warning = Amber. Message = Jordy (light blue). Timer = Navy. Colors match the semantic system used throughout GFS — ensuring visual-audio consistency across the platform.