That feeling has a name. Or rather, a typeface: .
| Era | Typeface | Problem | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Helvetica / Univers | Generic. Every competitor (Siemens, Philips) used the same fonts. No brand distinctiveness. | | 2000–2012 | Original Bosch Sans | A vast improvement, but designed for print. It lacked the "hinting" for digital screens. The weights were too heavy for UI buttons. | | 2013–Present | Bosch Sans Global | Custom built. Pixel-perfect. Multi-script. Scaled to 1,000+ subsidiaries. | bosch sans global font
The switch was not cheap. Developing a full family of 18 weights (including italics and condensed versions) plus global script support costs upwards of €50,000 to €100,000. For Bosch, it was a bargain. Why? Because licensing a standard font like Helvetica Now for 400,000 employees across every piece of software, website, and machine would cost millions annually. A proprietary font is a one-time investment that pays for itself in consistency. If you are a marketing partner, a Bosch subsidiary, or an internal employee, you have access via the Bosch Corporate Design portal. However, the general public cannot legally obtain this font. That feeling has a name
Prior to this font, Bosch used a mishmash of Arial, Univers, and custom cuts. The result was visual chaos. A spark plug box looked nothing like a power tool website, which looked nothing like a corporate investor presentation. Every competitor (Siemens, Philips) used the same fonts