Amazon is promoting the American Sign Language version of its logo, an inclusive effort led by Brendan Gramer, a senior UX designer on Amazon’s Consumer Payments team, whose day job is designing payment experiences for customers.

As an extension of helping support the ASL community at Amazon, comprised of deaf and hard of hearing employees and those who are learning ASL), Gramer helped develop the new Amazon ASL logo.

“We wanted to create something that would be culturally positive and demonstrate Amazon’s commitment to embracing employees for who they really are,” he commented in a blog post. “Because AmazonPwD was already engaged in promoting ASL as a language, creating an inclusive identity for the deaf community felt like a natural starting point.”

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Gramer led the design of the Amazon ASL logo with a group of designers, accessibility leaders, and others. The team worked together to accurately illustrate the ASL handshapes and fingerspelling movement, translating it to its English letter equivalent.

“The logo isn’t just symbolic—it’s a useful tool. For example, at our Post-Holiday Party, the logo was worn by interpreters to help deaf attendees find communication assistance,” said Gramer. In addition to driving awareness and adoption of the ASL logo within Amazon, we are continuing to hire in-house ASL interpreters to work with candidates and employees.

“It’s been really exciting and rewarding to see all the positive responses to the logo, and that it is helping Amazon strengthen its ASL community both at the HQ and across the company,” said Gramer of Amazon’s CSR commitment.

In his nearly 10 years at Amazon, Gramer has also helped lead efforts to connect Amazonians of all abilities by helping launch the AmazonPwD (People with Disabilities) affinity group. At Amazon, affinity groups are voluntary, employee-led groups that are designed to foster diversity and inclusion and to strengthen networking and community participation.

Gramer has been deaf since birth, born to a hearing family outside of Chicago. His parents decided to raise him orally, meaning that he would learn to speak and read lips rather than sign language. Like most children, Gramer primarily communicated orally with his friends and family. Later in his life he learned American Sign Language (ASL) and realized how much he had been missing even though he read lips.

“I would often miss homework assignments because teachers shouted them out as the bell rang,” said Gramer. It wasn’t until later in life that Gramer found a deaf community—a network of peers who are deaf and hard of hearing.

Taking lessons learned throughout his life and combining them with the passion for innovation he saw at Amazon, Gramer organized a group for Amazonians interested in learning and practicing ASL with the ASL Coffee Hour. Working with other passionate Amazonians, the group—open to Amazonians of all abilities—meets monthly and remains popular today.