How to find your brand’s essence

 Life is complicated. Good design shouldn’t be. Especially when your brand is driven by purpose, sustainability, and a hunger to change the world. 

Weaving those elements, and your brand essence, into a visual identity is what sparks connection and elicits opportunity — and it’s essential as the trees are to the forest.

So, what does your branding need to communicate? And how do you find your brand essence? Let’s find that out together! 

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Brand Story

Storytelling inspires and creates emotional connections with your audience.

Storytelling is a powerful tool for your brand’s communication. If you want to build meaningful relationships and create an elevated brand your people care about, you need a purposeful, authentic story to tell. 

Here’s the structure for good storytelling:

01 

PROBLEM:

Describe the difficulty, situation or problem that you set out to solve.

02

SOLUTION:

Describe how you solved it with your ideas and passion

03

SUCCESS:

Describe how your solution is making people’s lives better

Brand Purpose

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To create a brand identity that is rooted in strategy, designed with purpose, and resonates with your ideal client, we must get into the WHY of your brand first. 

Your brand purpose makes you irresistible to your target audience. It’s the foundation and the very reason your brand exists.

It goes beyond profit.

If used strategically, your why can be the driving force behind your brand’s success

Vision

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Your brand vision states what your brand does for your audience. Think of it as the picture of where you want your brand to be in the future.

Your vision should be measurable, attainable, inspiring, unique, cultural, and straightforward. 

The brands that are most capable of inspiring us and earning our trust are the ones that make us feel like we’re more than just another customer. They make us feel like we’re part of something even bigger.

Mission

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Think of your brand’s mission as the route to follow to achieve your brand’s vision.

Your brand’s mission is what your business strives to do for your audience. 

Think about what products and services you offer and the impact they have.

Values & Ethics 

What does your brand stand for? 

Values are at the core of your business. They influence how consumers perceive your brand and help them align with their own values.

Your ethics help define your purpose, personality, and visual style. 

From the colours you use, your logo, your voice and customer service, everything should be meaningfully defined around your brand values. 

Promise

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Your promise is how you commit to every client. It’s the way that makes your brand unique, and it’s what your target audience expects from your business.

Your promise helps you position yourself in the market, as it sets customers expectations on the brand’s quality and feel.

Personality 

Brand personality is a set of characteristics that your brand can purposely use to evoke the right emotional response and increase trust.

Brand personality is what humanises your brand and makes it resonate with your target audience.

Because we connect and purchase from brands we like and relate to, it’s important to define your brand personality to be engaging.

Audience

By knowing more about who you’re serving, communicating and connecting with your target audience becomes easy as a breeze.

Who is your audience and where do they look for when they find your brand? What are they searching for?

Customer Persona

Creating a customer persona allows you to understand your audience better and recognise key traits and patterns and how your brand can help.

01 

RESEARCH:

Research the problems your ideal clients are facing. What do they look for? Where do they seek help?

02 

DEFINE:

Define your customer persona. Think about age, interests, profession, routines, goals, aspirations, etc.

03 

 DETERMINE:

Map out their decision-making process and where and how your brand can help them. 

04

MAP OUT:

Map out their decision-making process and where and how your brand can help them. 

Colours

How your target feels about your brand is more potent than what they think about your brand. This means that your brand colours should be selected by their meaning, a preference is not enough. 

Brand colours are a reflection of your brand identity and evoke a strong and immediate emotional response.

Typography

Like colours, your brand’s fonts can make or break your visual identity. After all, it’s not just what you say: It’s how you say it.

Selecting the right typography can help amplify your brand’s message and give your logo and overall brand identity a unique feel. 

Why Storytelling Works in Marketing

 If you’re in the online marketing space in any way, shape, or form, you’ve probably heard someone talk about the power of using stories in marketing. 

But what does it actually mean to use storytelling when it comes to business facts and not some fictional, fantasy novel?

Buckle up buttercup because this blog post is dedicated to all things story: what it is, why we (humans) gravitate toward it, and how to use it in your own marketing efforts

What is storytelling?

On the most basic level, storytelling is the act of using words to help a listener or reader imagine an experience or another world.  It usually involves a beginning, a middle, and an end and it definitely includes characters.

Almost every story in existence follows the hero’s journey. The hero’s journey contains a main character (the hero) who encounters a problem that forces them out into the unknown where they meet a guide who helps them face the problem so they can return home victorious. 

Okay, great, but…

Why do we even care about stories?

Storytelling is hardwired into our DNA (and that’s not me being dramatic, it’s science). If you want to get really nerdy about it the impact storytelling has on the brain, you can do so here and here or just Google “storytelling and neuroscience.”

Basically, we know that stories work because we’ve studied storytelling and the brain enough to prove that the brain gets excited when it’s listening to a good story. 

Just think back to something CRAZY a friend has told you about…

What just popped into your mind? Was it a fact or a story?

I’m willing to bet it was a story…because stories are deeply human. Not only do they evoke feelings within us which we have a lot easier of a time remembering than facts, but they’re also a deeply human habit. The act of passing on stories about events and each other is a core part of our survival and our history. 

Stories are also stupid powerful 

They are a rallying cry unlike anything else. Think about Martin Luther King Jr’s “I have a dream” speech – the whole speech is a story that had readers imagining a better world, a different world. 

Think about The Bible. It doesn’t just say: God created the earth – it recounts what happened on each of the seven days of creation. 

And at the core of wildly successful brands? You guessed it, storytelling. Which brings us to the next point…

What good stories and marketing have in common 

1 – AN OBVIOUS PROBLEM TO SOLVE 

Every good story starts with a problem and that problem demands that the main character makes a decision: go passively about life and let this problem ruin everything or take action and dive into the unknown with the potential to be victorious. 

The same goes for marketing. Your ideal client is the hero at the beginning of their journey and when they come across your offer or your business, they’re experiencing a problem, a problem that you are offering a solution to. But taking a step toward fixing their problem requires a step into the unknown. 

The takeaway: how can you create stakes around what you offer so your reader can feel the tension between staying where they are and being fine/less than fine or taking the next step and being fulfilled?

2 – A RELATABLE MAIN CHARACTER

The main character is what makes or breaks a good story because if you don’t like the main character, you’re not gonna keep reading the book or watching whatever series.

Good main characters are scared but choose to be brave anyway, they have things they would absolutely never do (strong values), they make mistakes and are too hard on themselves for it, they have moments of extreme self-doubt, and they crave more. They’re the ones seeking to make a change; a change within their world or a change that impacts all of society.

They also have a rich backstory that deepens readers’ connections to the main character because it helps them understand why they are the way they are. (Have you ever watched a movie where there was so little backstory you just couldn’t care about what was happening at all? It sucks.)

While you’re not actually the “hero” of your story according to marketing genius, Donald Miller, you can think of yourself as the main character when it comes to including these main character elements in your marketing. 

The takeaway: Have a backstory that contextualizes how you ended up where you are, make your values apparent, and reveal your vulnerabilities so that your audience can relate with you (and on a deeper level, care about the success of your brand). 

3 – A KICKASS GUIDE

Along with a relatable main character, almost all good stories have a wise and wonderful guide who has faced the problem that the hero of the story is trying to overcome. 

And this is where the StoryBrand framework created by Donald Miller will blow your mind: you’re not the hero, you’re the guide. 

(I promise it’s still cool.)

The guide is the character that has been there and done that, having overcome similar challenges the hero is facing, and is a key character because the guide is able to relay their experiences in a way that helps the hero. 

(Imagine how bad it would be if Dumbledore was like: “Yeah, I’ve got no ideas how to beat Voldemort. Good luck though.” Not a very reassuring role model.) 

The guide is the all-knowing character that everyone respects and turns to for sage advice and is responsible for leading the hero through their journey, but ultimately letting them spread their wings and fly all on their own at the end. In your marketing storyline – your ideal client is the hero, turning to you for your expertise so you can lead them through their challenges and to triumph. 

The takeaway: you want to relate to your ideal client by telling them you know how they’re feeling because you’ve been there BUT that you’ve overcome it and you know what life is like on the other side, that’s why you’re qualified to help them.

4 – A DREAMY END GOAL

A good story makes a big deal out of the end goal. Whether that’s overcoming literal evil or getting your parents back together (shoutout to The Parent Trap), the end goal feels plausible but like a big f-ing deal. It’s not so easy that it’s boring, but it’s not so hard that it’s completely impossible – story consumers need something to root for. After all, the end goal is what makes the opening problem compelling. 

If there’s no end goal, then there’s only hopelessness. If there’s only the end goal, but no problem, it’s boring. The end goal paired with the problem is what creates the tension that drives the whole story. 

Give people a good goal to root for and you’ll form a community.

Just like at Nike. Yeah, they’re selling shoes. But they’re also selling the idea that anyone can accomplish the unbelievable if they just do it. And they do so by showing you the stories of ordinary people who have become extraordinary athletes, implying that their audience could be that too. 

The takeaway: show your ideal client what’s on the other side if they take this leap; paint a picture of what their life could look like if they were to succeed. 

5 – A TRANSFORMATION

Humans are hungry for transformation and good stories know that. The mistreated and abused step-daughter who goes on to marry a prince (Cinderella) or the woman who starts out frumpy and insecure but transforms into a sexy, confident woman after a haircut and wardrobe makeover (any makeover show). 

The list goes on and on: the diamond that goes from nothing special to a treasured gem or even the cleaning videos you can find on TikTok of people washing dirt off rugs and organizing their houses. 

It stems from the human desire to go from what we are to what we’re capable of, unlocking our want to be more than we currently are. It’s a powerful element of storytelling and it’s also one of the easiest to incorporate into your marketing because whatever you sell is taking someone from where they are now to where they want to be. 

The takeaway: show your ideal clients where they are now in comparison to where they could be. Tap into where they dream of going by telling them what’s possible if they take a step in that direction. 

6 – EMOTIONS SCATTERED THROUGHOUT

And what ties all of those pieces together? Emotion – the backbone, lifeblood, and undercurrent of all good storytelling. Because when people feel something, they remember it.

Pixar has perfected this one: they’ve got drawing on our emotions down to a science. They’ve made us empathize and care for just about everything out there: fish, toys, feelings that have feelings, monsters, robots, bugs, cars, and even rats to name a few of their most beloved movies. 

And you know why? Because emotion is front and center. Think about Ratatouille, a movie about a rat, a wildly unpopular animal, who wants to be a chef which is a ridiculous, yet entertaining concept on its own, but he’s not just a rat. 

He’s a rat who feels like an outsider, who want something more than what he’s told he can be. 

He dares to dream and after (forcedly) breaking away from the group and life he knows, steps into an unknown world where against all odds he finds someone who gets him, recognizes his talent, and helps him pursue his dream. Throughout the movie he confronts his identity, he betrays someone he cares about, and lastly, he owns who he is and becomes someone he is proud of: a chef who not only serves real people in a real restaurant but changes rat culture forever by taking typical cuisine from trash to tasty, real food. 

All of those points are incredibly emotionally compelling and relatable as hell. We can’t help but cheer Remy on as he embarks on an impossible journey and we can’t help but grin as his dream comes true. 

There’s a reason that movie has a 96% on Rotten Tomatoes and grossed 623 MILLION dollars at the box office.

The takeaway: Get emotional. You don’t need to reinvent the wheel, but you want to touch on the core emotional human experiences in a way that’s authentic and true to your story. 

The bottom line

Storytelling works and you can use storytelling in your marketing in all kinds of ways. Whether it’s the story of how your business got started, the story of your ideal client and what they’re looking for, the story you tell of how your offer transformed your customers’ life, or just a silly story you send to your email list, you can use stories everywhere.