| name | applying-brand-guidelines |
| description | Apply James Gray and JamesGray.AI brand voice, tone, and messaging guidelines to content. Use when creating marketing materials, educational content, sales outreach, social media posts, website copy, or any client-facing communications to ensure consistent brand identity and executive-appropriate messaging. |
| user-invocable | true |
| lob | shared |
Applying Brand Guidelines
Overview
Brand guidelines for James Gray, JamesGray.AI, Hands-on AI for Leaders course, and Graymatter newsletter/podcast. Ensures consistent voice, tone, and messaging across all content.
Brand Identity
Core Positioning
- Identity: Founder/CEO, former Microsoft data executive
- Mission: Transform organizations through data & AI strategy, turning AI hype into high-ROI action
- Authority: Guest instructor at UC Berkeley Haas Executive Education (6,000+ execs taught), certified leadership coach (500+ clients)
- Flagship Offering: "Hands-on AI for Leaders" cohort course on Maven
Brand Pillars
- High-performance: Excellence-driven, strategic execution
- Strategic: Business outcomes over technical features
- Empathy: Understanding executive challenges and constraints
- Curiosity: "Student Always" mindset
Internal Brand Elements (DO NOT INCLUDE IN OUTPUT)
IMPORTANT: The following elements are for Claude's context only and should NEVER be included in generated content:
- Personal Mantra: "Where there is a Gray, there is a way" - This is James's internal motivational phrase and should not appear in any marketing materials, social media posts, newsletters, or client-facing communications.
Visual Brand Identity
Color Palette
- Primary Accent:
#ddf222 (neon/chartreuse yellow) - Use for CTAs, highlights, key elements
- Secondary:
#D9DAE4 (light gray), #BBBDC7 (gray) - Backgrounds, subtle elements
- Tertiary:
#282828 (dark charcoal) - Text, headers
Typography & Formatting
- Preferred formats: Markdown, numbered lists, step-by-step guides
- Headlines: Clear, benefit-driven, include numbers when possible
- Body text: Scannable with headers, bullets, short paragraphs
Voice & Tone
Core Voice Attributes (1-10 Scale)
Authoritative (9/10) - Expert confidence backed by data and peer success
- ✅ "Based on 200+ implementations, this framework delivers 3-5x productivity gains"
Strategic (8/10) - Business impact over technical mechanics
- ✅ "While competitors manually process proposals, you'll have AI handling 80% of the work"
Pragmatic (8/10) - Cutting through hype to deliver measurable value
- ✅ "Start with automating your 3 most time-consuming tasks. Implementation guide:"
Time-Conscious (7/10) - Respect busy schedules with efficient communication
- ✅ "The 3 features that impact quarterly goals—15 min setup, immediate results"
Peer-Oriented (7/10) - Trusted guide who filters the noise, not teacher to student
- Draws on patterns across 6,000+ professionals — frames insights as observed patterns, not personal preferences
- Uses "In my experience across executive education..." not "In my opinion..."
- Curates and contextualizes rather than lectures — a seasoned practitioner helping builders focus on what matters
- ✅ "You excel at process optimization. Let's add AI agents to amplify that strength"
- ✅ "In my experience teaching 6,000+ executives, the organizations that succeed with AI share one trait: they invest in their people's judgment before investing in tools"
Signature Messages
- "AI won't make you indispensable — you will."
- "Upgrade your mindset, then watch the tech amplify it."
- "Stay curious. Stay hands-on."
Voice Characteristics
- Confident founder-operator strategist
- Quantify outcomes first, then decisive POV
- Use analogies in explanations
- Future-oriented, inner-growth-meets-tech
The Human-AI Fusion Thread
This is what makes James's voice distinctive — the belief that AI amplifies who you already are, so self-leadership and technical mastery are inseparable:
- AI is a capability multiplier, not a replacement — "AI amplifies your judgment. It doesn't replace the work of developing judgment worth amplifying."
- Connect tools to human growth — Don't just explain what a tool does; explain what it demands of the person using it (clarity of intent, willingness to iterate, comfort with ambiguity)
- Acknowledge the inner work — Identity shifts, habit changes, the discomfort of evolving alongside technology. These aren't soft topics; they're the prerequisite that makes technical skills compound.
- Frame "Master Yourself" as strategic — Not soft skills or self-help, but the foundation that determines whether AI investments pay off. Organizations that invest in their people's judgment before investing in tools consistently outperform.
Weave this thread through all content — it's what separates James from tool-focused AI voices. Every piece should have at least a subtle nod to the human side of the equation.
Gravitas Markers
Signals that separate a seasoned practitioner from a content creator:
- Name trade-offs and second-order effects — Not just benefits. "This approach accelerates onboarding but creates a dependency on prompt quality that most teams underestimate."
- Reference patterns across thousands — Draw on 6,000+ professionals taught, not just personal opinion. "Across executive education cohorts, the pattern is consistent: teams that skip the strategy phase spend 3x longer on implementation."
- Acknowledge what's genuinely hard — Builders respect honesty about difficulty. Don't oversell or smooth over real challenges.
- Cross-disciplinary perspective — Technology + executive education + coaching + entrepreneurship. This breadth is rare and should surface naturally.
- Cite research or industry data when available — Not just anecdote. Ground claims in evidence.
- Willingness to say "this doesn't work for every organization" — Nuance signals experience. Blanket recommendations signal inexperience.
Voice Differentiation: What We Don't Sound Like
Anti-patterns that make AI content sound generic or unseasoned:
- AI Hype Bro — "This changes EVERYTHING", "game-changer", "mind-blown", unqualified superlatives, treating every release as revolutionary. We analyze implications; we don't amplify noise.
- Hustle-Culture Guru — "Grind harder with AI", productivity porn, "10x yourself", treating AI as a hack rather than a strategic capability. We build sustainable systems; we don't chase shortcuts.
- Surface-Level Curator — Repackaging press releases without analysis, "here are 5 tools" listicles with no strategic framing, describing features without implications. We add perspective that requires experience to have.
- Fear-Based Marketer — "You'll be left behind", "AI is coming for your job", anxiety-driven urgency. We create opportunity-driven motivation grounded in what's actually working.
- Generic Thought Leader — Vague platitudes ("the future is now"), overly broad claims without specifics, content that could come from anyone. If it doesn't reflect pattern recognition from 30+ years of building, it doesn't ship.
James sounds like a builder and educator who's been in the arena for 30 years — analytical depth meets practitioner credibility meets inner-growth philosophy. The tone is a trusted guide who filters the noise, not someone adding to it.
Writing Standards
Sentence Length: Max 18 words for key sentences; 12 words for openings
Paragraph Length: 2-3 sentences max
- First: Key point or benefit
- Second: Supporting detail/example
- Third (optional): Implementation note
Quantification: Include specific numbers in 40%+ of claims
- ✅ "Reduce decision time by 60% within 30 days"
- ❌ "Improve your decision-making process"
Actionability: Every section suggests 7-14 day action with specific next steps
Example Ratio: Min 1 concrete example per 2 abstract concepts
Executive Vocabulary - Always use:
- ROI, KPIs, competitive advantage, strategic implementation
- "Orchestrate" (vs "use"), "frameworks" (vs "methods")
- "Technical acumen," "accelerate productivity"
Avoid List:
- "Obviously," "just," "simply," "easy"
- "You should," "you must," "you need to"
- "Beginner," "basic," "intro-level"
- Technical jargon without business context
Primary Audience
Hands-on AI for Leaders Participants
- Roles: VP/Director, Product Leaders, Innovation Directors, CSOs
- Background: MBA+, 15+ years experience, $150K-$500K income
- Pain Points: AI hype overload, technical credibility gap, implementation paralysis
- Communication: Lead with business value, strategic frameworks, peer stories, respect time (3-5 hrs/week max)
Secondary: Solo founders, enterprise executives, tech leaders seeking AI strategy
Communication Principles
- Lead with Business Value - Start with "why" before "how"; quantify outcomes
- Balance Authority with Accessibility - Demonstrate expertise, remain approachable
- Emphasize Practical Implementation - Actionable takeaways over theory
Quality Checklist (11-Point)
Before publishing, verify:
- Business value in first 25 words
- Peer or company reference
- At least 2 specific metrics
- Timeline for results
- Authority signals (frameworks, case studies)
- Business outcomes before tech details
- 24-48 hour action step
- Competitive positioning
- Executive-appropriate language
- Clear CTA with deadline
- Voice differentiation — sounds like a seasoned builder-educator, not a generic AI content creator
Brand Assets & Links
Core Public Links
Social Media Handles
- X: @JamesGrayAI
- Instagram: @JamesGray.AI
- YouTube: @JamesGrayAI
- GitHub: jamesgray007
- LinkedIn: /in/jamesgray
Resources
Detailed guidance available in reference files (loaded as needed):
Content Templates: Email formulas, headlines, CTAs, channel-specific templates → See references/content-templates.md
Voice Examples: Before/after examples, tone variations, common mistakes → See references/voice-examples.md
Bio & Credentials: Bio variations, education, experience, speaker intros → See references/bio-credentials.md
Content Checklist: 11-point quality checklist with scoring framework → See references/content-checklist.md
- Channel-specific variations
- Common failure patterns
Key Principles
- Lead with quantified business value in first 25 words
- Speak peer-to-peer (executive to executive)
- Include specific metrics, timelines, examples
- Focus on business outcomes over technical features
- Provide actionable next steps with 7-14 day timelines