| name | branding-expert |
| description | Brand identity, positioning, voice & tone guidelines, and style guide creation. |
| allowed-tools | Read, Glob, Grep |
Branding Expert
Build memorable, consistent brands that connect with audiences.
1. Brand Strategy Framework
| Element | Definition | Output |
|---|
| Purpose | Why you exist beyond profit | Mission statement |
| Vision | Where you're going | Vision statement |
| Values | What you believe in | Core values |
| Position | How you're different | Positioning statement |
| Personality | How you act | Brand archetypes |
| Voice | How you sound | Voice guidelines |
2. Brand Positioning
Positioning Statement Template
For [target audience]
Who [need/want]
[Brand] is the [category]
That [key benefit]
Because [reason to believe]
Competitive Positioning
| Strategy | Approach |
|---|
| Head-to-head | Beat the leader |
| Differentiation | Unique attribute |
| Niche | Specific segment |
| Category creation | New space |
| Value | Best price |
3. Brand Archetypes
| Archetype | Desire | Example Brands |
|---|
| Innocent | Safety, simplicity | Dove, Coca-Cola |
| Explorer | Freedom, discovery | Jeep, Patagonia |
| Sage | Knowledge, truth | Google, BBC |
| Hero | Mastery, courage | Nike, BMW |
| Outlaw | Revolution | Harley-Davidson |
| Magician | Transformation | Apple, Disney |
| Regular Guy | Belonging | IKEA, Target |
| Lover | Intimacy, beauty | Chanel, Häagen-Dazs |
| Jester | Joy, fun | M&Ms, Old Spice |
| Caregiver | Service, help | Johnson & Johnson |
| Creator | Innovation | Lego, Adobe |
| Ruler | Control, power | Mercedes, Rolex |
4. Brand Voice
Voice Dimensions
| Dimension | Spectrum |
|---|
| Formal ↔ Casual | Professional vs friendly |
| Serious ↔ Humorous | Straight vs playful |
| Respectful ↔ Irreverent | Traditional vs edgy |
| Enthusiastic ↔ Matter-of-fact | Excited vs neutral |
Voice Chart Template
| Trait | Description | Do | Don't |
|---|
| Confident | We know our stuff | Use definitive language | Be arrogant |
| Friendly | Approachable | Use "you" and "we" | Be too familiar |
| Clear | Easy to understand | Use simple words | Use jargon |
5. Tone Variations
Tone by Context
| Context | Tone Adjustment |
|---|
| Marketing | Inspiring, benefit-focused |
| Support | Patient, empathetic |
| Error messages | Helpful, calm |
| Legal | Clear, precise |
| Social | Conversational, human |
| Crisis | Serious, transparent |
Emotion Grid
| Audience Feeling | Our Response |
|---|
| Confused | Clarifying, patient |
| Frustrated | Empathetic, helpful |
| Excited | Match energy, celebrate |
| Skeptical | Proof-focused, humble |
6. Visual Identity
Logo Guidelines
| Element | Guidance |
|---|
| Clear space | Minimum breathing room |
| Minimum size | Legibility threshold |
| Color versions | Full, mono, reversed |
| Misuse | What not to do |
Color System
| Type | Purpose | Example |
|---|
| Primary | Main brand color | Hero elements |
| Secondary | Support colors | Accents |
| Neutral | Text, backgrounds | UI elements |
| Semantic | Status colors | Success, error |
Typography
| Level | Use |
|---|
| Display | Headlines, hero text |
| Body | Paragraphs, content |
| UI | Interface elements |
| Mono | Code, data |
7. Brand Guidelines Document
Essential Sections
| Section | Contents |
|---|
| Introduction | Brand story, purpose |
| Logo | Usage, clear space, variations |
| Color | Palette, accessibility |
| Typography | Fonts, hierarchy |
| Photography | Style, composition |
| Iconography | Style, grid |
| Voice | Tone, vocabulary |
| Applications | Templates, examples |
8. Naming Guidelines
Brand Name Criteria
| Criterion | Importance |
|---|
| Memorable | Easy to recall |
| Pronounceable | Easy to say |
| Spellable | Easy to write |
| Available | Domain, trademark |
| Meaningful | Relevant associations |
| Scalable | Works as you grow |
Naming Styles
| Style | Example | Pros |
|---|
| Descriptive | General Electric | Clear |
| Abstract | Xerox | Ownable |
| Acronym | IBM | Short |
| Metaphor | Amazon | Evocative |
| Founder | Ford | Personal |
| Portmanteau | Pinterest | Unique |
9. Brand Audit
Audit Checklist
| Area | Questions |
|---|
| Consistency | Same look everywhere? |
| Clarity | Clear value proposition? |
| Differentiation | Standing out from competitors? |
| Relevance | Resonating with audience? |
| Authenticity | Living up to promises? |
Touchpoint Review
| Touchpoint | Check |
|---|
| Website | Visual, voice, UX |
| Social | Profile, content, engagement |
| Email | Design, tone, signatures |
| Product | Packaging, interface |
| Support | Scripts, responses |
10. Brand Refresh vs Rebrand
When to Refresh
| Signal | Action |
|---|
| Dated look | Visual update |
| Inconsistency | Guidelines enforcement |
| New audience | Voice evolution |
When to Rebrand
| Signal | Action |
|---|
| Merger/acquisition | New identity |
| Major pivot | Complete overhaul |
| Reputation crisis | Fresh start |
| Fundamental change | New positioning |
Remember: A strong brand is built on consistency. Every touchpoint should feel like it comes from the same source.