Brand Strategy Engine

# Brand Strategy Engine

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Install skill "Brand Strategy Engine" with this command: npx skills add 1kalin/afrexai-brand-strategy

Brand Strategy Engine

Complete brand building and go-to-market system — from identity foundations through positioning, messaging, visual systems, and launch execution. Works for solopreneurs, startups, and established businesses rebranding.


Phase 1: Brand Discovery & Foundations

Strategy before aesthetics. Every visual decision flows from these answers.

1.1 Brand Purpose Statement

Answer in one sentence: Why does this business exist beyond revenue?

Template: "We exist to [verb] [audience] by [method] so they can [outcome]."

Examples:

  • "We exist to arm solo consultants with enterprise-grade tools so they can compete with agencies."
  • "We exist to simplify legal compliance for startups so founders can focus on building."

Test: If you removed your company, would anyone notice? The answer reveals your true purpose.

1.2 Brand Values (Pick Exactly 3)

More than 3 = forgettable. Fewer = too vague. Each value needs a behavior — what it looks like in practice.

brand_values:
  - value: "Radical Clarity"
    behavior: "We never use jargon. Every email, doc, and UI element passes the 'would my mom understand this?' test."
    anti_pattern: "Hiding behind buzzwords or complexity"
  - value: "Speed Over Perfection"
    behavior: "We ship MVPs in days, not months. We'd rather fix live than polish in private."
    anti_pattern: "Endless planning cycles, waiting for 'ready'"
  - value: "Skin in the Game"
    behavior: "We use our own products daily. Our pricing has a money-back guarantee."
    anti_pattern: "Recommending things we wouldn't buy ourselves"

1.3 Brand Personality (The Archetype Method)

Pick ONE primary archetype + ONE secondary flavor:

ArchetypeCore DriveVoice ToneBest For
SageKnowledge, truthAuthoritative, measuredConsulting, education, analytics
CreatorInnovation, visionInspiring, unconventionalDesign, tech, creative agencies
HeroMastery, achievementBold, confident, directFitness, coaching, enterprise tools
ExplorerFreedom, discoveryAdventurous, curiousTravel, startup tools, research
RebelRevolution, disruptionProvocative, irreverentChallenger brands, indie products
CaregiverService, protectionWarm, reassuringHealthcare, insurance, support
RulerControl, stabilityPremium, authoritativeFinance, luxury, enterprise
EverymanBelonging, honestyFriendly, down-to-earthCommunity tools, consumer products
MagicianTransformationVisionary, mysticalAI, wellness, life coaching
JesterJoy, humorWitty, playfulConsumer apps, food, entertainment
LoverIntimacy, experienceSensual, emotionalFashion, beauty, hospitality
InnocentSimplicity, optimismClean, hopefulWellness, kids, organic products

Output format:

brand_personality:
  primary: "Rebel"
  secondary: "Sage"
  summary: "We challenge the status quo with data to back it up. Think punk rock meets MIT."
  we_are: ["bold", "evidence-driven", "unapologetic", "sharp"]
  we_are_not: ["corporate", "safe", "fluffy", "slow"]

1.4 Competitive Landscape Map

Before positioning, know the territory:

competitive_map:
  category: "[Your market category]"
  competitors:
    - name: "[Competitor A]"
      positioning: "[How they position themselves]"
      strengths: ["...", "..."]
      weaknesses: ["...", "..."]
      price_tier: "premium|mid|budget"
      brand_vibe: "[1-3 words]"
    - name: "[Competitor B]"
      # ...
  white_space: "[Where NO competitor plays — this is your opportunity]"
  category_conventions: "[What everyone in this space does — colors, language, promises]"
  our_contrarian_angle: "[How we'll deliberately break conventions]"

Phase 2: Positioning & Messaging

2.1 Positioning Statement (April Dunford Method)

Fill in each element, then combine:

positioning:
  competitive_alternatives: "[What would customers use if you didn't exist?]"
  unique_capabilities: "[What you do that alternatives can't]"
  enabled_value: "[The measurable benefit those capabilities create]"
  best_fit_customers: "[Who cares MOST about that value — be specific]"
  market_category: "[The frame of reference that makes your value obvious]"

Combined statement: "For [best_fit_customers] who [pain point], [Brand] is the [market_category] that [unique_capabilities]. Unlike [competitive_alternatives], we [enabled_value]."

Positioning test — answer YES to all:

  • Can a 12-year-old understand what you do from this?
  • Does it make clear who this is NOT for?
  • Would a competitor cringe reading it? (If not, it's too generic)
  • Does it contain a falsifiable claim, not just adjectives?

2.2 Messaging Architecture

Three layers — never mix them:

Layer 1: Strategic Narrative (The Big Idea)

  • One paragraph that frames the world as changing, positions you as the guide
  • Pattern: "The old way of [X] is broken because [shift]. Companies that [Y] are winning. [Brand] gives you [Z]."
  • Used in: About page, pitch deck, keynote openings

Layer 2: Value Propositions (3 Pillars)

value_propositions:
  - pillar: "[Pillar Name]"
    headline: "[Benefit-driven, 8 words max]"
    subhead: "[How it works, 1 sentence]"
    proof: "[Specific stat, case study, or demo]"
    objection_it_handles: "[What skeptics say, and how this answers it]"
  - pillar: "..."
  - pillar: "..."

Layer 3: Proof Points For each value prop, stack evidence:

  • Customer quote (with name + company + result)
  • Metric ("43% faster onboarding")
  • Third-party validation (award, press mention, certification)
  • Demo/screenshot showing it in action

2.3 Ideal Customer Profile (ICP)

icp:
  demographics:
    company_size: "[range]"
    industry: ["...", "..."]
    revenue_range: "[range]"
    geography: ["..."]
    tech_stack: ["..."]  # if relevant
  psychographics:
    biggest_pain: "[The thing that keeps them up at night]"
    current_workaround: "[How they solve it today — badly]"
    buying_trigger: "[What event makes them search for a solution?]"
    decision_maker: "[Title + what they care about]"
    influencer: "[Who researches options before the DM sees them]"
    budget_holder: "[Who signs the check]"
  anti_signals:  # who NOT to target
    - "[Red flag 1 — e.g., 'wants custom everything']"
    - "[Red flag 2 — e.g., 'decision cycle > 6 months']"
    - "[Red flag 3 — e.g., 'budget under $X']"
  buying_journey:
    awareness: "[Where they first discover solutions — channels, searches]"
    consideration: "[What they compare — features, pricing, reviews]"
    decision: "[What tips them over — demo, trial, social proof, champion]"

2.4 Tagline & Elevator Pitch

Tagline formulas (pick one, refine):

  1. Verb + Outcome: "Ship faster. Break nothing."
  2. Contrast: "Enterprise power. Startup speed."
  3. Challenge: "Stop guessing. Start knowing."
  4. Promise: "From pipeline to paycheck in 14 days."
  5. Identity: "Built for builders."

Tagline quality checklist:

  • ≤6 words
  • No jargon or buzzwords
  • Works without context (on a billboard)
  • Implies a benefit, not a feature
  • Memorable — has rhythm, alliteration, or contrast

Elevator Pitch (30-second): "You know how [target audience] struggles with [problem]? We built [Product] which [solution]. Unlike [alternative], we [key differentiator]. [Customer] used it to [specific result]."


Phase 3: Brand Voice & Tone

3.1 Voice Guidelines

Voice is constant. Tone adapts to context.

brand_voice:
  voice_in_3_words: ["direct", "warm", "sharp"]
  writing_rules:
    - "Short sentences. Max 20 words unless making a complex point."
    - "Active voice always. 'We built X' not 'X was built by us.'"
    - "Contractions: yes. 'We're' not 'We are.'"
    - "First person plural ('we') for company, 'you' for customer."
    - "No hedge words: 'very', 'quite', 'somewhat', 'a bit.'"
    - "Specific > vague. '$40K saved' not 'significant savings.'"
    - "One idea per paragraph. If you need a semicolon, make two sentences."
  
  vocabulary:
    use: ["ship", "build", "real", "prove", "earn", "move", "own"]
    avoid: ["leverage", "synergy", "streamline", "cutting-edge", "revolutionize", "ecosystem", "holistic"]
  
  tone_spectrum:
    celebration: "Bold, high-energy. Short punchy sentences. Exclamation marks OK (max 1 per paragraph)."
    education: "Clear, patient, structured. Use examples liberally. No condescension."
    error_state: "Honest, calm, action-oriented. Say what happened, what we're doing, when it'll be fixed."
    sales: "Confident, proof-heavy. Lead with outcomes, not features. Never desperate."
    support: "Warm, specific, fast. Mirror the customer's urgency level."

3.2 Channel-Specific Adaptations

ChannelTone ShiftFormattingLength
Website copyBenefit-led, scannableH2s, bullets, social proof50-100 words/section
Email (marketing)Conversational, CTA-focusedShort paragraphs, 1 CTA150-300 words
Email (support)Warm, solution-focusedSteps numbered, links inlineAs short as possible
Social (LinkedIn)Professional, insight-ledHook → Story → CTA150-300 words
Social (Twitter/X)Sharp, pithy, opinionatedThread for depth, single for hooks280 chars or 5-8 tweet thread
Blog/ContentEducational, comprehensiveH2/H3 structure, examples1500-2500 words
Sales deckConfident, customer-centricVisuals > text, 6 words/slide10-15 slides
Product UIMinimal, action-orientedVerb-first buttons, no jargon3-8 words

3.3 Brand Voice Scorecard

Rate any piece of content 1-5 on each dimension:

Dimension1 (Off-brand)5 (On-brand)Weight
ClarityJargon-heavy, confusingCrystal clear, instant understanding25%
PersonalityGeneric, could be anyoneUnmistakably us20%
SpecificityVague claims, adjective-heavyNumbers, examples, proof20%
ActionPassive, informationalDrives clear next step15%
ConsistencyContradicts other brand commsReinforces brand story10%
Audience-fitWrong level, wrong concernsSpeaks directly to ICP10%

Score: <60 = rewrite. 60-79 = revise. 80+ = publish.


Phase 4: Visual Identity System

4.1 Color Palette

Primary (2 colors):

colors:
  primary:
    main: "#[hex]"  # Dominant brand color — used in logo, CTAs, headers
    accent: "#[hex]"  # Secondary emphasis — used in highlights, hover states
  neutral:
    dark: "#[hex]"   # Text, headings (near-black, never pure #000)
    medium: "#[hex]"  # Secondary text, borders
    light: "#[hex]"   # Backgrounds, cards
    white: "#[hex]"   # Page background (often #FAFAFA, not pure white)
  semantic:
    success: "#[hex]"
    warning: "#[hex]"
    error: "#[hex]"
    info: "#[hex]"

Color psychology quick guide:

  • Blue = trust, stability (finance, enterprise, healthcare)
  • Green = growth, health (sustainability, wellness, finance)
  • Red/Orange = energy, urgency (food, entertainment, sales)
  • Purple = premium, creative (luxury, education, design)
  • Yellow = optimism, attention (consumer, youth, caution)
  • Black = premium, power (luxury, tech, fashion)
  • Teal = modern, approachable (SaaS, fintech)

Ratio rule: 60% neutral / 30% primary / 10% accent

4.2 Typography

typography:
  heading:
    family: "[Font name]"
    weights: ["Bold (700)", "Semibold (600)"]
    style: "serif|sans-serif|display"
  body:
    family: "[Font name]"
    weights: ["Regular (400)", "Medium (500)"]
    style: "sans-serif"
    size_base: "16px"
    line_height: "1.6"
  mono:  # for code/technical content
    family: "[Font name]"
  pairing_rationale: "[Why these fonts work together]"

Safe pairings:

  • Modern SaaS: Inter + Inter (single font system)
  • Premium: Playfair Display + Source Sans Pro
  • Technical: Space Grotesk + IBM Plex Sans
  • Friendly: DM Sans + DM Sans
  • Editorial: Lora + Open Sans

4.3 Logo Direction Brief

If working with a designer, provide this:

logo_brief:
  type: "wordmark|lettermark|icon+wordmark|abstract|mascot"
  must_convey: ["[feeling 1]", "[feeling 2]", "[feeling 3]"]
  avoid: ["[cliche 1]", "[cliche 2]"]
  usage_contexts: ["favicon", "social avatar", "email signature", "merchandise"]
  competitors_look_like: "[Describe what's common in the space]"
  we_want_to_feel: "[Different how?]"
  min_size: "Must be legible at 32x32px (favicon)"
  variations_needed: ["full color", "single color", "reversed (white)", "icon only"]

4.4 Imagery & Photography Style

imagery:
  style: "photography|illustration|3D|abstract|mixed"
  mood: "[2-3 adjective description — e.g., 'bright, candid, energetic']"
  subjects: ["real people working", "product screenshots", "abstract patterns"]
  avoid: ["stock photo handshakes", "generic office scenes", "clip art"]
  filters: "[Any consistent treatment — e.g., 'slight warm tint, high contrast']"
  aspect_ratios:
    hero: "16:9"
    social: "1:1"
    blog: "2:1"

Phase 5: Go-to-Market Strategy

5.1 GTM Motion Selection

MotionBest WhenResources NeededTime to Revenue
Product-led (PLG)Low price, self-serve, viral potentialEngineering-heavy, analytics3-6 months
Sales-ledHigh ACV ($10K+), complex solutionSales team, collateral1-3 months
Community-ledDeveloper tools, niche marketsContent, community management6-12 months
Content-ledEducation market, long buying cyclesWriting, SEO, distribution6-12 months
Partner-ledEstablished ecosystem, integrationsPartnerships, co-marketing3-9 months

Decision framework:

  • ACV < $1K → PLG or Content-led
  • ACV $1K-$10K → PLG + Sales assist
  • ACV $10K-$50K → Sales-led + Content
  • ACV $50K+ → Sales-led + Partner

5.2 Launch Playbook

Pre-launch (T-30 to T-0):

pre_launch:
  week_4:
    - "Finalize positioning & messaging (Phase 2)"
    - "Set up analytics (website, product, marketing)"
    - "Create launch landing page with waitlist/early access"
  week_3:
    - "Draft all launch content (blog, email, social)"
    - "Brief sales team on positioning + battlecards"
    - "Set up CRM pipeline stages for launch leads"
  week_2:
    - "Seed content to early community (beta users, advisors)"
    - "Prepare PR/media list if relevant"
    - "Test all funnels end-to-end (landing → signup → onboarding → payment)"
  week_1:
    - "Final content review (voice scorecard — all pieces score 80+)"
    - "Load email sequences"
    - "Prepare real-time monitoring dashboard"
    - "Write the 'things went wrong' playbook (site down, negative feedback, etc.)"

Launch day checklist:

  • Publish landing page / make product public
  • Send email to waitlist / existing customers
  • Post to primary social channels (stagger by 2 hours)
  • Submit to relevant directories (Product Hunt, HN, industry-specific)
  • Monitor: traffic, signups, errors, social mentions (every 30 min)
  • Respond to every comment/question within 1 hour
  • End-of-day: metrics snapshot + lessons learned

Post-launch (T+1 to T+30):

  • Day 1-3: Respond to all feedback, fix critical issues
  • Day 4-7: First customer stories / testimonials
  • Day 8-14: Analyze funnel — where are people dropping?
  • Day 15-30: Iterate messaging based on what resonated

5.3 Channel Strategy

For each channel, define:

channels:
  - name: "[Channel name]"
    purpose: "awareness|consideration|conversion|retention"
    target_audience: "[Specific segment]"
    content_types: ["...", "..."]
    posting_cadence: "[frequency]"
    kpi: "[Primary metric]"
    target: "[Specific number by when]"
    budget: "[$/month or time investment]"
    owner: "[Who manages this]"

5.4 Sales Battlecard

battlecard:
  competitor: "[Name]"
  their_pitch: "[How they describe themselves]"
  their_strengths: ["...", "..."]
  their_weaknesses: ["...", "..."]
  landmine_questions:  # Questions that expose their weakness
    - "[Question that makes prospect think about competitor's gap]"
    - "..."
  our_counter:
    when_they_say: "[Competitor claim]"
    we_say: "[Our response — specific, proof-backed]"
  win_themes: ["...", "..."]
  loss_reasons: ["...", "..."]
  trap_to_avoid: "[What NOT to say when this competitor comes up]"

Phase 6: Brand Measurement & Evolution

6.1 Brand Health Dashboard

Track monthly:

MetricHow to MeasureBenchmark
Aided awarenessSurvey: "Have you heard of [Brand]?"Track trend
Share of voiceBrand mentions vs competitors (social, search)Growing
Brand sentiment% positive/neutral/negative mentions>70% positive
NPS"How likely to recommend?" (0-10)>40
Direct trafficPeople typing your URLGrowing MoM
Branded search"[Brand name]" Google searchesGrowing MoM
Repeat purchase rateReturning customers / total customers>30%
Content engagementAvg time on page, shares, savesImproving

6.2 Brand Audit (Quarterly)

Run this checklist every quarter:

Consistency check:

  • All customer-facing channels use current logo, colors, fonts
  • Website copy matches current positioning statement
  • Sales materials match current messaging architecture
  • Social profiles have consistent bios, links, imagery
  • Email templates use current brand voice

Effectiveness check:

  • Voice scorecard: score 5 recent content pieces — average 80+?
  • Review last quarter's campaigns — which messaging resonated most?
  • Read 10 recent customer reviews — do they echo our intended positioning?
  • Mystery shop: visit our own site fresh — is the value prop clear in 5 seconds?

Evolution signals:

  • Market has shifted — new competitors, new category, new buyer expectations
  • Product has expanded — brand no longer covers what we actually do
  • Audience has changed — attracting different customers than ICP
  • Values feel hollow — things we say we value but don't practice

6.3 Rebrand Decision Framework

Don't rebrand when:

  • You're bored of your own brand (customers aren't)
  • A competitor changed their brand
  • Revenue is flat (brand probably isn't the problem)
  • New leadership just "wants their stamp"

Do rebrand when:

  • Brand actively confuses people about what you do
  • Product pivot makes current positioning misleading
  • Merger/acquisition requires unified identity
  • Negative brand associations that can't be overcome with marketing
  • Outgrew the original brand (started as SMB tool, now enterprise)

Rebrand scope options:

  1. Refresh (low risk): Update colors, fonts, imagery. Keep name + positioning.
  2. Reposition (medium risk): Same name, new messaging + visual system.
  3. Rename (high risk): New name, new everything. Only when absolutely necessary.

Edge Cases & Advanced Patterns

Multi-Brand Architecture

If you manage multiple products/brands:

StrategyWhenExample
Branded HouseProducts share master brandGoogle Maps, Google Drive
House of BrandsProducts have distinct identitiesP&G → Tide, Gillette, Pampers
EndorsedSub-brands with parent endorsementMarriott → Courtyard by Marriott
HybridMix based on product typeApple (branded house) + Beats (endorsed)

Personal Brand vs Company Brand

When founder IS the brand:

  • Company brand: what you build (can be sold)
  • Personal brand: who you are (can't be sold)
  • Build both, but ensure the company can survive without the founder's face
  • Use personal brand to drive attention → funnel to company brand for conversion

International Brand Adaptation

Before entering new markets:

  • Name check: Does it mean something offensive in local language?
  • Color audit: Color meanings vary by culture (white = death in some Asian cultures)
  • Voice localization: Translate voice guidelines, not just words
  • Local proof points: Global stats don't resonate — find local references
  • Legal: Trademark search in target jurisdiction

Brand Crisis Playbook

Severity 1 (Minor — negative review, social complaint):

  • Respond publicly within 2 hours
  • Acknowledge, don't defend
  • Take the conversation private to resolve

Severity 2 (Moderate — trending criticism, competitor attack):

  • Internal alignment on response within 1 hour
  • Transparent public statement
  • Monitor for 48 hours, respond to follow-ups

Severity 3 (Major — data breach, product failure, public scandal):

  • CEO/founder response within 4 hours
  • Accept responsibility + specific remediation plan
  • Regular updates until resolved
  • Post-incident: what we changed (not just what we're sorry about)

Quick Reference: Natural Language Commands

CommandWhat It Does
"Build my brand identity"Full Phase 1-4 walkthrough
"Write my positioning"Phase 2.1 Dunford method
"Create messaging for [product]"Phase 2.2 full messaging architecture
"Define my ICP"Phase 2.3 customer profile
"Write brand voice guidelines"Phase 3.1 complete voice system
"Plan my GTM"Phase 5 go-to-market strategy
"Create a battlecard for [competitor]"Phase 5.4 sales battlecard
"Audit my brand"Phase 6.2 quarterly checklist
"Score this content"Phase 3.3 voice scorecard
"Should we rebrand?"Phase 6.3 decision framework
"Launch plan for [product]"Phase 5.2 full playbook
"Adapt brand for [market]"International adaptation checklist

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