After 20 years in the trenches of brand building, I’ve seen hundreds of brands come and go.
The ones that win aren’t necessarily the smartest, the biggest, or the ones with the fanciest campaigns.
They’re the ones where everything lines up – what they say, what they do, and what they stand for.
When that alignment is there, people instantly know what to expect from you. They trust you. They come back. They choose you when it matters.
But when it’s off – even a little – trust erodes fast. People get confused, they tune out, and eventually they walk away.
The harsh reality? Most brands that struggle aren’t failing because they lack ideas or budget. They fail because their messaging is scattered, their promises feel empty, and they’re disconnected from the people they’re trying to reach.
Simplicity and consistency are the real superpowers.
Over the years, I’ve developed a straightforward 9-step formula that fixes this disconnection and helps brands become clear, memorable, and trusted.
Strip your message down until your team can explain it to a 6-year-old.

Choose your single big idea and let everything else flow from it.

Every design choice should build trust.

Write the same way every time so you start to feel familiar.

Find it, sharpen it, and repeat it.

Zero brain power required.

Make them feel something — then give the reasons.

Build assets people can remember even without seeing your logo.

Listen to how they actually talk about you and adapt.

If you care about your brand, stop overcomplicating it.
Be consistent. Be memorable.
Strong brands are built through discipline and repetition.