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Brand Strategy

Let’s build your brand.

These questions help uncover the thinking behind your company so we can shape a clear brand strategy. Take your time and answer thoughtfully.

Getting started

Which project are you completing?

This determines whether the strategy focuses on core brand clarity or category leadership and narrative strategy.

Please select a project type to continue.
Admin

Quick logistics first.

A few practical questions before we get into the thinking. This helps us manage the project smoothly from day one.

Section 1 — Admin
Question 1

Who is the primary contact for this project?

The person we should default to for questions, feedback, and approvals.

e.g. Sarah Chen, Co-founder, sarah@company.com

Please share the primary contact details.
Question 2

Who else needs to approve or sign off on this work?

Co-founders, investors, advisors, or internal stakeholders who will have strong opinions at reveal stage. Better to know now than in week four.

e.g. My co-founder Alex reviews everything. Our lead investor gets a final look before public launch.

Please share who else needs to sign off.
Section 1 — Admin
Question 3

What is your target completion date, and is there a real deadline behind it?

Helps us plan the work and manage momentum. A real deadline — a funding announcement, a launch, an event — is useful context even if it’s ambitious.

e.g. End of March. We’re announcing our Series A on 10 April and want the new brand live by then.

Please share your target date and any deadline context.
Question 4

What existing brand assets do you have, and where do they live?

Logos, guidelines, old decks, previous identity work. Anything we should see before we start.

e.g. Old logo in Figma, basic guidelines PDF from 2022, pitch deck on Google Drive. Links to come.

Please share what brand assets already exist.
Question 5

Can we use your final brand work in our case studies, portfolio, and on social media?

We love showing our work. If there are any confidentiality constraints — a stealth product or sensitive client — let us know.

Please select an option.
Company Context

Tell us about the company.

Basic context that grounds the strategy in your real situation.

Section 2 — Company context
Question 6

What is your company or brand name?

This establishes the subject of the strategy and how the brand will be referred to.

e.g. Notion — or describe your situation if the name is TBC.

Please enter your company name.
Question 7

What is your website?

Helps understand current positioning and messaging.

e.g. notion.so — or write “pre-launch” if not live yet.

Question 8

How large is your team today?

Team size provides context for scale, culture, and strategic ambition.

e.g. 12 people — include founders, employees, and core collaborators.

Please share your team size.
Section 2 — Company context
Question 9

What is your current annual recurring revenue?

Revenue stage influences how bold or focused the strategy should be.

e.g. $1.2M ARR — or write “pre-revenue”.

Question 10

What stage is the company at today?

Brand strategy should reflect the company’s stage and growth trajectory.

e.g. Seed funded with an early product and 500 active users.

Please describe your current stage.
Origin and Motivation

Where did this come from?

The founding story often contains the most powerful brand material. Take your time here.

Section 3 — Origin and motivation
Question 11

Why did this company need to exist?

Often reveals the deeper purpose and conviction behind the business.

e.g. Design teams could not collaborate effectively across different tools.

Please share what drove you to start this company.
Question 12

What felt broken or unfair before this company existed?

Great brands often emerge from challenging something broken.

e.g. Design files were constantly emailed instead of shared live.

Please share what felt broken or unfair.
Section 3 — Origin and motivation
Question 13

If the company succeeds, what positive change will exist because of it?

Helps define the brand’s long-term impact and vision.

e.g. Teams will collaborate on product design as easily as editing a shared document.

Please describe the positive change you’re working towards.
Question 14

What would feel personally disappointing if this company failed?

Reveals founder motivation and emotional commitment.

e.g. If design collaboration remained fragmented and teams kept working in silos.

Please share what would disappoint you most.
Direction and Ambition

Where are you headed?

Strategy should serve real business goals, not abstract ones.

Section 4 — Direction and ambition
Question 15

In 10 years, what would you love the company to be known for?

Defines the brand’s long-term reputation and sense of purpose.

e.g. The platform that redefined collaborative product design.

Please share your 10-year vision.
Question 16

What is the single metric or outcome this brand should be judged on in the next 12 months?

Keeps strategy connected to real business pressure rather than abstract goals.

e.g. 10,000 active users, £500k ARR, or partnerships with three major design teams.

Please share the key metric for the next 12 months.
Audience

Who are you building this for?

Positioning becomes clear when the audience is precisely defined. Vague audiences produce vague brands.

Section 5 — Audience
Question 17

Who is your primary customer today?

Positioning becomes clear when the audience is clearly defined.

e.g. Product designers working in fast-growing SaaS companies of 50 to 200 people.

Please describe your primary customer.
Question 18

What pressure are they under right now? What’s keeping them up at night?

Strategy should be anchored around real customer pressure, not demographics.

e.g. Their team is growing fast but design reviews are bottlenecking shipping.

Please share what’s keeping your customer up at night.
Section 5 — Audience
Question 19

What keeps them stuck or dissatisfied today?

Identifies the tension your brand must resolve.

e.g. Too many disconnected tools, all promising to solve the same problem.

Please describe what keeps your customer stuck.
Question 20

If your product worked perfectly, what would change in their world?

Helps define the ultimate value the brand promises.

e.g. Design collaboration would happen in real time without status meetings.

Please describe what changes for your customer.
Question 21

Who is this brand deliberately not for?

Strong positioning comes from clear exclusion. The brands that try to be for everyone end up meaningful to no one.

e.g. Not for enterprise design teams needing heavy governance. Not for solo freelancers who work in isolation.

Please share who this brand is not for.
Alternatives and Differentiation

How do you stand apart?

Differentiation only means something relative to what already exists. Be honest about the landscape.

Section 6 — Alternatives and differentiation
Question 22

What do people do today instead of using your product?

Your real competition is often existing habits, not named competitors.

e.g. Using Google Docs and Slack together to manage design feedback.

Please describe the alternatives your customers use.
Question 23

What makes customers hesitate before choosing something like yours?

Reveals barriers the brand must overcome.

e.g. Migrating existing work feels risky. Hard to get the whole team to adopt a new tool.

Please share what makes customers hesitate.
Section 6 — Alternatives and differentiation
Question 24

Why do customers choose you over alternatives?

Helps identify perceived advantages from the customer’s perspective.

e.g. Our tool enables real-time collaboration without disrupting existing workflows.

Please share why customers choose you.
Question 25

What do you genuinely do better than competitors?

This often becomes the brand’s strategic focus.

e.g. Speed and simplicity of onboarding. No training required.

Please share what you do better than competitors.
Question 26

What would be hardest for a competitor to copy?

Identifies sustainable advantages worth building the brand around.

e.g. Our proprietary collaboration architecture and community of early adopters.

Please share what’s hardest for competitors to copy.
Question 27

What do competitors in your space do that feels lazy, dishonest, or frustrating to you?

The things you refuse to do often define the brand more sharply than the things you choose to do.

e.g. Overpromising AI capabilities. Buying their way onto review sites. Jargon-heavy messaging that says nothing.

Please share what competitors do that frustrates you.
Category

What game are you playing?

Category shapes how customers think about you before they even look at your product.

Section 7 — Category
Question 28

What category do you believe you are in today?

Category context shapes positioning and competitive comparisons.

e.g. Collaborative design software.

Please describe your current category.
Question 29

Is there a category you want to redefine or lead?

Some brands win by creating a new category rather than competing in an existing one.

e.g. Real-time design collaboration platforms.

Please share the category you want to lead.
Proof

What evidence exists?

Positioning without proof is just a claim. What you can already demonstrate shapes what the brand can credibly say.

Section 8 — Proof
Question 30

What signals suggest your approach is already working?

Evidence strengthens credibility and feeds proof points in the final strategy.

e.g. Users spend several hours a day in the product. 40% of trials convert to paid. Three unsolicited referrals in the last month.

Please share some proof points.
Brand Behaviour and Character

How does this brand behave?

Behaviour under pressure defines a brand more than personality descriptors do. These questions are about how you act, not how you describe yourself.

Section 9 — Brand behaviour and character
Question 31

How should this brand handle it when something goes wrong for a customer?

Behaviour under pressure defines a brand more than personality descriptors do.

e.g. Own it quickly and publicly, explain what happened, fix it in days not weeks, never blame the customer.

Please share how the brand handles things going wrong.
Question 32

How should this brand talk about competitors, without being dismissive or disrespectful?

How a brand handles rivals reveals its confidence and maturity.

e.g. Acknowledge what they do well, be honest about where we differ, never badmouth publicly.

Please share how the brand talks about competitors.
Section 9 — Brand behaviour and character
Question 33

How should this brand sell, without being pushy or salesy?

Sales behaviour is where most brands leak their real values.

e.g. Educate first, only recommend when there’s a genuine fit, never use scarcity tactics or fake urgency.

Please share how the brand sells.
Question 34 — Optional

What will this brand refuse to do, even if it would win business?

The refusals are often more defining than the commitments. If nothing obvious comes to mind, leave blank — that is useful information too.

e.g. Refuse to work with fossil fuel clients. Refuse to use dark patterns. Refuse to overcharge early-stage founders.

Section 9 — Brand behaviour and character
Question 35

Choose 5 paired adjectives that best describe how this brand should feel.

Each pair contains a tension that forces real design and tone decisions. Try to pick from at least three different territories.

Select exactly 5. If you have selected 5, deselect one before choosing another.

0 of 5 selected
Presence and confidence
Warmth and humanity
Craft and precision
Energy and imagination
Rarer, sharper options
Please select exactly 5 adjectives before continuing.
Question 36

How should your brand sound when communicating?

A sanity check against the adjectives above — your voice should feel consistent with the character you just described.

e.g. Expert but approachable. Direct without being blunt. Warm but not overly familiar.

Please describe your brand voice.
Question 37

Are there words, clichés, or claims you want this brand to avoid?

Prevents generic messaging and protects the voice from drifting into category noise.

e.g. “Game-changing”, “disruptive”, “revolutionary”, any language that overclaims.

Please share words and claims to avoid.
Customer Language

What do customers actually say?

Customer language almost always beats internal language. The exact words people use to describe you are often the best copy you will ever write.

Section 10 — Customer language
Question 38

What real words have customers used to describe your brand, product, or experience?

Paste actual quotes if you have them, even rough ones from sales calls, support tickets, or reviews. Polished is not required.

e.g. “It just gets out of my way.” “Feels like working with a small team even though we’re 200 people.” “I stopped feeling stupid.”

Please share some customer language.
Internal Role

What does the brand do inside the company?

A strong brand guides internal decisions as much as external ones.

Section 11 — Internal role of the brand
Question 39

What should the brand help your team do better?

Brands also guide internal decisions — hiring, culture, alignment, and story.

e.g. Help us hire people who value craftsmanship. Give sales a clearer story to tell.

Please share the brand’s internal role.
Question 40

Where does the current brand feel unclear or misaligned?

Highlights the specific problems the strategy should fix.

e.g. Our messaging does not clearly explain the product to non-technical buyers.

Please share where the brand feels misaligned.
Inspiration

What do you love and what do you hate?

Visual and tonal references are some of the most useful inputs we get. The things you hate are often as useful as the things you love.

Section 12 — Inspiration and anti-inspiration
Question 41

Share links to brands, websites, or products that inspire you.

Provides visual and tonal references for the brand direction.

e.g. stripe.com — clarity and developer-focused communication. linear.app — precision and craft.

Please share some inspiration links.
Question 42

Share links to brands you actively dislike or want to avoid.

Helps avoid stylistic or tonal directions that feel wrong — often more useful than the inspiration list.

e.g. Over-hyped crypto marketing sites. Generic SaaS landing pages with stock photography.

Please share some anti-inspiration links.
BrandCraft Elevate

Proof and investor pressure.

These questions pressure-test the positioning against the evidence you have and the questions you will face.

Section 8 continued — Proof (Elevate)
Question 43

What proof does this brand still need to build over the next 12 to 24 months?

Positioning without proof is marketing. Knowing what to build next turns positioning into strategy.

e.g. A category-defining customer case study. Published research on collaboration patterns. A signature annual event.

Please share what proof still needs to be built.
Question 44

What is the hardest question an investor has asked you, and the one you are nervous they will ask next?

The positioning needs to survive the investor conversation. Knowing the hardest questions is how we pressure-test it.

e.g. Hardest asked: why won’t Figma just build this? Nervous about: how defensible is this long term?

Please share the hardest investor questions.
BrandCraft Elevate

Category intelligence.

These questions push into the dynamics, assumptions, and frustrations of the category your brand operates in.

Section 13 — Category intelligence
Question 45

What major trends are shaping your category?

Strategy must align with industry shifts to remain relevant.

e.g. AI tools transforming how software teams work. Remote-first teams becoming the default.

Question 46

What assumptions does the industry take for granted?

Challenging assumptions is where differentiation is often found.

e.g. Developers must manually write production code. Design reviews require synchronous meetings.

Please share the assumptions your industry takes for granted.
Section 13 — Category intelligence
Question 47

What frustrates customers about the current category?

Category-level frustrations reveal opportunities for disruption beyond your own product.

e.g. Every tool promises collaboration but none of them actually reduce the number of meetings.

Please share the category frustrations.
Question 48

What competing pressures does your customer face?

Great positioning often resolves a tension the customer is already feeling.

e.g. Move fast versus build for maintainability. Standardise versus stay flexible.

Please describe the competing pressures your customer faces.
BrandCraft Elevate

Category worldview.

The strongest brands do not just compete in categories — they challenge them. These questions explore the worldview your brand brings.

Section 14 — Category worldview
Question 49

What change do you believe needs to happen in this category?

Defines the broader mission the brand can own beyond the product.

e.g. Design tools should eliminate status meetings, not just reduce them.

Please share the change you believe needs to happen.
Question 50

What outdated thinking should disappear?

Strong brands often win by opposing a status quo that others in the category defend.

e.g. That design is a final step in the process rather than something that runs through all of it.

Please share the outdated thinking you want to challenge.
Section 14 — Category worldview
Question 51

Where does your approach challenge conventional thinking?

Reveals the brand’s strategic edge and the narrative it can credibly lead.

e.g. We believe design should happen at the speed of conversation, not the speed of a review cycle.

Please share how your approach challenges convention.
Question 52

What uncomfortable truth about the category do you believe is real?

Strong positioning insights often come from uncomfortable truths the rest of the category ignores.

e.g. Most design tools create more collaboration theatre than actual collaboration.

Please share the uncomfortable truth you believe.
BrandCraft Elevate

Future and risk.

The final questions test where your positioning is strongest, where it could be copied, and where it could grow.

Section 15 — Future and risk
Question 53

If your company succeeds completely, how will the industry look different?

Helps define the brand’s largest possible worldview and the category it could eventually lead.

e.g. Developers will focus on solving problems rather than writing boilerplate code.

Please share how the industry will look different.
Question 54

Where do you think your positioning is most fragile or most likely to be copied?

Strategy must plan for competitive response, not just the current landscape.

e.g. Larger incumbents could ship our core collaboration features within 18 months.

Please share where your positioning is most fragile.
Question 55

What adjacent category or opportunity could this brand grow into within three years?

Creates future optionality without stretching the brand beyond what it can credibly own today.

e.g. Team collaboration beyond design. Education for emerging designers. Tooling for design leaders.

Please share the adjacent opportunity.

Thanks so much for submitting.

We can’t wait to get stuck in with you.