What Most Brands Get Wrong Before They Launch
Most founders launching a brand finish the visual layer before the strategic one, meaning the logo is done and the packaging is ready by the time they go to market. Yet, when someone asks why this product exists and who it is specifically for, there is no answer that holds.
A product launching for the first time has no track record, press, or word of mouth to rely on, leaving the brand as the only thing standing between the product and a skeptical market. When that brand is built on references and aesthetics alone, it simply cannot answer those tough questions.
That is why the process must begin with the argument first. By the time the first visual decision is made, the brand already has a clear reason to exist and a defined position, allowing the design to make that foundation visible instead of trying to create it from scratch.
How I Work
STEP 1
Discovery
We start with an online meeting or text discussion to go over your goals, audience, and vision. This gives us everything we need to move into the work with a clear direction.
Depending on the scope, I also offer a dedicated brand session to go deep into who the brand is for, what it stands for, and how it should communicate. This becomes the strategic foundation before any design begins.
STEP 2
Design
Based on what we defined together, I develop the visual direction for your brand: logo, color palette, typography, and any additional elements outlined in the scope. Each decision is intentional and tied back to your goals and story.
STEP 3
Delivery
Once everything is approved, I'll deliver all your brand assets in organized, ready-to-use files, along with a brand guidelines document to keep everything visually and strategically consistent as your brand grows.
STEP 4
Ongoing Support
The project doesn't end at delivery. I stay available for questions, and if new needs come up down the line, we can always continue working together.
What I deliver
I. strategic Branding
May include:
• Strategy Session
• Brand Strategy
• Creative Direction
• Logo Suite
• Brand Typography
• Color Palette
• Brand Illustrations
• Brand Patterns
• Curated Imagery Direction
• Brand Mockups
• Brand Guidelines / Book
• File Formats (.pdf, .jpg, .svg, .png)
timeline: 1-4 weeks
investment: from $650
II. strategic website
Includes:
• Creative Direction
• Up to 5+ custom pages
• Responsive + Mobile-Friendly Design
• Website management training videos
• Search Engine Optimization
• Essential Integrations
• Custom Domain Setup
• Legal Pages
• Up to 30 days of follow up support
timeline: 4-10 weeks
investment: from $1500
III. Add-ons design
May include:
• Stationery Design
• Business Card
• Packaging Design
• Social Media Design
IV. Creative Retainer
May include:
• 3-Month minimum contract
• Social Media Graphics
• Landing Page Design
• Fliers, Letterheads, etc.
• Apparel Design
• Small Packaging Items
• Stickers, Business Cards, etc.
• …and lots more
investment: from $200
Before You Begin
What does brand strategy include?
Strategy includes: brand overview, brand story, brand name, brand mission, brand vision, brand values, brand archetypes, brand personality, target audience, brand champion, brand role model, brand voice (ToV), brand messaging, brand slogan, competitive analysis, brand benefits, brand attributes (RTB), brand positioning, USP, and brand goals.
When should a small business invest in brand strategy?
The honest answer is: before you need it feels urgent. Most founders come to brand strategy after something has already started to cost them, the wrong clients, the pricing conversations that don't go anywhere, the feeling that the business has grown but the brand hasn't kept up. That is a valid moment to begin. But the founders who build on strategy from the start spend less time correcting and more time compounding. A brand built right before the business gains momentum doesn't just look better. It attracts better, holds better, and scales without needing to be rebuilt.
Do I need brand guidelines, or just a logo?
A logo without guidelines is a mark without a system. Guidelines are what ensure that the brand looks and feels the same whether it appears on a website, a business card, a social post, or a pitch deck. Without them, every new application becomes a new interpretation, and the brand slowly loses coherence across the surfaces that matter. Guidelines are not a formality. They are what turns a visual identity into something that works consistently on its own, without needing to be supervised every time it appears.
Should branding be done before the website?
Always. A website built before the brand strategy is in place is a website built around assumptions, about who the business is for, what it should communicate, and how it should feel. Some of those assumptions will be right. Many won't. When the brand is defined first, the website doesn't need to figure those things out on its own. It carries the strategy forward into a digital space, so every visual decision, every word, and every interaction is already rooted in something coherent. The website becomes an extension of the brand rather than a guess at what the brand might be.
How much of my time will I need to commit during the branding project?
More than you might expect at the beginning, less than you might fear throughout. The early stages of the process require real engagement: sharing the thinking behind the business, articulating the vision, giving considered feedback on direction. This is not a formality. It is the material the work is built from. Once that foundation is established, the process becomes more independent, and your role shifts from contributor to reviewer. The founders who get the most from this process are the ones who treat the early conversations as seriously as they treat any other strategic decision in their business.
Do you offer ongoing support after the project?
Once the project is complete, you walk away with everything you need to carry the brand forward independently. For founders who want continued access, ongoing support is available as a monthly retainer. Each package gives you a set number of hours per month to use however your business needs, whether that's new collateral, website updates, social media templates, or anything else. The advantage is working with someone who already knows your brand from the inside, so the work stays consistent because the person doing it never left.
The work you have built deserves a brand that reflects its value, and this is where I begin that process.
When the brand is built on strategy, you go to market looking like you already belong at the level you are aiming for, before anyone asks the price.






