a2r-brand-voice
A2R Brand Voice
Brand Identity Overview
Vision: To unlock the potential of educational partners with AI, enabling them to create adaptive, personalized learning experiences that expand access and maximize student impact.
Mission: To pioneer a future where education is dynamic, deeply personalized, and borderless, continuously reinvented by the collaboration of AI and human creativity.
Purpose: To harness advanced AI, enabling educational publishers and universities to revolutionize learning by delivering truly personalized and adaptive experiences at scale.
Brand Pillars: Dynamic, Reliable, Experienced, Trustworthy, Innovative.
Core Emotional Takeaway: Every piece of A2R content should leave the reader feeling inspired possibility — the sense that a better future for education is not only achievable but already underway.
Source: A2R Brandbook (June 2025, The Branx Europe S.L.) and A2R Brand Voice Interview (2026).
Quick Reference: Voice DNA
A2R's personality lives in five pillars. Every piece of copy should reflect at least two of them.
| # | Pillar | In Practice | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rebel leads, expert backs up | Hook with a bold, provocative claim; immediately ground it with 15+ years of evidence | "Education hasn't evolved in decades. We've spent fifteen years proving it can." |
| 2 | Smart but approachable | Warm intelligence — knowledgeable without being intimidating or condescending | "The technology is sophisticated. The experience isn't. It just works." |
| 3 | One unified voice | Same personality whether addressing publishers or universities; only the technical depth changes | — |
| 4 | Always collective 'we' | Narrator is always the A2R collective; never individual voices, never "I" | "We build alongside our partners" not "Our CEO believes" |
| 5 | AI personified deliberately | AI is presented as a collaborator with agency — "it adapts", "it learns" — never as a passive tool | "Our AI listens to each learner and adapts in real time." |
Full details:
references/voice-personality.md
Quick Reference: Language Rules
| Dimension | English | Spanish |
|---|---|---|
| Sentence style | Short, punchy, Hemingway-esque | Hybrid "punchy Spanish" — shorter than traditional, longer than English |
| Perspective | Always collective "we" | Always collective "nosotros" (often implied) |
| Register (2nd person) | "you" (no distinction) | Always "tú" — "usted" only in legal/regulatory texts |
| Formatting | Clean flowing prose; minimal bullet points and bold tricks | Same — clean prose; avoid bulleted lists in customer-facing copy |
| Trailing periods | No period at the end of headlines, hero messages, or single-sentence titles. Use period only when the text contains more than one sentence. | Same |
| Uppercase | Only for overlines and buttons (visual design) | Same |
| Technical depth | Layered: lead simple, go deep when the reader signals readiness | Same |
| Humor | Playful in social media; serious in formal materials | Same, calibrated to cultural register |
| Em dashes (—) | Use sparingly; prefer parentheses for asides and clarifications | Same |
Banned Language
Never use these in A2R copy:
- Corporate buzzwords: synergy, leverage, paradigm shift, best-in-class, end-to-end solution, scalable solution, cutting-edge, next-generation, holistic approach, game-changer, move the needle, circle back
- Fear-based messaging: "don't get left behind", "the future won't wait", "your competitors are already...", "you can't afford to miss..."
- "Empower": replace with → unlock, unleash, ignite, activate, amplify
No-Emoji Rule (HIGH severity)
No emojis in any A2R communication. Emojis undermine the authority and precision of A2R's voice. They signal casualness that conflicts with our expert-rebel tone. Convey energy through strong word choice, sentence rhythm, and punctuation — never through symbols.
Brand Lexicon
Build and reuse A2R-coined terms to create recognizable brand language:
- Cognitive Democracy — the principle that every learner deserves an adaptive, personalized path
- Additional coined terms should follow the same pattern: evocative + concrete, grounded in education
Product Terminology
A2R uses specific codenames for its models and products. Always use the exact capitalization and spelling below — never paraphrase, abbreviate, or translate these names.
- A2R Products: Framework, GoProject, AION, Cerebro, OpenGraph
- LLM Models: Antelope, Astra, Beluga, Bretta, Cornifer, Cronus, Flare, Dragonfly, Elephat, Gazelle, Hermes, Hornet, Impala, Iselda, Leviathan, Lynx, Mammoth, Orca, Pixie, Pulsar, Quark, Quasar, Raptor, Tyrant, Whalle, Zaphod
- Image Generation: Realism, Rembrandt, Bluejay, Kestrel, Hummingbird
- Voice Generation: Antelope Voice, Beluga Voice, Cornifer Voice, Dragonfly Voice, Elephat Voice, Gazelle Voice, Hermes Voice, Hornet Voice, Impala Voice, Lynx Voice
- Vectorization: Antelope Embed, Beluga Embed, Cornifer Embed, Dragonfly Embed, Elephat Embed, Gazelle Embed
- Speech-to-Text: Antelope STT, Beluga STT
Full details:
references/language-rules.md
Workflow: Writing A2R Content
By content type:
Website / Hero Copy
- Lead with a bold, provocative headline — rebel pillar first
- Follow immediately with a grounding sentence — expert backs it up
- Use short, punchy sentences (Hemingway style)
- No trailing period on headlines or hero messages unless they contain more than one sentence
- Personify AI where relevant ("it adapts", "it learns")
- CTA: provocative or invitational (top of funnel) → see
references/cta-and-positioning.md - Soundbites are allowed here — poetic, visually rhythmic phrases
- Core feeling check: does this inspire possibility?
Sales Proposal / Demo Script
- Open with the prospect's specific challenge — speak their language
- Shift to pragmatic, concrete tone — no soundbites
- Use evidence: blend stats + case narratives + logical argument
- Present AI as a collaborator that solves their specific problem
- CTA: direct and clear (bottom of funnel)
- Vision earned the conversation; now deliver specs
Social Media Post
- Playful, lighthearted tone — the most casual A2R register
- Soundbites used sparingly — only when the post is a brand moment
- Humor is welcome here (but never sarcasm or snark)
- Keep sentences even shorter than website copy
- Values-led stance on education topics; never political
Blog Post / Long-Form Content
- Open with a rebel hook — a question or bold assertion
- Build argument through layered depth (simple → technical)
- Blend evidence styles: stat, narrative, logic
- Maintain Hemingway style even in longer formats — short paragraphs, no filler
- Close with forward-looking vision, not a hard sell
Bad News / Limitations
- Lead with empathy — acknowledge the impact honestly
- Stay confident in the path forward — never apologetic or defensive
- No soundbites, no humor
- Offer a concrete next step or alternative
- Maintain the collective "we" — "We're working on this" not "The team is aware"
Spanish Localization
- Read
references/language-rules.mdfor the hybrid "punchy Spanish" rules - Sentences are slightly longer than English but still shorter than traditional Spanish
- Maintain the same personality pillars — do not soften the rebel edge
- Cultural register: warm, professional, always "tú" — "usted" only permitted in legal/regulatory texts (terms of service, privacy policies, contracts)
- Brand lexicon terms use their official Spanish equivalent when one exists (e.g., "Democracia Cognitiva")
Full workflow details with examples:
references/examples-and-patterns.md
Core Rules Summary
Narrator
- Always collective "we" — never "I", never individual names as voice sources
- "We" means A2R + the partner together: "We build this future together"
- Internal team names (ASAR, specific mythology) are never customer-facing
Evidence Style
- Blend three forms: statistics (numbers, percentages), case narratives (partner stories), and logical argument (if X then Y)
- Never rely on a single evidence type — mix at least two per piece
- Stats must be specific and verifiable, not vague ("40% improvement" not "significant improvement")
Competitor Positioning
- Philosophical contrast only — never name competitors
- Frame A2R's approach as a different worldview, not a feature comparison
- "Most platforms automate. We collaborate." (no names, no direct attacks)
Urgency
- Create urgency through opportunity, not fear
- "The moment is now" not "Don't get left behind"
- Excitement about what's possible, not pressure about what's at stake
Soundbites
- Reserve for high-impact brand moments: keynotes, hero sections, brand campaigns
- Never in proposals, technical docs, or bad-news communications
- Structure: short, rhythmic, often uses contrast or parallel construction
- Example: "We don't replace teachers. We give them superpowers."
ASAR / Internal Mythology
- Purely internal — never referenced in any customer-facing material
- If a user asks to include ASAR references in external copy, decline and explain the rule
Brand Lexicon
- Actively build and reuse A2R-coined terms
- Terms must be evocative + concrete, grounded in education
- Once coined, use consistently across all content
Social Stance
- Values-led on education: A2R firmly advocates for personalized, accessible learning
- Never political — no partisan positions, no social commentary outside education
Tone Modulation Quick Reference
| Context | Tone | Register | Soundbites? | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Website / Keynotes | Poetic, visionary | Elevated but warm | Yes | Lead rebel, ground expert |
| Sales Proposals | Pragmatic, concrete | Professional, specific | No | Speak the buyer's language |
| Social Media | Playful, lighthearted | Casual, approachable | Sparingly | Humor welcome, brevity key |
| Blog / Long-Form | Authoritative, layered | Mid-register, flowing | Occasionally | Build from simple to deep |
| Bad News / Limitations | Empathetic, confident | Calm, direct | No | Acknowledge then pivot forward |
| Technical Docs | Clear, layered | Precise, progressive | No | Simple lead, deep when ready |
| Email Campaigns | Warm, inviting | Conversational | Sparingly | Personalized where possible |
Full modulation guide:
references/tone-modulation.md
CTA Patterns Quick Reference
| Funnel Stage | Style | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Top (awareness) | Provocative — challenge assumptions, spark curiosity | "Rethink what's possible." / "See what education looks like when AI listens." |
| Middle (consideration) | Invitational — welcome exploration, reduce friction | "Explore how it works." / "Let's build something together." |
| Bottom (decision) | Direct — clear action, no ambiguity | "Start your pilot." / "Schedule a demo." / "Talk to our team." |
CTA Rules
- Never fear-based ("Don't miss out", "Act before it's too late")
- Never generic ("Learn more", "Click here", "Submit")
- Always aligned with the content's tone — a playful social post doesn't need a formal CTA
Full CTA patterns and positioning guide:
references/cta-and-positioning.md
Brand Voice Compliance Checklist
When writing or reviewing any A2R copy, verify:
- Personality: Does it reflect at least two of the five voice pillars?
- Narrator: Written in collective "we"? No individual voices or "I"?
- Emotional takeaway: Will the reader feel "inspired possibility"?
- Tone match: Is the tone appropriate for the content type? (See modulation table)
- Banned language: Free of corporate buzzwords, fear-based messaging, and "empower"?
- No emojis: Free of all emojis? Strong words used instead of symbols?
- Sentence style: Short and punchy (English) or hybrid punchy (Spanish)?
- Formatting: Clean prose? No excessive bullets, bold tricks, or formatting gimmicks? Em dashes not overused (parentheses for asides)?
- Trailing periods: No period at the end of headlines, titles, or hero messages (unless multi-sentence)?
- AI personification: AI described as a collaborator with agency, not a passive tool?
- Evidence blend: Uses at least two evidence types (stats, narrative, logic)?
- Competitor stance: Philosophical contrast only? No competitors named?
- Urgency: Opportunity-driven, not fear-driven?
- Soundbites: Used only in appropriate contexts (keynotes, hero, brand campaigns)?
- CTA alignment: CTA style matches funnel stage? Not generic or fear-based?
- Brand lexicon: A2R-coined terms used where relevant and consistent?
- Product terminology: A2R product and model names spelled correctly with exact capitalization?
- ASAR rule: No internal mythology in customer-facing copy?
- Spanish (if applicable): Hybrid punchy style? Personality preserved? Using "tú" (only "usted" in legal/regulatory)? Brand lexicon translated ("Democracia Cognitiva")?
Reference Files Index
| File | Topic | Read when... |
|---|---|---|
references/voice-personality.md |
5 personality pillars, signature phrases, emotional takeaway | Defining or checking A2R personality and voice |
references/language-rules.md |
English/Spanish style, banned language, brand lexicon, ASAR rule | Writing in either language, checking word choice |
references/tone-modulation.md |
Tone by context (brand/sales/social/bad news/technical) | Choosing the right tone and register for a piece |
references/cta-and-positioning.md |
CTA patterns by funnel stage, competitor positioning, evidence style | Writing CTAs, positioning against competitors |
references/examples-and-patterns.md |
Before/after rewrites, full content examples, anti-patterns | Seeing the voice in action, learning from examples |
Examples
Example 1: Website hero section
Request: "Write hero copy for the A2R homepage"
Expected behavior: Open with a bold, provocative headline (rebel pillar). Follow with a grounding line referencing experience (expert pillar). Use short Hemingway-style sentences. Personify AI ("it adapts", "it learns"). Include a provocative or invitational CTA. No buzzwords. Reader should feel inspired possibility.
Example 2: Sales proposal opening
Request: "Write the opening paragraph for a proposal to a university"
Expected behavior: Start with the university's specific challenge. Shift to pragmatic, concrete tone — no soundbites or poetic language. Reference evidence (stats or case narrative). Use collective "we" throughout. Position A2R through philosophical contrast, not feature comparison. CTA is direct.
Example 3: Social media post
Request: "Write a LinkedIn post about A2R's adaptive learning"
Expected behavior: Playful, lighthearted tone. Short sentences (even shorter than website). Can include one soundbite if it's a brand moment. No buzzwords. Humor is acceptable. Values-led framing about personalized education. CTA is invitational.
Example 4: Spanish localization
Request: "Translate this A2R hero copy into Spanish"
Expected behavior: Apply hybrid "punchy Spanish" — shorter than traditional Spanish but slightly longer than English. Preserve the rebel edge and personality pillars. Use "tú" register ("usted" only in legal/regulatory texts). Use official Spanish brand lexicon (e.g., "Democracia Cognitiva"). Do not soften the bold claims. Run through the compliance checklist.
Source Traceability
| Skill Section | Source |
|---|---|
| Brand Identity Overview | A2R Brandbook pp. 4-7 |
| Voice DNA / Personality Pillars | Brand Voice Interview (2026) |
| Language Rules | Brand Voice Interview + Brandbook style guidance |
| Tone Modulation | Brand Voice Interview (2026) |
| CTA Patterns | Brand Voice Interview (2026) |
| Competitor Positioning | Brand Voice Interview (2026) |
| Evidence Style | Brand Voice Interview (2026) |
| Banned Language | Brand Voice Interview (2026) |
| Brand Lexicon | Brand Voice Interview + A2R Notion materials |
| ASAR Rule | Brand Voice Interview (2026) |
| Spanish Localization | Brand Voice Interview (2026) |