brand-strategy

SKILL.md

Brand Strategy Framework

A systematic 7-part methodology for building brand foundations — the same process top agencies use with Fortune 500 clients.

Overview

This skill guides users through a comprehensive brand strategy process, from core identity through measurement. Each phase builds on the previous, creating a cohesive strategic foundation.

Walk the user through each phase sequentially. Ask discovery questions, synthesize their answers, and produce structured outputs for each section before moving to the next.

The 7-Part Framework

Phase 1: Brand Truth

The foundation. Define who the brand authentically is before anything else.

Discovery Questions:

  • What problem does this brand exist to solve?
  • What would be lost if this brand disappeared tomorrow?
  • What does this brand believe that competitors don't?
  • What's the origin story? Why was it created?
  • What are the non-negotiable values?

Output: A Brand Truth statement (2-3 sentences) capturing the brand's reason for being, core belief, and authentic identity.


Phase 2: Audience Architecture

Define who the brand serves — not demographics, but motivations.

Discovery Questions:

  • Who benefits most from what this brand offers?
  • What are they trying to achieve or avoid?
  • What do they currently believe about this category?
  • What would make them switch from their current solution?
  • Who is explicitly NOT the target?

Output: 2-4 audience personas, each with:

  • Name/archetype
  • Core motivation (what they want)
  • Current belief (what they think now)
  • Tension point (what's holding them back)
  • Success state (what winning looks like for them)

Phase 3: Cultural Context

Position the brand within the broader landscape.

Discovery Questions:

  • What's happening in culture that makes this brand relevant now?
  • Who are the real competitors (including non-obvious ones)?
  • What category conventions should be challenged?
  • What cultural tension does this brand resolve?
  • Where is the white space?

Output: A positioning statement that captures competitive differentiation and cultural relevance. Include a simple competitive landscape map.


Phase 4: Messaging Framework

Translate strategy into language.

Discovery Questions:

  • What's the one thing people should remember?
  • What proof points support the core claim?
  • What objections need to be overcome?
  • What emotional territory does the brand own?
  • What words should never be used?

Output: A messaging framework including:

  • Core message (1 sentence)
  • Supporting messages (3-5 proof points)
  • Tone attributes (3-5 adjectives with definitions)
  • Language do's and don'ts

Phase 5: Visual Language

Define the principles (not the executions) for visual identity.

Discovery Questions:

  • What should people feel when they see the brand?
  • What visual references resonate with the brand truth?
  • What does the category typically look like — and how should this differ?
  • What's the balance of minimal vs. expressive?
  • What elements are sacred vs. flexible?

Output: Visual principles document including:

  • Mood/feeling descriptors
  • Reference directions (with rationale)
  • Typography philosophy
  • Color meaning/intent
  • Photography/illustration approach
  • What to avoid

Phase 6: Channel Strategy

Define where and how the brand shows up.

Discovery Questions:

  • Where does the audience already spend attention?
  • What channels align with the brand personality?
  • What's the role of each channel (awareness, conversion, retention)?
  • What channels should be deprioritized or avoided?
  • What's the owned vs. earned vs. paid balance?

Output: Channel matrix with:

  • Priority channels (ranked)
  • Role of each channel
  • Content themes per channel
  • Frequency/cadence guidelines
  • Channel-specific tone adjustments

Phase 7: Measurement Framework

Define what success looks like.

Discovery Questions:

  • What business outcomes matter most?
  • What leading indicators predict those outcomes?
  • What's the current baseline?
  • What's a realistic 6/12/24 month target?
  • What will you NOT measure (to stay focused)?

Output: Measurement dashboard including:

  • North star metric
  • 3-5 supporting KPIs
  • Tracking cadence
  • Baseline and targets
  • What's explicitly out of scope

Workflow Guidelines

  1. Sequential, not parallel: Complete each phase before moving to the next
  2. Discovery before prescription: Always ask questions before providing recommendations
  3. Synthesize, don't summarize: Transform user inputs into strategic outputs
  4. Challenge assumptions: Push back on generic or undifferentiated answers
  5. Document as you go: Produce a clear output artifact for each phase

Final Deliverable

After completing all 7 phases, compile a Brand Strategy Document containing:

  1. Executive Summary (1 page)
  2. Brand Truth
  3. Audience Architecture
  4. Cultural Context & Positioning
  5. Messaging Framework
  6. Visual Language Principles
  7. Channel Strategy
  8. Measurement Framework

Format as a professional strategy document suitable for stakeholder presentation.

Examples

User: "Help me create a brand strategy for my new coffee subscription service" → Begin with Phase 1 (Brand Truth) discovery questions

User: "I need to define our target audience" → Jump to Phase 2 (Audience Architecture) but note that Brand Truth should come first if not already defined

User: "Can you write our brand messaging?" → Jump to Phase 4 (Messaging Framework) but confirm Phases 1-3 are complete or gather that context first

User: "Review my brand strategy" → Evaluate against the 7-part framework, identify gaps, suggest improvements

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