What is a Brand?
Before you can design one, you need to understand what a brand actually is — and it's not what most people think.
Brand Identity is everything you can design: the logo, colors, fonts, tone of voice, and imagery. These are the tools you'll create in this project.
Brand is what people actually think, feel, and remember. It lives in the mind of the audience — not on your style guide.
Jeff Bezos described it this way: "Your brand is what people say about you when you're not in the room."
Your job as a brand designer is to close the gap — to make the identity so intentional and consistent that it shapes the brand in the direction you want. You can't fully control it, but you can deliberately shape it.
None of these brands are defined by their logo alone. They're defined by every consistent decision they make — what they say, how they say it, what they show, and what they don't.
Minimal, bold, black-and-white. "Just Do It." What do you feel? Determination. Performance. Challenge. The swoosh took $35 to design. The brand took decades of consistent messaging to build.
White space, one product per screen, no clutter. What do you feel? Simplicity. Innovation. Premium quality. They could show specs. They show feelings instead.
Earthy tones, rugged photography, no-frills type. What do you feel? Environmentalism. Authenticity. Anti-corporate. Their brand is built on what they refuse to do as much as what they do.
What is a Personal Brand?
You already have one. The question is whether you're building it intentionally.
Personal branding is the practice of intentionally shaping how others perceive you professionally. It's your reputation — and the story you tell about your skills, values, and approach.
For an associate at Waukee APEX, your personal brand is how clients, mentors, potential employers, and collaborators experience you. It shows up in:
- The way you introduce yourself in a client meeting
- Your LinkedIn profile and portfolio
- The quality and consistency of your deliverables
- How you follow up after a conversation
- Your email signature, your business card, your online presence
You're building a brand whether you're intentional about it or not. This project makes it intentional.
- ValuesWhat you stand for. Your professional non-negotiables. The principles that guide your work even when no one is watching.
- VoiceHow you communicate. Formal or conversational? Direct or diplomatic? Technical or accessible? Your voice should feel consistent across all your writing and presentations.
- Visual IdentityThe colors, fonts, and imagery that represent you consistently — across your portfolio, LinkedIn, business card, and any materials you produce.
- PresenceWhere and how you show up — LinkedIn, portfolio, in-person meetings, business card, handshake. Presence is where brand becomes real.
Take 5 minutes and answer both of these honestly. Don't edit yourself — first drafts are more useful than polished ones.
Reflect on Yourself
This is the most important phase. Everything you design will come from here. Don't rush it.
Select the 3 values that best describe what you stand for professionally. Not what you aspire to — what actually drives you right now.
What are you actually good at? Not what you want to be good at — what do you reliably deliver well? Think about feedback you've received from clients, teachers, or teammates.
Every associate in APEX has skills. What's your angle? What do you bring that's hard to find, or that makes people want to work with you specifically?
Pick 3 adjectives that describe how you want to communicate. Your LinkedIn About section, your emails, the way you present to clients — all of it should feel like these 3 words.
Who do you want to work with or impress? Be specific — types of clients, industries, employers, or collaborators. Generic brands try to speak to everyone and connect with no one.
Use everything above to draft a single sentence that captures your professional brand.
Formula: I help [specific audience] achieve [specific outcome] through [specific approach or skill].
Example: "I help local nonprofits tell their stories through professional video that moves audiences to action."
Bring these questions to your check-in
- Is my UVP specific enough, or does it still feel generic?
- Do my values and strengths actually show up in my APEX work so far?
- Is there a gap between how I currently come across and how I want to?
- Is there anything surprising or true in what I wrote that I should lean into?
Design Your Brand
Now translate who you are into something people can see. Every visual choice should connect back to your reflection.
Archetypes are universal personality patterns. Identifying yours helps ensure your visual choices feel coherent and intentional — not just pretty. Pick the one that most closely matches who you are professionally.
Colors communicate before words do. Choose colors that reinforce your values and archetype — not just colors you personally like.
Fonts have personalities. Match yours to your brand voice.
- Serif (Georgia, Garamond, Playfair Display) — Traditional, authoritative, trustworthy. Finance, law, journalism, or classic creative work.
- Sans-serif (Inter, Montserrat, Helvetica) — Modern, clean, approachable. Works for most professional and digital-first contexts.
- Script — Creative, personal, elegant. Use for accents only — never body text.
- Monospace (Source Code Pro, Courier) — Technical, precise. Good for development or highly technical brands.
Before you build anything, write 3 words that describe how your brand should feel. Not what it does — how it feels. These should connect directly to your voice adjectives and archetype.
Examples: "Bold. Precise. Human." / "Warm. Creative. Reliable." / "Ambitious. Clear. Grounded."
Bring these questions to your review
- Do my color and font choices reflect the values and archetype from Phase 2?
- Does anything feel chosen because it looks nice rather than because it communicates something?
- Is there visual coherence — do the colors and fonts feel like they belong to the same brand?
- What's one thing I should reconsider before building assets?
Build & Deliver
Now build the real things. Every deliverable below should feel like a consistent expression of the brand you defined.
Final review — walk Russ through your complete brand system
- Do all the deliverables feel consistent — could someone tell they came from the same person?
- Does the brand system reflect the values and UVP you built in Phase 2?
- Which deliverable are you most proud of, and why?
- What would you do differently if you started this project again?