My Approach

Make your brand a business advantage.

Brand isn't what you say about yourself. It's the meaning other people attach to you. And meaning is something you can shape, intentionally, if you're willing to do the work.


What I Believe

Branding is the management of meaning.

Most businesses don't have a marketing problem. They have a meaning problem. People aren't sure what you stand for, who you're for, or why you're the right choice. And when that's unclear, everything downstream is harder: sales, hiring, pricing, partnerships.

My job is to help you get deliberate about the meaning your business creates. Not through a rebrand, but through the strategic decisions that shape how you show up: what you say, what you do, what you refuse to do, and how consistently you do all of it.

That work belongs in the boardroom, not the marketing department. It requires leadership commitment. And it compounds over time in a way that campaigns never do.

A brand that's hard to explain A clear story everyone can articulate
Branding as a marketing cost Brand as a driver of commercial growth
Leadership misalignment Leadership aligned and focused
Internal confusion or cynicism Internal belief and buy-in
Safe positioning that goes unnoticed Courageous positioning that gets chosen
A strategy that lives in a document A strategy embedded in how you work
The Process

Four phases. One clear outcome.

01

Diagnose

Before I recommend anything, I need to understand what's actually going on. Not just what the leadership team believes, but what customers hear, what competitors are claiming, and where the story quietly breaks down inside the business.

This phase involves stakeholder interviews, customer research, competitive analysis and a brand audit. I'm looking for the gaps between intention and perception, because that's where the real work lives.

Outputs: diagnosis report, insight summary, leadership alignment baseline

02

Define

With a clear picture of where you are, we align on where you're going. This is the strategic work: positioning, target audience, brand architecture, messaging hierarchy, and the narrative that connects it all.

I facilitate the leadership team through this process. The goal isn't consensus for its own sake; it's a decision that everyone commits to and can articulate. That's the north star everything else points back to.

Outputs: brand strategy document, positioning statement, messaging framework, one-page brand narrative

03

Direct

Strategy without action is just expensive thinking. This phase turns the brand framework into a working plan: what changes, what gets built, who owns it, and by when.

Where delivery is needed, the work runs through Ayuda, my studio, so the strategy and execution stay connected under one line of thinking. I stay involved to make sure nothing gets lost in translation.

Outputs: prioritised action plan, leadership commitments, delivery brief if applicable

04

Embed

The most common failure point in strategy isn't the thinking. It's what happens three months later when the deck is filed and everyone goes back to their default behaviours. Embed is the accountability phase.

This is where ongoing advisory comes in. Regular sessions to review progress, remove blockers, adjust where needed, and make sure the strategy is actually influencing decisions. Not just sitting on a shelf.

Outputs: progress reviews, brand governance framework, ongoing advisory retainer

What Makes This Different

Not a consultant who disappears after the workshop.

You work with me, directly

No account managers, no junior analysts. The person who wrote the proposal is the person in the room. Senior thinking, personal delivery, every engagement.

I challenge, not just facilitate

Good strategy requires someone willing to say the uncomfortable thing. I'm not here to validate the status quo. I'm here to help you make the decision you've been avoiding.

Strategy that travels

Everything I produce is written in plain language, built for internal use, and designed to survive the first thirty days after I leave the room. If the team can't use it, it isn't finished.

Want to understand the process in detail?

The best place to start is a conversation. Tell me where you are and what's getting in the way. I'll tell you whether this process is the right fit, and what it would look like for your business specifically.