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Brand Strategy & Identity

Planet-friendly blueprint for a thriving brand. Perfect for a startup ready to shine or a seasoned small business that has outgrown its current branding.
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Web Design & Build

Shape a website that thrives with purpose. If you're feeling unseen online or are frustrated with a website that doesn't work I'm here to help.
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Brand Audit

Is your brand feeling a bit off? I have a solution for you. A quick and effective refresh of your brand to get you back on track.

Branding vs. marketing

Branding vs. Marketing:
Where should conscious B2B startups begin?

How to be SUCCESSFUL

POV: You’re staring at a spreadsheet, wondering how to stretch your limited budget across everything your business needs. Marketing seems urgent. Branding sounds important. But which one will actually help you grow?

As a conscious B2B company, the stakes are high. You’re not only competing with other like-minded companies—you’re also up against larger, less sustainable players with deeper pockets. Your ethical mission also comes with a unique set of challenges in a world that's still following business-as-usual. Every decision feels like a gamble. So, where do you start?

Here’s the truth: you need both. But the order matters. Especially for businesses like yours, where values and authenticity are everything.

by Sandra Hurkova

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Branding vs. marketing: What’s the difference?

Let’s break it down:

Branding is who you are, your foundation. It’s your mission, your story, and how you visually and verbally communicate them. Your logo, colors, tone of voice, and even the way you describe your business are all part of your brand. Branding ensures people know what you stand for and why you exist. It's the way you show up in the world.

Marketing is how people find you, like a megaphone. It’s how you share your brand with the world and attract customers. From campaigns to content, marketing is about reaching your audience and driving sales.But here’s the catch: Without branding, your marketing risks being scattered, forgettable, or misleading. Without branding, marketing is just noise. You may be shouting your message everywhere only to realize no one understands what you’re saying—or worse, no one cares.

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Why branding comes first (Yes, even for startups)

If you’re just starting out, branding might feel like an abstract or even unnecessary expense.

After all, isn’t marketing what gets customers in the door? Not exactly.

Here’s why branding needs to come first:

It saves you from a hot mess of inconsistency.
Imagine his: you’re prepping a pitch deck for investors. Slide one is sleek and minimal. Slide two looks like it was made in 2005. Slide three? Comic Sans makes a comeback. The result? Your message is disconnected, and investors are distracted, confused, or worse—unimpressed. Now imagine having a cohesive brand identity guiding everything. The result? Clean, professional, and trustworthy. Consistent visuals and messaging not only make your materials easier to create but also build trust with your audience.

It communicates your values often without saying a word.
As a sustainability-focused business, your values aren’t just a nice-to-have—they’re the reason you exist. Branding helps you articulate these values in a way that’s compelling and authentic. Whether it’s through a minimalist design, a carbon-optimized website, or transparent messaging, your brand becomes a tool to tell your story.

It sets you apart
In a world where many major companies are abandoning their sustainability promises, authenticity is your chance to stand out. Strong branding shows your audience that you’re not just checking off boxes and saying stuff for PR. That’s how you prove you’re different from larger competitors that may lack your integrity or innovation. A strong brand creates emotional connections and loyalty—two things money can’t buy.

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Addressing the elephant in the room: Isn’t marketing faster?

It’s tempting to dive straight into marketing because it feels more tangible and results-driven. I get it.

But consider this: how will you design your pitch deck, social media banners, or website? How will you ensure they all communicate the same message? That they all look and feel the same? Without branding, your marketing efforts can lack direction, wasting time and money.Strong branding provides the structure for your marketing efforts. It ensures that your campaigns are consistent, recognizable, and aligned with your values. Think of branding as the blueprint and marketing as the construction team. You wouldn’t start building without a plan, right?

Sure, marketing might get you quicker wins in the short term. But without branding, it’s like throwing spaghetti at a wall to see what sticks. How will you design your campaigns? What tone will you use? And how do you make sure your website doesn’t feel like it belongs to a different company than your Instagram?

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For mid-stage companies: When to revisit your branding

Branding isn’t a “set it and forget it” task. As your business grows, so will your understanding of your audience, your market, and even your mission.

For mid-stage companies, revisiting your branding can help you:

  • Align your identity with new goals or market opportunities.
  • Stay relevant as industry trends evolve.
  • Address any inconsistencies that may have developed over time.

For example, you may have started as a scrappy startup appealing to small B2C consumer goods companies, but you're now targeting larger corporate clients. Or maybe your market has become very competitive. Your branding might need a more refined and authoritative tone to reflect that shift.

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Ready to invest in branding? Here are some actionable steps:

1. Apply and test

Apply your branding to key assets such as your website, pitch decks, or marketing collateral.

Use feedback loops. Survey clients, stakeholders, and employees to ensure your brand resonates and feels authentic.

Keep evolving. Branding isn’t static—regularly revisit it to reflect changes in your business or the market.

2. Develop your identity

If budget allows, work with a designer to create your logo, color palette, and typography.

Establish a tone of voice that reflects your brand personality. Are you witty, formal, or bold?

Ensure that your touchpoints have been thought through. Like if your website or product packaging areoptimized for sustainability.

Is your website energy-efficient? Test its carbon footprint using tools like Website Carbon.

Use recyclable or compostable materials for packaging.

Create brand guidelines to ensure consistency across all materials. For example, specify sustainable print practices or preferred materials for marketing materials.

3. Apply and test

Apply your branding to key assets such as your website, pitch decks, or marketing collateral.Use feedback loops. Survey clients, stakeholders, and employees to ensure your brand resonates and feels authentic.

Keep evolving. Branding isn’t static—regularly revisit it to reflect changes in your business or the market.

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Wrap-up thoughts: Build a brand that reflects your mission

As a sustainable B2B startup, your brand is more than just your logo or website—it’s the sum of every interaction someone has with your business. By prioritizing branding, you’re not just creating a foundation for marketing; you’re building trust, standing out in your industry, and amplifying the values that make your business unique.

So, should you focus on branding or marketing first? If you want to make a brand that will last a long time, create impact, and ensure every dollar counts, start with branding. Marketing will follow naturally, powered by the clarity and consistency that only a strong brand can provide.

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Work hard

You can get to about the 90th percentile in your field by working either smart or hard, which is still a great accomplishment. But getting to the 99th percentile requires both—you will be competing with other very talented people who will have great ideas and be willing to work a lot.

Extreme people get extreme results. Working a lot comes with huge life trade-offs, and it’s perfectly rational to decide not to do it. But it has a lot of advantages. As in most cases, momentum compounds, and success begets success.

And it’s often really fun. One of the great joys in life is finding your purpose, excelling at it, and discovering that your impact matters to something larger than yourself. A YC founder recently expressed great surprise about how much happier and more fulfilled he was after leaving his job at a big company and working towards his maximum possible impact. Working hard at that should be celebrated.

It’s not entirely clear to me why working hard has become a Bad Thing in certain parts of the US, but this is certainly not the case in other parts of the world—the amount of energy and drive exhibited by entrepreneurs outside of the US is quickly becoming the new benchmark.

You have to figure out how to work hard without burning out. People find their own strategies for this, but one that almost always works is to find work you like doing with people you enjoy spending a lot of time with.

I think people who pretend you can be super successful professionally without working most of the time (for some period of your life) are doing a disservice. In fact, work stamina seems to be one of the biggest predictors of long-term success.

One more thought about working hard: do it at the beginning of your career. Hard work compounds like interest, and the earlier you do it, the more time you have for the benefits to pay off. It’s also easier to work hard when you have fewer other responsibilities, which is frequently but not always the case when you’re young.

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Be bold

I believe that it’s easier to do a hard startup than an easy startup. People want to be part of something exciting and feel that their work matters.

If you are making progress on an important problem, you will have a constant tailwind of people wanting to help you. Let yourself grow more ambitious, and don’t be afraid to work on what you really want to work on.

If everyone else is starting meme companies, and you want to start a gene-editing company, then do that and don’t second guess it.

Follow your curiosity. Things that seem exciting to you will often seem exciting to other people too.

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Be willful

A big secret is that you can bend the world to your will a surprising percentage of the time—most people don’t even try, and just accept that things are the way that they are.

People have an enormous capacity to make things happen. A combination of self-doubt, giving up too early, and not pushing hard enough prevents most people from ever reaching anywhere near their potential.

Ask for what you want. You usually won’t get it, and often the rejection will be painful. But when this works, it works surprisingly well.

Almost always, the people who say “I am going to keep going until this works, and no matter what the challenges are I’m going to figure them out”, and mean it, go on to succeed. They are persistent long enough to give themselves a chance for luck to go their way.

Airbnb is my benchmark for this. There are so many stories they tell that I wouldn’t recommend trying to reproduce (keeping maxed-out credit cards in those nine-slot three-ring binder pages kids use for baseball cards, eating dollar store cereal for every meal, battle after battle with powerful entrenched interest, and on and on) but they managed to survive long enough for luck to go their way.

To be willful, you have to be optimistic—hopefully this is a personality trait that can be improved with practice. I have never met a very successful pessimistic person.

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Be hard to compete with

Most people understand that companies are more valuable if they are difficult to compete with. This is important, and obviously true.

But this holds true for you as an individual as well. If what you do can be done by someone else, it eventually will be, and for less money.

The best way to become difficult to compete with is to build up leverage. For example, you can do it with personal relationships, by building a strong personal brand, or by getting good at the intersection of multiple different fields. There are many other strategies, but you have to figure out some way to do it.

Most people do whatever most people they hang out with do. This mimetic behavior is usually a mistake—if you’re doing the same thing everyone else is doing, you will not be hard to compete with.

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Build a network

Great work requires teams. Developing a network of talented people to work with—sometimes closely, sometimes loosely—is an essential part of a great career. The size of the network of really talented people you know often becomes the limiter for what you can accomplish.

An effective way to build a network is to help people as much as you can. Doing this, over a long period of time, is what lead to most of my best career opportunities and three of my four best investments. I’m continually surprised how often something good happens to me because of something I did to help a founder ten years ago.

One of the best ways to build a network is to develop a reputation for really taking care of the people who work with you. Be overly generous with sharing the upside; it will come back to you 10x. Also, learn how to evaluate what people are great at, and put them in those roles. (This is the most important thing I have learned about management, and I haven’t read much about it.) You want to have a reputation for pushing people hard enough that they accomplish more than they thought they could, but not so hard they burn out.

Everyone is better at some things than others. Define yourself by your strengths, not your weaknesses. Acknowledge your weaknesses and figure out how to work around them, but don’t let them stop you from doing what you want to do. “I can’t do X because I’m not good at Y” is something I hear from entrepreneurs surprisingly often, and almost always reflects a lack of creativity. The best way to make up for your weaknesses is to hire complementary team members instead of just hiring people who are good at the same things you are.

A particularly valuable part of building a network is to get good at discovering undiscovered talent. Quickly spotting intelligence, drive, and creativity gets much easier with practice. The easiest way to learn is just to meet a lot of people, and keep track of who goes on to impress you and who doesn’t. Remember that you are mostly looking for rate of improvement, and don’t overvalue experience or current accomplishment.

I try to always ask myself when I meet someone new “is this person a force of nature?” It’s a pretty good heuristic for finding people who are likely to accomplish great things.

A special case of developing a network is finding someone eminent to take a bet on you, ideally early in your career. The best way to do this, no surprise, is to go out of your way to be helpful. (And remember that you have to pay this forward at some point later!)

Finally, remember to spend your time with positive people who support your ambitions.

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You get rich by owning things

The biggest economic misunderstanding of my childhood was that people got rich from high salaries. Though there are some exceptions—entertainers for example —almost no one in the history of the Forbes list has gotten there with a salary.

You get truly rich by owning things that increase rapidly in value.

This can be a piece of a business, real estate, natural resource, intellectual property, or other similar things. But somehow or other, you need to own equity in something, instead of just selling your time. Time only scales linearly.

The best way to make things that increase rapidly in value is by making things people want at scale.

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Be internally driven

Most people are primarily externally driven; they do what they do because they want to impress other people. This is bad for many reasons, but here are two important ones.

First, you will work on consensus ideas and on consensus career tracks.  You will care a lot—much more than you realize—if other people think you’re doing the right thing. This will probably prevent you from doing truly interesting work, and even if you do, someone else would have done it anyway.

Second, you will usually get risk calculations wrong. You’ll be very focused on keeping up with other people and not falling behind in competitive games, even in the short term.

Smart people seem to be especially at risk of such externally-driven behavior. Being aware of it helps, but only a little—you will likely have to work super-hard to not fall in the mimetic trap.

The most successful people I know are primarily internally driven; they do what they do to impress themselves and because they feel compelled to make something happen in the world. After you’ve made enough money to buy whatever you want and gotten enough social status that it stops being fun to get more, this is the only force I know of that will continue to drive you to higher levels of performance.

This is why the question of a person’s motivation is so important. It’s the first thing I try to understand about someone. The right motivations are hard to define a set of rules for, but you know it when you see it.

Jessica Livingston and Paul Graham are my benchmarks for this. YC was widely mocked for the first few years, and almost no one thought it would be a big success when they first started. But they thought it would be great for the world if it worked, and they love helping people, and they were convinced their new model was better than the existing model.

Eventually, you will define your success by performing excellent work in areas that are important to you. The sooner you can start off in that direction, the further you will be able to go. It is hard to be wildly successful at anything you aren’t obsessed with.

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