Who is your brand plan actually for?
When most businesses say they need to "work on their brand", what they’re really saying is: new logo, fresher colours, maybe a tagline that sounds good in a pitch.
That's a rebrand. It's not a brand plan.
A brand plan is a commercial framework. It tells you where you compete, who you're actually for, what outcomes you lead with, and what you flat-out refuse to compete on.
More importantly, your brand plan should shape your decisions. How you build campaigns, how you open conversations, what you say no to.
If none of that changes after writing it, you haven't built a strategy. You've built a document. And if everyone in the room agreed with it on the first version? That's a sign something's wrong.
Real strategy means choosing a position not everyone will like. It means saying no to certain customers, refusing to compete on price, and backing a direction before you have proof it'll work. It’s uncomfortable, but it’s also the whole point.
When your brand plan is done properly, three things happen.
First, your competitive position gets clear. Not "we offer great service" clear. Actual position. The specific space you own and the associations you're deliberately building in memory.
Second, the business aligns internally. Brand stops sitting with marketing and starts running through everything. How you sell, how you onboard, how you follow up.
Third, the market learns what you stand for. That familiarity is what makes performance cheaper over time. It's what makes buyers feel safer choosing you before they've even spoken to your team.
Without it, activity increases and direction weakens. More spend, more tactics, harder growth.
With it, growth becomes intentional.
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This is taken from the weekly email written by one of our directors, Roberto Boi. Every Thursday he shares observations, ideas and perspectives from the work we’re doing day to day at Dilate. If you’d like to get it delivered straight to your inbox, you can sign up here.