a preview — not the final cut

← The Books

Build the Feeling
First.

How to create brands people trust, remember, and want to belong to. A field guide to building a brand from the inside out — the feeling first, the system around it, and the honest decisions in between.

It’s coming as a PDF. This page is the preview: read the shape of it, then get told the day it drops.

A feeling, with a
system around it.

A brand is a feeling first

Not a logo, a palette, and a tagline — those come last. The book starts where the trust actually forms: the feeling someone gets, and the system that produces it on purpose, every time.

Build for the person, not the category

Skip the demographic. Build for the human underneath it — what they’re tired of, what they wish existed, and how they want to feel after they meet you.

Productive tension

The proprietary idea at the core: the best brands hold two things at once — premium but approachable, playful but dependable, expert but unintimidating. The tension is what makes them memorable.

Teach first, hide nothing

The polished brands demonstrate the method. The ones that stalled, changed direction, or got shelved reveal how the decisions were actually made. This is a transparent field guide, not a portfolio in disguise.

Four parts,
one rhythm.

Every chapter runs the same loop: Principle → Story → Method → Case → Exercise → Check. You don’t just read what I believe — you watch it get decided, then do it on your own brand.

Part 1 — The Feeling Comes First

A brand is a feeling with a system around it — not a logo, a palette, and a tagline. Build for the person, not the category. Define the emotional promise, and find the productive tension that makes it distinct.

Part 2 — Build the Foundation

The brand brief. The audience beneath the demographic. Positioning without corporate language. Personality and anti-personality. The reason to believe.

Part 3 — Create the Brand World

Naming the world. Voice as behavior. Writing like a thoughtful host — credible enough to trust, warm enough to join, distinctive enough to remember. Visual restraint. Designing for belonging.

Part 4 — The Case Files

Real brands at every stage — the polished, the evolving, the reworked, and the shelved. Told by the lesson, not the logo, and always with the names disguised.

The frameworks
you’ll steal.

A name must survive use

A name can be beautiful in a deck and break in real life — on an invoice, as a possessive, as an abbreviation, said out loud a hundred times. The test is survival, not applause.

Productive tension

Find the two-word contradiction your brand lives inside — and defend it against every decision that tries to collapse it to one side.

“The Turn”

The recurring sidebar for reworked brands: what wasn’t working, what everyone misunderstood, and the single decision that unlocked the stronger direction.

“What We Killed and Why”

The shelved brands get their own feature — decision studies, never apologies. The killed ideas often teach more than the launched ones.

The Brand Creation Brief

The core tool, and the spine of the companion workbook: twelve sections that carry you from “built for people who ___, tired of ___, want to feel ___” all the way to a one-page brand foundation you can actually build from.

The name that
rebuilt the business.

The book’s centerpiece is a rebrand — names disguised, decisions real. A strong creative concept that turned out to be a high-friction operating name. The problems looked like copywriting problems at first; they were business-model questions wearing a naming costume.

Renaming it became a diagnosis. It produced usable terminology, a real brand architecture, and a clearer operating model — brand development doing the work of business development. That’s the whole argument of the book, in one story.

“The new name did not simply give the business a new name. It gave the business a new way to understand itself.”

— from the anchor case

Want it the day
it drops?

The preview PDF lands here first, then the full book. Leave your name and what you’re building and you’ll be first to know — no funnel, no spam, just the heads-up.