home / skills / sanky369 / vibe-building-skills / brand-voice

brand-voice skill

/skills/marketing/brand-voice

This skill helps you define and maintain a consistent brand voice across channels by outlining archetypes, dimensions, and guidelines.

npx playbooks add skill sanky369/vibe-building-skills --skill brand-voice

Review the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.

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SKILL.md
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---
name: brand-voice
description: Define and establish your unique brand voice with personality dimensions, voice guidelines, and consistency frameworks. Use when creating brand guidelines, ensuring messaging consistency, or developing voice standards for your organization.
---

# Brand Voice Skill

## Overview

Brand Voice is the foundation of all marketing communication. It's how you sound, not what you say. This skill helps you define your unique voice and ensure consistency across all channels.

**Keywords**: brand voice, tone, personality, messaging, consistency, brand guidelines, communication style, brand identity

## Core Methodology

Your brand voice has four dimensions:

1. **Personality Archetype** — The character type your brand embodies
2. **Voice Dimensions** — Specific traits that define how you communicate
3. **Tone Variations** — How your voice adapts to different contexts
4. **Voice Guidelines** — Rules for maintaining consistency

## Personality Archetypes

Choose the archetype that best fits your brand:

- **The Sage** — Analytical, knowledgeable, truth-seeking (think TED Talks)
- **The Hero** — Courageous, bold, inspiring (think Nike)
- **The Lover** — Passionate, emotional, intimate (think Tiffany & Co.)
- **The Creator** — Innovative, imaginative, expressive (think Apple)
- **The Innocent** — Optimistic, cheerful, simple (think Coca-Cola)
- **The Everyman** — Relatable, friendly, down-to-earth (think Target)
- **The Caregiver** — Compassionate, supportive, helpful (think Dove)
- **The Ruler** — Authoritative, commanding, organized (think IBM)
- **The Magician** — Transformative, mysterious, powerful (think Tesla)
- **The Outlaw** — Rebellious, disruptive, provocative (think Red Bull)

## Voice Dimensions

Define your voice across these dimensions:

**Formality**: Formal ↔ Casual  
**Optimism**: Pessimistic ↔ Optimistic  
**Humor**: Serious ↔ Humorous  
**Confidence**: Uncertain ↔ Confident  
**Sophistication**: Simple ↔ Complex  
**Warmth**: Cold ↔ Warm  
**Energy**: Calm ↔ Energetic  
**Directness**: Indirect ↔ Direct

## Tone Variations

Your voice stays consistent, but your tone adapts:

- **Educational Content** — Informative, clear, authoritative
- **Sales/Promotional** — Persuasive, compelling, benefit-focused
- **Customer Support** — Empathetic, helpful, patient
- **Social Media** — Conversational, engaging, personality-driven
- **Crisis Communication** — Transparent, accountable, reassuring

## Voice Guidelines Framework

Create your voice guidelines document with:

1. **Archetype** — Your personality type
2. **Voice Dimensions** — Your specific traits
3. **Do's** — What to always do
4. **Don'ts** — What to never do
5. **Examples** — Good and bad examples
6. **Tone Variations** — How to adapt by context
7. **Word Choices** — Preferred and avoided words
8. **Sentence Structure** — How you construct sentences

## How to Use This Skill

1. **Identify Your Archetype** — Which personality type fits your brand?
2. **Define Your Dimensions** — Where do you fall on each dimension?
3. **Create Your Guidelines** — Document your voice rules
4. **Test for Consistency** — Review existing content against guidelines
5. **Train Your Team** — Share guidelines with everyone creating content

## Integration with Other Skills

Brand Voice is the foundation for:
- **Positioning Angles** — Your voice delivers your positioning
- **Direct Response Copy** — Your voice makes copy persuasive
- **SEO Content** — Your voice makes content engaging
- **Newsletter** — Your voice builds audience connection
- **Email Sequences** — Your voice builds trust

## Common Pitfalls

**Inconsistency** — Your voice changes across channels.  
**Too Generic** — Your voice sounds like everyone else.  
**Inauthentic** — Your voice doesn't match your actual brand.  
**Unclear Guidelines** — Your team doesn't understand the voice.

## Next Steps

Once you've defined your Brand Voice, move to Skill 02: Positioning Angles to find your unique differentiation.

Overview

This skill helps you define and establish a distinct brand voice with clear personality dimensions, tone rules, and a consistency framework. It produces a compact voice guideline you can apply across marketing, product copy, and customer interactions. Use it to align teams and maintain a coherent brand identity across channels.

How this skill works

You select a primary personality archetype and map the brand across concrete voice dimensions (formality, warmth, confidence, etc.). The skill generates do's and don'ts, tone variations for different contexts, example copy, and a checklist to test existing content for consistency. It also provides a simple training checklist so teams can adopt the voice quickly.

When to use it

  • Creating or refreshing brand guidelines
  • Launching a new product or rebrand
  • Onboarding writers, marketers, or support teams
  • Auditing existing content for consistency
  • Localizing messaging while keeping voice intact

Best practices

  • Pick one dominant archetype and one secondary nuance to avoid being generic
  • Quantify voice dimensions (e.g., 70% casual, 30% formal) for clear decisions
  • Include concrete do's/don'ts and paired good/bad examples
  • Specify tone rules per channel rather than one-size-fits-all
  • Run a short content audit and iterate guidelines based on gaps

Example use cases

  • Build a one-page brand voice guide for hands-on use by writers and designers
  • Create tone cards for social, support, and product copy to speed content reviews
  • Audit marketing emails and product UI text for alignment with the voice
  • Train customer support reps with sample replies that match the brand tone
  • Draft launch communications that translate positioning into consistent language

FAQ

How do I choose the right archetype?

Match the archetype to your audience expectations and core values; pick the one that feels authentic long-term rather than trendy.

Can one voice work across all channels?

Yes, but your tone should adapt by context—keep the same underlying voice while varying formality, energy, and directness per channel.