August 1, 2025

Your Brand Guidelines are Not a Logo File

Why your brand needs a playbook – not just pretty colors.

Let’s get this out of the way first:

Your brand is not your logo. It’s not your font. It’s not your color palette.

Those are just the wrappers.

Your brand is how your company shows up – in every interaction, on every channel, with every audience. And if your team doesn’t have a clear, shared roadmap for that… they’re just guessing. And it shows.

Why storytelling belongs in your brand guide

Most companies don’t lose proposals because they’re bad. They lose because they’re forgettable.

In a crowded, compliance-driven market like GovCon, clarity is table stakes. But story is what separates you from every other "experienced, agile, client-focused" firm out there.

Story is what makes your value stick. It gives context, character, and credibility to what you’re saying. It turns dry content into compelling messaging.

And let me be clear… I'm not talking about fluffy, feel-good-but-not-really-say-anything storytelling.

This isn’t a mission statement that sounds like it was written by a motivational poster.

This is about giving your team the tools to clearly and consistently connect what you do to why it matters… in real proposals, in live conversations, and in front of evaluators who’ve seen it all.

But here’s the kicker: you can’t tell a great story if your people don’t know the plot.

That’s why brand guidelines have to go deeper than design. You need to codify your story… and teach your team how to tell it.

So, what should brand guidelines actually include?

Here’s what a real brand guide covers (and what most companies skip):

1. Your Messaging Foundation

  • Vision + mission
  • Core values (real ones, not buzzwords)
  • Your big why – why you exist + why it matters now
  • Brand voice + tone (how you sound, not just what you say)
  • Key talking points and proof points
  • Narrative structure: what’s your story arc?

2. Your Visual Identity

Yes, logos and color palettes belong here… but it’s also about consistency:

  • Typography, spacing, layout
  • Imagery guidelines: stock vs. branded visuals
  • Graphics + icon usage
  • What not to do (the anti-examples matter)

3. Story in Action

Your brand doesn’t live in a vacuum. It lives in:

  • Proposal boilerplate + past performance blurbs
  • LinkedIn posts + capability statements
  • Speaker bios + email signatures
  • Capture decks + pre-RFP outreach

Here’s the test: if your BD lead, your capture manager, and your proposal writer all introduce the company differently, your brand isn’t working – it’s just winging it.

Why some leaders resist this

We hear it all the time:

“Do we really need brand guidelines?”

“We’re not Nike.”

“We just need a deck and a one-pager.”

But here’s the thing… when the market is crowded and contracts are competitive, messaging is strategy.

Your brand is positioning. Your brand is story.

And without a guide that ties it all together, you're leaving differentiation to chance.

Bottom line?

If you’ve invested in branding, don’t stop at the logo.

Build the guidebook. Codify the story. Train your team. Make it easy to stay consistent.

Because the firm that tells the clearest, most compelling story – wins.

Want help building a guide that actually gets used?

We do this work every day… especially for teams who’ve outgrown their old story.

Krystn Macomber

CP APMP Fellow, LEED

There’s magic in disrupting the ordinary. This is the philosophy Krystn brings to working with and empowering her clients. With a 20-year track record of helping global professional services enterprises, Krystn is redefining what’s possible for companies looking to elevate their marketing, pursuit, and business development operations. She is an industry leader, award winner, mentor, coach, and highly sought-after speaker.

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