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Hi, You may have noticed the newsletter looks a little different this time. That's because I changed my business name last month. Mid-rebuild. Website still unfinished. Visual identity nowhere close to sorted, and feeling very exposed right now (!!). My mentor had told me it didn't matter that much… I could have listened. Except… I'd spent a year doing marketing backflips to make an ill-fitting name work, and I couldn't operate under that cognitive and messaging drag anymore. I couldn't keep telling clients their message matters while I pointedly ignored the friction with a name that stopped fitting me years ago. So I changed it! My own rebrand is still crawling along. I keep smiling as I say: "the cobbler's children have no shoes" and trying not to cringe. My decision's timing was objectively terrible. I did it anyway because waiting for perfect conditions is how you stay stuck forever. Are you doing some version of this right now? Do your materials match your mission anymore? Maybe it's the website copy that makes you sound like everyone else. Maybe it's the piece that still lists programs you phased out two years ago. Maybe it's the donor language that your community stopped using before the pandemic. You know it needs to change, and you've known for a while. The full rebrand feels impossible right now. You don't have the budget. You don't have the internal capacity. You don't have a clear enough strategy to know what the new brand should even be. So you wait. You focus on "more pressing issues." You tell yourself you'll tackle it when conditions are better. Here's what that waiting costs you: every day your outdated materials are out there, someone lands on your website and doesn't understand what you do. A potential partner sees your communications and assumes you're not serious. Your own team has to explain around the gap between what you say you are and how you actually show up. This isn't neutral. The cost of waiting isn't "things stay the same", it's "things get worse while you wait." Your mission is too important to be undermined by a brand that doesn't serve it anymore. What's stuck? I read every reply. I've been trying to write new homepage copy for a website that doesn't exist yet, using a visual identity I hadn't created, for a brand name I changed six weeks ago. Every sentence feels like building a house on sand. But I'm writing it anyway. Uncomfortable? Absolutely. But I couldn't wait for everything else to be perfect before fixing the thing that was a constant cognitive/messaging/alignment drag. Rooting you on, Reader. Reesa
P.S. If any of this resonated with you, here are three ways you can let me know:
About Reesa Beyond design, I'm a parent to a young girl gang, and move from weightlifting to vernacular jazz dance (though seldom together), along with reading, cooking, and reading about cooking. I'm always happy to talk about vegetarian food or my temperamental sourdough starter, Pudding. |
For nonprofits and social enterprises whose work runs deeper than their marketing lets on. If your team is doing it all, this is for you: accessible, practical, occasionally weird monthly dispatches featuring accessibility-focused design ideas and fixes. Stuff you can use now, freebies when I've got them, and the occasional rant about the sector's bad habits. So the communities you serve can actually see themselves in your mission, and engage.
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