Instead of creating a vague "ideal client avatar," identify a real person who embodies your brand's values. For Birdies, this was Meghan Markle—before her royal fame—because she represented warmth, hosting, and community. This makes marketing and product decisions tangible and focused.

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To truly change a brand's narrative, marketing's 'talking the talk' is insufficient. The product experience itself must embody the desired story. This 'walking the walk' through the product is the most powerful way to shape core brand perception and make the narrative shareable.

The advice to "serve a customer for 10 years" is incomplete. A more foundational step is to first understand your own authentic identity. Building products that reflect who you are naturally attracts the right customer, creating genuine "customer-founder fit" and avoiding the burnout of "putting on a show."

Trust is now built through credible personalities, not just branded content. Channels like podcasts and newsletters succeed because they are personality-driven. HubSpot's CEO advises businesses to identify and empower internal figures with high authority to represent the brand.

Instead of comparing to competitors, compare your product to the ideal human interaction. Google Meet aimed to be like a real conversation, not just better than Zoom. This 'humanization' framework pushes teams to think beyond features and focus on a more intuitive, emotionally resonant experience.

Instead of manually sifting through overwhelming survey responses, input the raw data into an AI model. You can prompt it to identify distinct customer segments and generate detailed avatars—complete with pain points and desires—for each of your specific offers.

The nature of marketing has shifted from promoting a faceless corporation to showcasing an authentic founder personality. Companies without an interesting character at the helm are at a disadvantage. This requires leaders to be public figures, as their personal brand, story, and voice are now integral to the company's identity and success.

As audiences push back against AI-generated and overly polished stock imagery, featuring real people in authentic situations will be critical for engagement. Showcasing your team, customers, or volunteers in natural settings—not on a green screen—builds trust and connection, making genuine humanity the key to cutting through the noise.

To make your emails more engaging, stop addressing your entire list. Instead, picture one specific, real person—a friend, an ideal client, or someone you admire—and write directly to them. This simple mental shift transforms your tone from a generic broadcast into an intimate, compelling conversation.