
James Whitfield
Creative Director

Most companies treat a rebrand as a visual problem. It rarely is. The visual identity is almost always a symptom of a deeper strategic confusion — about who the company is for, what it believes, and what it is willing to say no to. This piece unpacks why rebrands fail and what it takes to do one that actually works.
Why Most Rebrands Fail Before They Begin
A rebrand is not a logo change. That sentence sounds obvious until you watch a company spend six months and a significant budget on a new visual identity only to find that nothing has actually changed — not how customers feel about them, not how employees talk about the company, not the problems that made them want a rebrand in the first place.
The Brief Is the Work
Most rebrands fail in the briefing stage. The client presents symptoms — "we look dated", "we're losing to competitors", "our identity doesn't reflect who we are now" — and the agency treats these as the brief. They are not. They are the presenting complaint. The brief is what you find when you ask why three more times and actually listen to the answers.
We worked with a fintech company last year that came to us saying they needed to look more premium. After two weeks of stakeholder interviews, the real issue emerged: their enterprise sales team was embarrassed to show the brand in board-level meetings. The visual identity was a symptom. The problem was positioning — they were selling at enterprise price points with a brand that read as a startup tool. The rebrand we delivered was almost incidental to the strategic repositioning work that preceded it.
Identity Follows Strategy
The most durable brands we know are the ones where the visual system is almost inevitable given the strategy. When the thinking is clear, the design decisions get easier. When the thinking is confused, every design decision becomes a negotiation.
This means the best branding work happens when the client is willing to do the uncomfortable work first — articulating what they actually believe, who they are actually for, and what they are willing to say no to. A brand that tries to appeal to everyone is a brand that resonates with no one.
What to Look For in a Brand Partner
The question worth asking any agency before you hire them is not "can you show me work similar to what we need." It is "tell me about a time you disagreed with a client brief and what happened." The answer will tell you more about how they work than any case study.
Good brand work requires genuine creative tension. You are not hiring someone to execute your vision — you already have a vision, and it got you to wherever you are now. You are hiring someone to challenge that vision with craft, rigour, and a perspective that is genuinely external to your organisation.
The Long Game
The brands we admire most were built over time by people who were willing to say no to short-term opportunities that would compromise long-term coherence. Consistency is not a creative constraint. It is the mechanism by which trust accumulates. Every time a customer encounters your brand and it is exactly what they expected, that is a deposit in an account that pays out when they need to make a decision under uncertainty.
A rebrand is not a reset. It is a recommitment — to a clearer version of what you already believe. The best ones feel inevitable in retrospect.




