Mood boards aren't the problem. Starting with them is.
When you build a visual identity from references, you're working backwards. You're saying "I want to look like this" before you've established what your brand needs to communicate, to whom, and why. The result is an aesthetic that might be beautiful and completely disconnected from your positioning.
In beauty, this produces a particular kind of brand — one that looks like a category average. Warm neutrals, minimalist packaging, a delicate serif. It's not bad design. It's just indistinguishable from fifty other brands on the same shelf, because everyone pulled from the same pool of references.
The mood board should come after the brief. It should be a translation of strategy into visual direction — not a substitute for having one.




