Branding is not your logo. It's not your colour palette, your font, or the aesthetic of your Instagram grid. Those things are the visible surface of branding — the output of a process that, if done correctly, happens long before a designer opens a file.
A brand is the complete set of associations a person has with your product the moment they encounter it. It's what they feel before they buy, what they tell someone when they recommend you, and what they remember when they're standing in front of a shelf trying to decide. It's built deliberately or it's built accidentally. The brands built accidentally rarely survive.
For skincare specifically, branding carries extra weight because the category is saturated, trust is the primary purchase driver, and the consumer is sophisticated. They've been marketed to by every brand from The Ordinary to La Mer and they know the difference between a brand that knows who it is and one that's performing an identity it hasn't earned.
The work of branding is the work of deciding — with precision and intention — what all of those associations are going to be, before you ask a designer to make anything.




