Knowledge that grants authority.
Century-old winery repositioned around the Sage archetype (knowledge of terroir, generational transmission). Didactic communication with depth, without becoming dull.
Memorable brands have character. Archetype work defines that personality with rigour — voice, symbols, behaviours — so the customer recognises your brand even with the logo covered up. Built on Carl Jung, Mark & Pearson, and contemporary practice.
You have an impeccable graphic standards manual and communications that could be anyone's. There's a strategic layer missing to give substance to the form.
Every new lead reinterprets the brand in their own way. Without a defined archetype, coherence depends on the individual — and is lost with every handover.
Your voice works in Spanish by instinct, but translation and operating in other markets dilutes it. The archetype is the anchor that travels.
You need coherence across diverse communications (B2B and B2C, premium and mass-market). The archetype is the connecting thread.
How does your brand sound today? Analysis of communications, customer service, sales conversations. What is actually done, not what people believe they do.
From the 12 classic archetypes (Sage, Hero, Caregiver, Rebel, Creator, Jester, Innocent, Explorer, Lover, Magician, Everyman, Ruler) we choose the one that best fits purpose and positioning.
I ground the archetype in voice (how we write), symbols (what represents it), behaviours (what we say and do, what we don't) and brand mythology (founding stories).
Workshop with marketing, sales and customer service teams so they can recognise and apply the archetype. Without this, the document is dead letter.
The archetype isn't decoration — it's an everyday decision-making tool. What it offers:
When the team understands the archetype, communication decisions are made by correct intuition — not by consulting an endless manual.
Brands with a clear archetype are recognisable by tone alone, even without visual signature. Apple, Patagonia, Nike — they all have an immediately identifiable voice.
External agencies and creatives have a clear north star. Creative work doesn't need 5 rounds of revisions because the archetype filters at the first pass.
Archetypes work because they're universal — the customer recognises the brand's ‘persona’ and decides whether they want to relate to it.
People join brands whose personality matches them. The archetype is a tool for selection and cultural onboarding.
Brands with a solid archetype resist the pressure to adopt every communicative fashion. That preserves brand value over the long term.
Century-old winery repositioned around the Sage archetype (knowledge of terroir, generational transmission). Didactic communication with depth, without becoming dull.
Specialist machinery manufacturer worked as Hero (resolving challenges impossible for the customer). Use cases told as technical feats, not as specifications sheets.
Private clinic worked as Caregiver (attentive presence, anticipation, warmth without sentimentality). Communication that feels human without becoming saccharine.
Data, context, competition, audiences.
Positioning, priorities, allocation.
Actions per channel with owner and deadline.
Review, adjustment and next round.
Archetype work is especially valuable in these four moments. Before them, it tends to be academic; after them, it's an attempt to put order into existing chaos:
If your customer reads a post of yours and one from a competitor unsigned, they couldn't tell them apart. That is absence of archetype — and it shows.
Each new agency reinterprets the brand and communication swings between different versions. The archetype is the constant that survives supplier changes.
International launch, new product line, merger. Expansion moments demand an anchor more than any other — and they are the most often neglected.
Employees who feel disconnected from public messaging, customers who perceive a gap between experience and communication. The archetype is the reconciliation tool.
Done badly, yes. The 12-archetype system comes from Jung's analytical psychology and was popularised in marketing by Mark & Pearson (‘The Hero and the Outlaw’). What matters is applying it with rigour — as a strategic tool, not as a magazine quiz.
One primary and one or two secondary that nuance it. More than three becomes incoherent. The strength of the archetype lies in its purity — diluted, it loses effectiveness.
It works for both. In B2B it sometimes needs more subtlety — the Sage or Ruler archetype works very well in professional services, while Caregiver fits medical technology or support services. What changes is the expression code, not the logic.
Quite the opposite — it liberates it. Well-defined constraints are the breeding ground for good creative work. Without an archetype, every brief starts from zero. With one, creativity has a frame and fires sooner and better.
It depends on the size of the brand and the depth of the work. For an SME the project can start at modest budgets; for a large brand with multiple lines and markets, costs scale accordingly. In the first session we define a realistic scope for your case.
First 45-minute session, free of charge and no commitment. If we fit, I send you a detailed proposal within 5 days. If we don't, you take away a useful initial diagnosis.