Is your brand personality instantly memorable – or totally forgettable?
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Is your brand personality instantly memorable – or totally forgettable?

Illustration that depicts memorable brand personality

In a world where consumers are bombarded with thousands of marketing messages daily, your brand personality is either making waves or barely causing a ripple. Let’s be brutally honest – most brand voices sound like they’ve been drafted by a committee, sanitised by legal, and stripped of anything remotely interesting.

The result? A sea of corporate sameness that’s about as memorable as yesterday’s weather forecast. So which side of the fence are you on – distinctively delightful or decidedly dull?

Why brand personality matters more than ever

The marketplace isn’t just noisy; it’s a cacophony of brands all shouting for attention. In this environment, a distinctive brand personality isn’t just nice to have – it’s your ticket to being heard above the din.

When everyone zigs with corporate speak, the brands that zag with authentic personality create genuine cut-through.

The business case for personality-led branding

Before the creative types get too excited, let’s talk bottom line.

A strong brand personality isn’t just about being quirky for quirkiness’ sake – it delivers tangible business benefits:

  • Brands with distinctive voices create stronger memory structures, making them more recognisable and shareable (hello, free marketing).
  • Personality creates emotional connections – and emotions drive purchasing decisions far more than logic ever will.
  • It cuts through category conventions, particularly valuable in traditionally ‘serious’ sectors like finance, insurance, or B2B technology.
  • A well-defined verbal identity gives everyone in your organisation guardrails for consistent, on-brand communication.

Take Airifi, for example. When Fabrik developed their product naming and verbal identity, we ensured their brand personality reflected their innovative approach to wireless technology – resulting in memorable brand communication that stands out in a crowded tech marketplace.

Set of three images that showcase the Airifi logo and brand personality.

Warning signs your brand personality is falling flat

Think your brand voice is fine? Perhaps. But ‘fine’ is the enemy of memorable.

Here are the red flags that suggest your brand personality might be in need of resuscitation:

Generic and jargon-filled

If your website, social posts or brochures are stuffed with phrases like ‘innovative solutions’, ‘best-in-class’, or ‘customer-centric approach’, you’re swimming in the same tepid pool as thousands of other brands.

Corporate waffle and meaningless buzzwords are the beige wallpaper of brand communication – present but entirely unremarkable.

Inconsistent across channels

Monday’s LinkedIn post sounds like it was written by a university professor. Tuesday’s Instagram caption could’ve come from a teenager. Wednesday’s customer email has the warmth of an automated parking ticket.

Sound familiar? When your brand personality has multiple personalities, you’re not just confusing your audience – you’re diluting your impact.

Sounds like everyone else in your sector

Financial services brands all talk about ‘solutions’ and ‘partnership’. Tech companies are universally ‘disrupting’ and ‘transforming’. Universities are all ‘world-leading’ and ‘excellence-driven’.

When your messaging could be copy-pasted onto a competitor’s website without anyone noticing, you’ve got a personality deficit.

Our work with Touching Distance demonstrates how distinctive tone of voice can elevate a brand above sector clichés.

Their focused brand storytelling breaks away from typical industry language, creating genuinely refreshing brand language that resonates with their audience.

If you’re nodding along to any of these, don’t panic – but do consider it might be time for a refresh…

An illustration of a person out of a line-up highlighted with a spyglass.

What makes a brand personality stand out?

Let’s flip the script and look at what makes certain brands leap off the page (or screen) and lodge themselves in our consciousness:

Clarity and confidence

The most compelling brand voices don’t hide behind complexity or verbosity. They say more by saying less. They speak like actual humans, not corporate entities. They have the confidence to use straightforward language that resonates rather than impresses.

Character (without being cringey)

There’s a fine line between personality and parody. The best brand voices inject character – whether that’s through humour, unexpected observations, or a distinctive point of view – without veering into try-hard territory.

They understand their audience and what will resonate with them.

When Fabrik developed the Caripod product naming for Seraphine, we crafted a copywriting style that balanced playfulness with practicality – perfect for busy parents who want products that make life easier without sacrificing style.

Image of person using Caripod from Seraphine with young child.

Consistency across all touchpoints

A great brand personality isn’t just for the big campaign moments – it flows through everything from advertising headlines to 404 error messages, from sales presentations to out-of-office replies.

This consistency builds recognition and trust over time.

Brand voice examples that break the mould

Theory is all well and good, but what does a distinctive brand personality actually look like in practice?

Here are a few brands that have carved out unmistakable verbal identities:

An image of a barista pouring Oatly into a milk jug.
Credit: Oatly

Oatly

Oatly transformed a potentially dull product category (plant milk) with a voice that’s conversational, self-aware, and occasionally philosophical.

Their packaging doesn’t just list ingredients – it riffs on consumerism, environmental impact, and the oddity of drinking milk as adults.

It’s confident enough to poke fun at itself and the industry it’s disrupting.

Image showing Monzo's brand personality through their verbal language.
Credit: Monzo

Monzo

Banking isn’t exactly known for its sparkling personality, but Monzo changed that with language that’s refreshingly direct and human.

From their app notifications (“You just spent £8.50 on lunch – enjoy!”) to their help articles explaining financial concepts in plain English, they’ve created a voice that feels like a knowledgeable friend rather than a faceless institution.

Image of Innocent Drinks in fridge that is wrapped in grass and flowers.
Credit: Tiki Chris

Innocent

The pioneers of playful packaging, Innocent’s tone manages to be whimsical without sacrificing substance.

Their chatty labels, quirky social media and ‘we’re just making smoothies here’ approach created a brand voice so distinctive it spawned countless imitators.

But crucially, beneath the playfulness lies serious purpose – their sustainability messaging comes through clearly despite the conversational tone.

We’re not suggesting you should copy any of these approaches (in fact, please don’t) – but understanding why they work might help you find your own brand’s authentic voice.

Illustration of woman holding a jug and drinking from glass.

So… how would your brand personality taste in a glass?

Here’s a thought experiment: if your brand voice was a drink, what would it be?

A flat, lukewarm tap water that nobody notices? A pretentious cocktail with too many ingredients and not enough flavour? Or a memorable, refreshing elderflower spritz that leaves people wanting more?

The metaphor might seem frivolous, but it’s a useful way to evaluate whether your brand has a personality worth experiencing. And if you’re coming up short in the taste test, it might be time for a brand voice refresh.

What your brand personality says about you is more significant than most realise – it communicates your values, your approach to business, and ultimately, how much you respect your audience’s time and intelligence.

When to refresh your brand voice

There are certain trigger points when reconsidering your verbal identity makes particular sense:

  • After a merger or acquisition, when multiple brand voices need to harmonise.
  • When repositioning your brand or targeting a new audience segment.
  • If you’ve noticed a significant shift in your customer base or their expectations.
  • If you’re consistently beating yourself up over inconsistent messaging.
  • If, if we’re being completely honest, you’ve never really defined it in the first place.

The Amplius merger branding project is a perfect example of how personality-led branding can unite different corporate cultures under one coherent verbal identity, avoiding dull brand messaging while maintaining consistent communication across all business units.

illustration of a man with clouded thoughts, surrounded by scraps of paper at his desk.

Final thoughts: ditch the dull, embrace the different

In a marketplace drowning in sameness, a distinctive brand personality isn’t just nice to have – it’s a commercial imperative.

It’s the difference between being remembered and being scrolled past. Between connection and indifference. Between loyalty and mere transaction.

Ask yourself: if your brand personality walked into a room, would anyone notice? Would they remember the encounter the next day? Would they look forward to meeting again?

If the answers aren’t a resounding yes, perhaps it’s time to give your verbal identity some serious attention.

Because in a world of forgettable brands, being memorably yourself isn’t just good branding – it’s good business.

Let’s make your brand voice unforgettable

At Fabrik, we specialise in creating distinctive verbal identities that set brands apart. From developing comprehensive tone of voice guidelines to crafting compelling brand stories, we help organisations find their authentic voice and use it consistently across all touchpoints.

Drop us a line, and let’s start a conversation…

Fabrik: A branding agency for our times.

Stewart Hodgson
Co-founder
Stewart Hodgson
Co-founder
Our co-founder, Stewart, is responsible for content strategy and managing Fabrik’s publishing team. It’s up to Stewart to bring Fabrik to busy marketers’ attention. As a regular contributor to Brand Fabrik, Stewart creates articles relevant to anyone in branding, marketing and creative communication.

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Fabrik’s been helping organisations rethink and reshape their brands for over 25 years. We’ve guided companies through mergers, rebrands and new launches. Whatever stage you’re at, we’ll meet you there.

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