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How solopreneurs should think about branding

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If you’re self-employed and spend any time on social media, you’ve seen the debate. One person swears you need a professional website from day one. Another says a logo is the first thing to invest in. Someone else is selling a $500 course that promises to “elevate your brand’s presence.” 

Everyone has an opinion about where your money should go first (and they’re usually selling whatever they’re recommending).

I’ve been running my own business for three years. I’ve run the branding gamut from DIY templates in Canva to hiring a professional brand designer. 

Here’s what I’ve learned: the right branding investment depends entirely on where your business is today. When you’re spending money, you need an actual payoff in your business. Branding investments might not turn into specific dollars, but they should make sense for your business and the clients you want to attract.

Start with low-cost investments

In the early stages of a solo business, your identity is still forming. You might still be tweaking your specific offers and ideal customer profile (ICP). Spending thousands of dollars on branding at this point means you’re paying a professional to work with a moving target.

You can start with professional headshots. AI-generated headshots, for example, are very affordable and get used everywhere, from LinkedIn to guest bios. 

Next, you can create a visual identity. Consistent branding signals to potential clients that you take your business seriously. But the key word is consistent—not expensive. A consistent visual identity means picking two or three colors, choosing a font, and sticking with them across your LinkedIn profile, your website, and your content. Canva templates make this accessible without a designer. 

You can also start with a simple one-page website that communicates what you do and how to contact you. Unless your services include “designing websites” or something very high-ticket, your homepage doesn’t need to be fancy. If a website feels like too much, even a Linktree page that organizes your key links gives potential clients a place to land. 

These are appropriate investments for the stage you’re in. In the beginning, you have to be strategic about where your money goes.

Know when to upgrade

About a year and a half after I launched my business, I hired a designer. I’d been using Canva for everything from social posts to client proposals. It was consistent, but started to feel “homemade.” I spent months working with a designer who put a ton of energy into understanding who I am and what I do before creating a full suite of assets for every aspect of my business. 

The signal to invest more in your brand isn’t a specific timeline. It’s a feeling: you’ve outgrown the DIY version, and your business identity is stable enough that a professional can work with it. If your services, your audience, and your positioning are still shifting, a designer is working with incomplete information. 

The cost range is wide. A brand designer or a professionally built website might cost thousands of dollars. You might also hire someone to help with messaging or copywriting. The question isn’t whether any of these are worth it—it’s whether your business is at the stage where the investment pays off.

Don’t let someone else’s timeline pressure you into spending money you’re not ready to spend. The solopreneur who spent $5,000 on a website in year one is in a very different position than the one who waited until year three.

Don’t invest in brand before you’re ready

The most expensive branding mistakes aren’t the investments themselves. They’re the ones you have to redo because you invested at the wrong time.

You don’t want to be in a situation where your business is still fluid enough that you have to make a lot of changes later. On top of the additional cost, it is a lot of work to update your brand assets and visual identity. 

Nearly 18 months after I completed work with my brand designer, I felt like my tagline was no longer a good fit. I had shifted my focus a bit, so we iterated and came up with a new one. It was a giant chore to update all the places where my tagline existed. It needed to be done, but I had to feel that the change was absolutely necessary in order to offset the effort. 

Your brand will always be a reflection of where your business is today. It’s supposed to change. But your investments should happen when you have a firm grasp of who you are and how you want to communicate your brand to clients. 

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