Every week a small business comes to me with a brand that needs a refresh.
Same problems.
Different business.
Mistake 1: No Clear Brand Identity
This is the most common one by a long stretch.
They have a logo and a website they created quickly maybe with AI or their mate.
But there is no thread connecting any of it.
Nothing that tells you immediately who this business is for, what they stand for, or why you should choose them over anyone else.
There is always a messaging or alignment problem with the design.
This happens because owners start with the visual before answering the strategic questions underneath. They skip the foundation and go straight to the surface.
As the designer, your job is to go back to that foundation first. Before you open a single design file, understand:
Who the business is actually for
What position they want to hold in their market
What makes them meaningfully different from competitors
What feeling they want customers to walk away with
When you have that clarity, everything you design has a reason behind it.
And you can explain that reason to the client in plain language.
That is what builds trust and gets you referrals.
Mistake 2: Inconsistency Across Every Touchpoint
Their Instagram or Meta lacks content and looks nothing like their website.
Their business card uses a different font from their email signature.
Their packaging feels like it belongs to a completely different company.
When a potential customer sees a business in five different places and it looks like five different brands, they do not feel confident. Confidence is what makes people buy.
The fix is a proper brand system, not just a logo file.
A clear set of rules that covers:
Primary and secondary color palette
Font choices and how to use them
Spacing, scale, and layout rules
Tone of voice guidelines
How the brand appears across print, digital, and social
This is exactly why a solid brand guidelines document matters.
When you hand a client a polished, thorough brand system, they know how to use it correctly without coming back to you every week.
Get my designer playbook which includes all my templates built to make that handoff clean and professional every time.
Mistake 3: Their Brand Has Outgrown Where They Started
Most small businesses build their brand when they are just getting off the ground.
They did not fully understand their customer yet.
They were figuring it out as they went.
And the brand they built back then reflects that early version of the business, not where they are today.
The result is a brand that feels misaligned.
The website is outdated.
The testimonials are old or missing entirely.
And the calls to action are either buried, confusing, or just not there at all.
If the brand no longer reflects the promise the business is actually delivering, it is time for a reset.
As the designer, watch for these signs:
Their website copy does not reflect who they actually serve now
There are no clear calls to action telling visitors what to do next
Testimonials are outdated, thin, or missing from key pages
The visual identity feels like it belongs to a younger, less confident version of the business
New services or products have been added but the brand has not kept up
This is one of the most rewarding projects to work on because the business owner already has proof.
They have results, happy clients, and a track record. Your job is to build a brand that finally matches the level they are actually operating at.
That conversation alone can open the door to a full brand refresh and website project, which is one of the highest value engagements you can land as a solo designer.
Mistake 4: Generic Stock Visuals Everywhere
Their website is full of photos grabbed from free stock sites.
There is nothing wrong with it but we have AI to help us make better images.
This is a conversation worth having with your clients early. Here is how to frame it:
Even a small budget for real photography changes perception dramatically
Brand-aligned illustrations or custom graphics work when photography is not possible
Curate stock images carefully if budget is tight, choose ones that feel real and human
Consistency in photography style is just as important as the photos themselves
When you guide clients toward better visual choices, you are not just designing for them.
Create them a AI prompt guide and the tool you recommend them using.
You are thinking like a brand partner.
And that is the version of you that commands higher fees and longer relationships.
Jeremy




