Claude-skill-registry brand-archetype-selection

Provides Jungian brand archetype frameworks, the 12 archetypes with profiles, the 70/30 primary/secondary rule, archetype combinations, and selection templates. Auto-activates during brand archetype selection, emotional positioning, and brand personality work. Use when discussing brand archetypes, Jungian archetypes, 12 archetypes, Hero, Outlaw, Magician, Creator, Lover, Jester, Everyman, Caregiver, Ruler, Sage, Explorer, Innocent, 70/30 rule, Mark-Pearson, or archetype combinations.

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source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/data/brand-archetype-selection" ~/.claude/skills/majiayu000-claude-skill-registry-brand-archetype-selection && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/data/brand-archetype-selection/SKILL.md
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Brand Archetype Selection Framework

Quick reference for selecting brand archetypes using the Mark-Pearson methodology and Jungian psychology.

"Archetypes are the heartbeat of a brand because they convey a meaning that makes customers relate to a product as if it actually were alive in some way." — Margaret Mark & Carol Pearson


Psychological Foundations

Why Archetypes Work

Carl Jung proposed that beyond our personal unconscious lies a collective unconscious—a shared psychological inheritance containing archetypes: universal symbols, themes, and characters that appear across all human societies.

Key Insights:

  1. Subconscious Pattern Recognition: Our brains respond to archetypal stories as deeply familiar
  2. The 95% Rule: According to Harvard Professor Gerald Zaltman, 95% of purchasing decisions are made subconsciously
  3. Mirror Neuron Response: When encountering clear archetypal expression, our mirror neurons fire as if we were embodying that archetype ourselves
  4. Archetypes bypass the intellectual mind and produce feelings that lead to brand loyalty

The Business Case

A six-year Young & Rubicam study found that brands most clearly aligned with a single archetype were the most profitable.


The 70/30 Rule (Core Methodology)

Primary Archetype (70%): Your core personality that represents the majority of your brand. Any less and your personality will be confusing—you'll struggle to connect through familiarity.

Secondary "Influencer" Archetype (30%): Left to spend on differentiation. This is where you stand out from competitors who share your primary archetype.

Strategic Choice

  • Align with industry expectation (safety, meets customer expectations)
  • Go against the grain (differentiation opportunity, but riskier)

The Four Motivation Quadrants

The 12 archetypes are organized into four fundamental human motivations:

QuadrantMotivationArchetypes
Stability & ControlProviding structure to the worldInnocent, Everyman, Ruler, Caregiver
Independence & FulfillmentThe yearning for paradiseHero, Outlaw, Explorer, Sage
Mastery & RiskLeaving a thumbprint on the worldMagician, Creator
Belonging & EnjoymentNo one is an islandLover, Jester

The 12 Archetypes Quick Reference

ArchetypeMottoCore DesireGreatest FearGift
Innocent"Free to be you and me"Happiness, paradisePunishment for wrongdoingFaith, optimism
Everyman"All are created equal"Belonging, connectionBeing rejected, left outRealism, empathy
Hero"Where there's a will, there's a way"Prove worth through courageWeakness, vulnerabilityCompetence, courage
Outlaw"Rules are made to be broken"Revolution, freedomPowerlessness, being ordinaryRadical freedom
Explorer"Don't fence me in"Freedom to discover oneselfGetting trapped, conformityAutonomy, ambition
Creator"If you can imagine it, it can be created"Create enduring valueMediocre vision/executionCreativity, imagination
Ruler"Power isn't everything. It's the only thing."ControlChaos, being overthrownResponsibility, leadership
Magician"I make things happen"Transform realityUnintended consequencesFinding win-win solutions
Lover"You're the only one"Intimacy, experienceBeing alone, unwantedPassion, commitment
Caregiver"Love your neighbor as yourself"Protect and care for othersSelfishness, ingratitudeCompassion, generosity
Sage"The truth will set you free"Discover the truthBeing duped, ignoranceWisdom
Jester"You only live once"Live in the momentBeing bored or boringJoy

R-O-A-D Map Framework (Kaye Putnam)

R - Review your brand values, audience, and competitive landscape O - Observe how each archetype feels when applied to your brand A - Align with your business goals and ideal client D - Decide on primary (dominant) and secondary (influencer) archetypes


Industry Default Archetypes

IndustryDefault ArchetypeNotes
HealthcareCaregiverExpected; breaking from this is risky but differentiating
FinanceSage or RulerTrust and expertise expected
TechnologyCreator or MagicianInnovation and transformation
LuxuryRuler or LoverStatus and desire
Outdoor/AdventureExplorerFreedom and discovery
Sports/FitnessHeroAchievement and overcoming
EntertainmentJester or MagicianFun and transformation
Food (comfort)Caregiver or EverymanNourishment and belonging

Archetype Combinations

Complementary (These Work Well)

PrimarySecondaryEffectExample
RulerCreatorAuthority with innovationChanel
OutlawExplorerRebellion with adventureRoxy
EverymanLoverWelcoming with emotional depthAirbnb
SageMagicianWisdom with transformationTED
HeroCaregiverStrength with compassionHealthcare brands
CreatorSageInnovation with expertiseAdobe
ExplorerOutlawAdventure with counter-culturePatagonia

Problematic (Use with Caution)

CombinationConflict
Jester + RulerPlayfulness vs. authority
Innocent + OutlawPurity vs. rebellion
Sage + JesterWisdom vs. playfulness
Ruler + EverymanExclusivity vs. accessibility
Caregiver + OutlawNurturing vs. disruption

Customer Journey Archetype Strategy

Different archetypes can be relevant at different stages:

StageArchetype PurposeExample
AwarenessDifferentiating archetypeRebel energy to stand out
SalesExpertise archetypeSage energy to build trust
SupportComfort archetypeCaregiver energy to nurture

Apple Example: Creator in product development, Outlaw in awareness marketing, Sage when teaching customers, Caregiver when providing support.


Common Mistakes & Anti-Patterns

#MistakeThe Fix
1Trying to Be Everything (too many archetypes)Commit to one primary; use secondary sparingly
2Inconsistent ApplicationEvery touchpoint must reflect archetype
3Ignoring Your AudienceMust align with customer expectations and desires
4Overused Without DifferentiationAdd secondary archetype for uniqueness
5Ignoring Shadow SidesUnderstand and mitigate archetype weaknesses
6Making It Too RigidAllow room for growth and adaptation
7Cultural BlindnessVet archetypes for target cultural context

Shadow Sides (Weaknesses to Avoid)

ArchetypeShadow SideWhat to Avoid
InnocentNaive, in denialSeeming out of touch with reality
EverymanBland, forgettableNo distinctive point of view
HeroArrogant, aggressivePutting others down, being preachy
OutlawDestructive, alienatingRebellion without purpose
ExplorerAimless, flakyUnable to commit or be relied upon
CreatorPerfectionist, impracticalDismissive of execution details
RulerTyrannical, elitistAppearing arrogant or inaccessible
MagicianManipulative, over-promisingSmoke and mirrors, undeliverable claims
LoverObsessive, shallowDesperate for approval, purely superficial
CaregiverMartyring, smotheringMaking customers feel incompetent
SageCondescending, disconnectedTalking down, ivory-tower thinking
JesterIrresponsible, offensiveHumor that punches down, inability to be serious

Selection Validation Tests

Apply these tests before finalizing archetype selection:

TestQuestionPass Criteria
Authenticity TestDoes this feel true to the founder/brand?Resonates deeply, not forced
Audience TestDoes this archetype resonate with our customers?Matches their emotional needs
Differentiation TestDoes this stand out from competitors?Not the same as direct competitors
Consistency TestCan we express this across all touchpoints?Translates to voice, visuals, experience
Longevity TestWill this still fit in 5-10 years?Not tied to trends, core to identity
Shadow TestCan we avoid the archetype's dark side?Have plan to mitigate weaknesses

Differentiating Within an Archetype

When competitors share your archetype:

  1. Add a secondary archetype for unique flavor
  2. Go deeper into sub-archetypes — find unique angle within archetype
  3. Own specific territories — causes, aesthetics, customer segments
  4. Develop unique voice within archetype — Nike vs. FedEx are both Hero

Key Principles

From Mark & Pearson

  • "Archetypes are the heartbeat of a brand"
  • Discover the "soul" of your brand through archetypal analysis
  • Express that soul in ways that tap into universal stories
  • Achieve iconic brand identity that withstands time

From Neumeier

  • "A brand is not what you say it is. It's what they say it is."
  • Focus on differentiation and "onliness"
  • Archetypes are one tool in the toolkit, not the entire strategy

Core Truths

  1. Archetypes are shortcuts to meaning — they accelerate emotional connection
  2. Consistency compounds — consistent expression builds trust (up to 23% revenue increase)
  3. Primary archetype clarity beats complexity — one clear archetype outperforms blends
  4. Archetypes must be authentic — forcing misalignment creates dissonance
  5. Differentiation happens at the edges — same archetype, different expression

Templates

See reference/templates.md for:

  • Archetype Selection Worksheet
  • Archetype Profile Template
  • Competitive Archetype Mapping Template
  • Archetype Combination Validation Template
  • Archetype Expression Guide Template
  • Quick Reference Card Template
  • Full Archetype Documentation Template

When to Apply This Knowledge

During Competitive Analysis

  • Map competitors to archetypes
  • Identify archetype gaps in market
  • Find differentiation opportunities

During Archetype Selection

  • Review all 12 archetypes against brand values
  • Apply the 70/30 rule for primary/secondary
  • Validate combinations are complementary

During Archetype Validation

  • Run all 6 validation tests
  • Check against common mistakes
  • Assess shadow side mitigation

During Final Documentation

  • Include complete archetype profiles
  • Document expression guidelines
  • Provide quick reference card