
Brand Voice in 30 Minutes:
A Quick Workshop for Small Teams
Most small business owners hear “brand voice” and picture a 40-page brand guide that took a marketing agency three months and $15,000 to produce.
That’s not what this is.
Brand voice is simpler than that. It’s just the way your business sounds when it talks to people – in your website copy, your social posts, your emails, your text replies to customers. Consistent tone builds trust. Inconsistent tone makes people feel like they’re dealing with a different company every time.
The good news: you can define yours in about 30 minutes. Here’s the workshop.
Before You Start: What Brand Voice Actually Is (And Isn’t)
Brand voice is: The consistent personality and tone your business communicates in, across every piece of written content.
Brand voice is not: A logo, a color palette, or a font choice. Those are brand identity. Voice is different – it’s about words, not visuals.
And here’s the part most small business owners miss: you already have a brand voice. It’s just not defined yet. The way you talk to customers at the counter, the way you explain your work, the way you describe what makes you different – that’s your voice. This workshop just captures it.
Step 1: Answer These 5 Questions (10 Minutes)
Grab a notepad or open a blank doc. Answer these honestly – don’t overthink them.
1. If your business were a person, how would you describe their personality in 3 words?
(Examples: straightforward, warm, no-nonsense / expert, approachable, local / bold, plain-spoken, reliable)
2. Who are you talking to?
Be specific. Not “small business owners” – “a 48-year-old HVAC contractor in Wauseon who’s been burned by a web agency before and just wants someone straight with him.”
3. What do you want people to feel after reading your content?
(Examples: relieved, confident, understood, ready to take action)
4. What tone do you want to avoid?
(Examples: too corporate, too casual, too salesy, too technical, too cheerful)
5. What’s one brand you think communicates really well?
It doesn’t have to be in your industry. Just something where the words always feel right to you.
Step 2: Build Your Voice Filter (10 Minutes)
Take your answers and turn them into a simple 3-column filter. This is the most useful brand voice tool you’ll ever build, and it fits on a Post-it note.
| We are… | We are not… | We sound like… |
|---|---|---|
| Straightforward | Corporate or stiff | A trusted neighbor who happens to know a lot |
| Warm but direct | Overly casual or jokey | Someone who respects your time |
| Local and grounded | Generic or cookie-cutter | A real person, not a press release |
Fill this in with your own words from Step 1. Three rows is enough. You’re not writing a dissertation – you’re building a quick filter you can check copy against.
How to use it: Before you post anything, ask: does this sound like the middle column? If yes, rewrite it. Does it sound like the right column? You’re good.
Step 3: Write 3 Example Sentences (10 Minutes)
This is the part that makes everything real. Write one sentence for each of these:
A. How you introduce what you do:
(Your homepage hero text, basically. Who you help, what you do, where.)
B. How you handle a customer objection:
(Something like “We know hiring a web designer feels like a gamble. Here’s how we make it not feel that way.”)
C. How you close a piece of content:
(Your CTA voice. “Ready to talk?” vs. “Schedule a consultation today” vs. “Let’s figure out what your site needs.”)
These three sentences become your baseline. When you’re writing new content and it feels off, compare it to these. If it doesn’t sound like the same person who wrote them, revise.
A Quick Example: Day & Night Media’s Voice Filter
Since we’re asking you to do this work, it’s only fair we show ours:
| We are… | We are not… | We sound like… |
|---|---|---|
| Direct and plain-spoken | Corporate, jargon-heavy | A straight-talking local who’s done this before |
| Warm and invested | Salesy or pushy | Someone rooting for your business, not just billing it |
| Strategy-first | Template-driven or generic | A partner, not a vendor |
Every piece of content we write – including this post – gets checked against that filter. If it sounds like a press release, we rewrite it. If it sounds like the person who’d give you an honest answer over coffee, we’re done.
What to Do With Your Voice Filter Now
Once you have it, use it everywhere:
- Website copy – run every page through the filter before it goes live
- Social media – especially LinkedIn and Facebook, where “corporate creep” happens fast
- Email replies – yes, even those. Consistency in small moments adds up.
- Working with contractors or VAs – hand them the filter so they write in your voice, not theirs
If you ever hire someone to write content for you, this is the single most valuable document you can give them. It saves revisions, miscommunications, and the frustrating experience of getting back copy that sounds like it came from a stranger.
Your Brand Voice, Defined in Half an Hour
You don’t need an agency or a giant document to sound consistent. You need three words, a filter, and three sentences. Everything else builds from there.
If you’d like help putting this into practice across your website and content – or if you’re starting from scratch and want brand voice built into your site from day one – that’s exactly what we do.
Start a branding project → | Learn about our content writing services →
Day & Night Media builds websites and local SEO presence for small-town service businesses across Fulton County and NW Ohio. Big-agency strategy. Small-town clarity. A price that doesn’t make you nervous.





