


For years, I carried around this quiet frustration about myself.
I’d get excited about an idea, throw myself into it, build something… and then (seemingly out of nowhere) my energy would shift. I’d lose interest, start questioning the whole thing, and end up moving on to something completely different.
New offer. New project. New direction.
And the story I told myself was always the same:
“Why can’t you just stick to one thing?”
“What is wrong with you?”
“Everyone else seems so consistent.”
If you’ve ever felt that way, you’ll know it’s not just annoying — it can actually chip away at your confidence. Because when you’re constantly starting again, it’s easy to label it as failure.
But then I discovered brand archetypes — and everything reframed.
Not in a fluffy “this is your vibe” way.
In a practical, grounding way that finally gave me language for what had been happening all along.
When I got my result, it wasn’t just interesting.
It was relieving.
Because it helped me see a pattern that had been there for years:
I’m a Creator.
And creators don’t thrive by forcing themselves into rigid, narrow boxes. Creators thrive when they’re allowed to explore, build, iterate, refine, and bring new things to life.
That “I start something, then move on” tendency?
It wasn’t a character flaw.
It was a signal.
A signal that I’m designed to generate ideas, build, test, evolve — and that my work needs room for creativity to breathe.
Here’s what the Creator archetype gave me (that I didn’t realise I was missing):
1) Self-trust
Instead of assuming my instinct to change direction meant I was flaky, I started asking a better question:
“Is this a natural evolution… or am I avoiding discomfort?”
That one distinction is powerful.
2) Permission to build in seasons
I stopped expecting myself to create in one straight line. I started building in cycles: create → share → refine → create again.
3) A brand that fits who I am
Once I accepted my Creator energy, I stopped trying to market like someone else — and started building a brand identity that supports how I naturally operate.
4) Authentic confidence
Not the “I’ve got it all figured out” kind.
The calmer kind that comes from understanding yourself and working with your wiring instead of against it.
Creators often notice things like:
And when you don’t understand this pattern, you can end up stuck in self-criticism.
But when you do understand it, you can build your business and brand around it — without constantly feeling like you’re doing it “wrong”.
If you’re new to archetypes, here’s a simple overview. As you read, notice what sounds most like you — not what you aspire to be.
None are “better” than the others. They’re just different routes to trust, connection, and influence.
Before archetypes, “be authentic” felt like vague advice.
After archetypes, authenticity became something I could actually do.
Because once I knew my pattern, I stopped trying to force consistency that didn’t suit me.
I started building a brand that uses my creativity instead of fighting it.
And honestly? It’s been one of the most freeing shifts in my business life.
Maybe you’re not.
Maybe you’re just building a brand without the right framework.
Discovering your brand archetype can give you language, direction, and permission to grow into who you already are — and build from there.
And that’s exactly why I created my Personal Brand Archetype Quiz and the game-changing $25 Brand Activation Kits.
Because your archetype isn’t just a label.
It’s a way to stop second-guessing yourself… and start showing up as you on purpose.
If you haven’t taken the quiz yet, start there.
And if you already know your archetype, choose your kit and let’s activate it.