Copywriter, Creative Writer & Brand Photographer at Sarah Wayte Creative
Answered 5 months ago
Consistency in copywriting isn't about sticking to a script or obsessing over whether you've used the same adjective three times this month. It's about knowing who you are and refusing to water that down to make everyone comfortable. My brand voice is mine because I made it that way. It's sharp. It's opinionated. It's got a healthy dose of side-eye for the online business cliches we're all sick of. I don't write to tick boxes or make the algorithm happy. I write to make real humans stop scrolling and feel something. And that kind of consistency doesn't come from a brand board. It comes from actually giving a damn. I've spent years getting crystal clear on what I stand for, what I won't tolerate and what tone of voice feels like a full-body yes. So when I sit down to write—whether it's a cheeky LinkedIn post or a deep-dive sales page—I don't have to second-guess. If it doesn't sound like me, it doesn't get published. Simple as that. I once rewrote a sales page for a creative coach whose original copy sounded polished and professional... and completely unlike her. It read like she was trying to impress LinkedIn instead of speak to her people. When we stripped it back and leaned into her actual personality—smart, funny, no filter—it not only felt more like her, it worked. She saw a massive spike in consult bookings after it went live. Proof that being consistent doesn't mean being safe. It means being real. Your brand voice shouldn't feel like something you have to remember. It should feel like coming home.
To ensure my copywriting is consistent with the brand voice and tone, I always start by thoroughly understanding the brand's mission, values, and target audience. I then develop a style guide that includes key phrases, tone guidelines, and examples of dos and don'ts. This guide helps maintain consistency across all content, whether it's for ads, blog posts, or social media. A specific example would be when I worked with a health and wellness brand. Their tone was approachable yet authoritative, so I made sure the language was conversational but backed by credible information. I avoided using overly technical jargon, instead focusing on clear, relatable language that made their products feel accessible to a wide audience. The result? The content resonated with customers, helping to drive engagement and build trust in the brand. Consistency is key in fostering familiarity, and it ensures that customers hear the same message regardless of where they interact with the brand.
We maintain a consistent brand voice across all of our copy by ensuring that our brand voice aligns with our values, worldview, and way of seeing things. We live it before we write it. For us, consistency comes from clarity. Our voice reflects our experience, our standard of execution, and our high-leverage philosophy, which shows up in everything from our blog posts to our pitch decks. Here's the actual process we use to ensure brand consistency: 1. Voice First, Text Second We don't write first; we speak, voice-record our thoughts, and transcribe them. That's how we get the tone right. The spoken word is raw and honest, capturing phrasing, rhythm, and opinions in ways text rarely does from scratch. It also gives us material that sounds like us because it is us. 2. Draft With AI, Refine With Standards We'll run the transcript through tools like ChatGPT to refine and organise it. Then, we use Grammarly to tighten it up for polish. But none of these tools publishes it for us - that's our job. We still use human judgment to ask: "Is this true? Is this on-brand? Would we say this to a client face-to-face?" 3. Two-Person Sign-Off Rule Every piece goes through two sets of eyes: one writer and one reviewer. The reviewer isn't there to fix grammar; they're there to protect the brand. We ask: Does this sound like us? Is it too safe? Too generic? Does it challenge or inspire the way we want it to? We recently wrote a blog on AI-powered sales assistants. It started as a voice note. We structured it with AI, cleaned it with Grammarly, and then went through three internal rounds to align it with our tone - direct and insightful. That's the bar. Your brand voice is more than adjectives and taglines. It's the standard you operate by. And if your team lives it, your copy will never stray too far from it.
Ensuring our copywriting consistently reflects our brand voice and tone involves a multi-faceted approach, starting with a clearly defined brand style guide. This guide meticulously outlines our brand's personality - whether it's authoritative, friendly, or innovative - along with specific guidelines on word choice, sentence structure, and even the use of humor or technical jargon. Before any piece of copy is finalized, it undergoes a review process where we check for alignment with these established guidelines. This ensures that every communication, from website content to social media posts, speaks with a unified and recognizable voice. One example of how we've maintained brand consistency in our writing involves crafting website copy for a new product feature. Our brand voice is typically informative and straightforward, emphasizing clarity and user benefit. When writing about this feature, we avoided overly technical language, focusing instead on explaining its value proposition in a clear and concise manner, using active voice and direct phrasing - hallmarks of our brand's communication style. We also ensured that the overall tone remained helpful and user-centric, reflecting our commitment to empowering our audience with knowledge. Even when highlighting the innovative aspects of the feature, we grounded the language in practical benefits, ensuring that the excitement didn't overshadow the clarity and trustworthiness that define our brand voice.
Consistency in brand voice is undoubtedly important, but I think sometimes we forget about nuance. The goal is that if you take your brand's logo off an asset, people can still instantly recognize your brand voice. The more you can do this, the more your brand gets lodged in their memories (especially if the voice in question aligns with their values). That said, too many people don't make the distinction between voice and tone. So while your voice should be consistent, your tone will likely change depending on the platform you're writing for. If you look at a brand like Wendy's, you can clearly see how this works. Its snarky and sarcastic tone on socials is iconic. But if you go to the website, you'll see that the copy is much less about humor and much more about clarity. As a golden rule, the closer you get to the product, the more your copy should focus on clarity and wayfinding. Starbucks is another great example. It actually uses two brand voices: - Functional - helpful copy that focuses on the product and helps customers find their way - Expressive - shows the brand's personality and is used to present product truths in a fresh or thought-provoking way So yes, consistency matters. And yes, it starts with clear and accessible brand guidelines. But my advice is to ditch the idea of having "brand police" and instead aim for "brand enablers". Doing this gives you space to play with tone and tailor it to native platforms or specific copy goals.
It starts with knowing exactly how the brand should feel when someone reads it. Before writing, I ask what the tone needs to carry: calm, sharp, warm, or direct. That helps guide the rhythm and word choices. For example, when we rewrote our service pages, I made sure every line sounded like something I would say out loud. Clear language, steady tone, and no filler. That consistency made the brand feel familiar across every touchpoint, from a homepage to a one-line reply.
When you're creating the framework for your brand's voice, tone, and messaging, you need to make sure it's consistent with something you'll be able to create each day. As in, don't try to sound like a buttoned-up expert if you naturally sound like someone's best friend. If you're clear on your brand's tone and identity (how you want people to perceive you) then writing copy should be pretty intuitive. After that, you can always edit through the lens of "does this help with my brand consistency?"
Detailed brand voice guidelines that outline not only how we talk but how we don't (e.g., words, phrases, and cliches we avoid like the plague). It may seem like a little thing, but it sets the guardrails to make sure we don't sound like our competitors or default to generic corporate-speak.
There is no shortcut to putting in the reps. Not even ChatGPT can save you..... I have been writing for brands and businesses since 2016 and in that time have had hundreds of paid gigs with such ventures. I've had to review briefs, study founders, and companies in order to get paid the way that I want. So my tip? It's not rocket science... 1. Simply put in the effort to actually research the brand that you are writing for. 2. Write for a long time at a high volume. You can follow me on LinkedIn for examples of consistency. (have over 180k followers who seem to think I'm pretty consistent)
To keep my copywriting consistent with our brand voice and tone, I start by clearly defining the brand's personality and key messaging pillars. For Kalam Kagaz, we focus on being approachable, knowledgeable, and trustworthy. I create detailed brand guidelines that cover language style, preferred vocabulary, and the emotions we want to evoke. For example, when writing website content or social media posts for Kalam Kagaz, I always revisit these guidelines to make sure every sentence aligns with our friendly yet professional tone. If a piece feels too formal or too casual, I revise it until it reflects that balance. This consistency builds trust with our audience and strengthens our brand identity over time.
We keep our tone sharp, direct, and no-nonsense, just like our clients in pest control. Every writer on our team follows a short internal style guide that includes tone, banned phrases, and examples of real copy we've shipped. It's not theoretical—it's battle-tested. For example, our blog intros always skip the fluff. When writing about termite control SEO, we led with: "You don't need traffic. You need calls." That voice appears in ads, landing pages, and emails, so our brand feels consistent wherever prospects engage.