
Everyone talks about fancy edits and using trends on social, but no one is talking about how a unique brand voice and tone can help you stand out on social media. Let’s get into it.
A lot of brands know they need to be polarizing on social to stand out, but polarizing doesn’t mean aggressive or controversial. It just means being distinct enough that people either deeply resonate with you or quickly realize you’re not for them. Both outcomes are a win. You can have a witty, funny tone and still be polarizing. You can be quirky and bold while still having a clear point of view. The real question is: what’s the emotional experience you want to create? Do you want people to feel seen, motivated, called out (in the best way), or entertained? Get specific. That feeling becomes the north star for every piece of content you create.
This is where it gets practical. If you’re a health coach working with other women, maybe you open something like “Babes, I wish someone told me this.” That phrasing alone tells us everything, the audience, the energy, the relationship you’re building. Start by listing out the words, phrases, and even sentence structures that feel like YOU. Then make an equally important list of what to avoid. For example, if you’re building a serious financial brand that works with corporate clients, casually mentioning Mercury retrograde might undercut the authority you’re trying to establish. Both lists matter just as much as each other. BONUS: Writing this guide and having it in one place can be helpful if you are looking to expand your team and want to train a social media manager or VA on your team.
Brand voice isn’t just about what you say. It’s about how reliably you show up saying it. Your audience should be able to read a caption, watch a reel, or land on your website and immediately recognize it’s YOU, even without seeing your name or face. That means your voice needs to translate across formats. The way you write a carousel caption should feel like a written version of how you’d talk in a video. A good gut check: if you handed a piece of content to someone who knows your brand well, would they instantly know it came from YOU? If not, something’s off.
Finding your brand voice and tone isn’t a one-time exercise (it’s an ongoing practice). The more consistently you show up in your voice, the more your audience will know what to expect from you, and that predictability is actually what builds trust. You don’t have to have it ALL figured out before you start posting. Give yourself permission to refine it as you go. The brands that stand out on social aren’t the ones with the most followers or the most polished content, they’re the ones that feel unmistakably, unapologetically themselves.