Unknowing as a discipline
Great branding isn't a prediction of the future. It's creating the conditions where the right future become possible. That takes strategic imagination, not inherited habits.
You don't need someone who knows your industry's habits. You need someone who can see beyond them. Someone with the interpretive intelligence to identify the hidden patterns shaping your industry, not just operate within them.
That's a trained practice: systematic curiosity under uncertainty. It's the ability to ask "Does it have to be this way?" not because they don't understand the rules, but because they understand which rules are serving you and which are holding you back.
The right questions to ask
If industry experience isn't the right lens for evaluating a branding agency, what is?
Start with how they work, not where they've worked. How do they conduct research and discovery? What happens when they get a room full of stakeholders who can't agree on anything? How do they navigate that? When they need to bring in outside perspectives, how do they do it without turning the process into a slog? How do they get a team excited about the work, not just willing to approve it?
Then get specific about what you're dealing with. Maybe you've got a fifteen-person board and getting them aligned feels impossible. Have they worked through something like that? Maybe you're trying to speak to two different audiences with one brand.
How have they handled that kind of tension? Did it work?
Ask them what they believe branding is. Is it about crafting the perfect message? Do they think the goal is to convince people to buy, or to create the conditions where buying you makes sense?
These conversations tell you what you need to know: whether this agency has the thinking, the process, and the resilience to solve your problems. Not whether they've worked with companies that look like yours.
Some Truth About Agency Selection
Why capability beats familiarity
The future of your brand can't be built by people whose best arguments come from the past.
Your branding agency needs to understand how decisions happen (instantly, emotionally, through pattern recognition, not through logical analysis). They need to know how to design conditions, not just messages. They need the capability to configure your business (from operations to culture to market positioning) so that your value becomes obvious without having to be argued.
That capability doesn't come from working with companies like yours. It comes from disciplined thinking, rigorous process, and the resilience to solve problems that don't have obvious answers.
The marketer's advantage is experience. The brand strategist's advantage is the ability to reimagine experience.
Choose accordingly.
If you're considering how to choose your next brand partner, start here: How State of Assembly works.