The argument in one line.
Choose a social media archetype based on the resources you actually have—not the coolest strategy—and execute it relentlessly to build a content system that works.
Read if. Skip if.
- A social media manager or in-house marketer at an established brand with 6+ months of posting history who wants to audit and redirect an underperforming strategy.
- A freelancer or agency strategist preparing client proposals who needs a repeatable framework to establish buy-in before execution.
- A founder or operator running social yourself who knows you're inconsistent but haven't diagnosed whether it's execution, strategy, or the wrong archetype entirely.
- A brand leader tasked with getting leadership alignment on social media strategy and needs a language executives already understand from traditional brand work.
- You're looking for tactical content creation tips — this is strategy-first, not how-to-shoot-or-edit focused.
- You're building social media from absolute zero with no existing posts or audience to audit; this assumes you have something to diagnose and redirect.
The full version, fast.
Brand archetypes turn social media from random posting into a repeatable strategy by defining the role a brand plays in its audience's world. The framework presents five archetypes � Oracle (deep expertise explainers), Performer (entertainment-first shows), World Builder (creative content far beyond the product), Catalyst (aspirational guidance toward a better self), and Helper (practical, relatable tips) � each with a guiding question, content formats, and brand case studies spanning software, fashion, manufacturing, and retail. The critical prerequisite most teams skip is a resource audit before picking an archetype: map who can appear on camera, who can design, what budget exists, and what the company actually has access to film. Pick the role you can staff, then build content pillars around it.
Chat with this breakdown — free.
Sign in and you get 23 free chat messages on us — ask for the hook, quote a framework, find the exact transcript moment, generate a markdown action plan. Bring your own key when you want unlimited.
Create a free account →Where the time goes.

01 · Cold open + thesis
Sponsor tag, then immediately: 'archetypes are the secret weapon for brand social media.' Defines archetype as the role a brand plays in a consumer's world.

02 · Promise + credibility
Names the audience (you've started on social, it's not landing), stacks credibility (Cut30, Fortune 500 workshops), maps the video.

03 · Why exercises work
Why filling out a doc beats vibes: makes freelancers look pro, helps internal employees pitch leadership.

04 · Archetypes context
Origin in brand strategy / CMO world; this video distills the executive concept down for social.

05 · The hidden prerequisite — resource audit
Brands fail because they pick an archetype they can't staff. Audit who can be on camera, who designs, what you can showcase BEFORE picking.

06 · Putting the roadmap together
Cross-reference archetype + resources, build a brainstorm list that becomes a content roadmap feeding into content pillars.

07 · Archetype 1: The Oracle — definition
Best for brands that can teach with deep expertise. Question: what does our customer need to understand about the world we inhabit?
08 · Oracle — four content types
Historical explainers, category comparisons, why things are the way they are, predictions for the future. Chess sets, dentist, industrial parts examples.
09 · Oracle — case studies
Kensaku/Front Office (workwear/salvage denim), Blam Motorworks (Porsche restoration), Kreiss Furniture (founder-driven on second account), Rarify (rotating team).
10 · Archetype 2: The Performer
Content as a show — entertainment-driven, personality-first, built to be binged. Product is omnipresent but rarely pitched. Examples: Duer, Mohawk Chevrolet, LC Sign.
11 · SPONSOR: Framer shaders
Mid-roll integration framed as a tactical demo — how to use shader backgrounds in Framer. Lands as bonus tutorial, not ad-break.
12 · Archetype 3: The World Builder
Massive creative swing — content far beyond what brand sells, built so people love the brand right next to it. Examples: Death to Stock, Cluely, Fern.
13 · Archetype 4: The Catalyst
Bridges who customer is and who they want to be. Educational + aspirational. Examples: Artifaxing, base-living curation, Kreis Group manufacturing.
14 · Archetype 5: The Helper
Brands with no deep expert. Practical (not aspirational) help from relatable creators. Examples: Kyoko Beauty, Hashi Home, Marpipe.
15 · The organic-paid bridge (Marpipe insight)
Tangential informational content from a creator-on-main reduces paid ad friction — brand recognition makes the click easier.
16 · CTA stack + closing exhortation
Community call, HYPER newsletter cheat sheet, Cut30 bootcamp. 'Stop trying to be everything to everybody and lock in on one archetype.'
Lines worth screenshotting.
- Before picking a brand archetype, audit your actual resources — who can be on camera, who can design, what content you can realistically film — or you will pick a fantasy strategy.
- The Oracle archetype works only if you have a genuine domain expert on staff; without that person, every other archetype is a better fit.
- Historical explainer content, category comparisons, and 'why things are the way they are' posts are the three content pillars that drive Oracle accounts.
- The resource audit step is what separates a content strategy that gets executed from one that lives in a Notion doc.
- Archetypes are a translation layer between high-level brand strategy (what CMOs discuss) and daily content decisions (what creators actually publish).
- Picking an archetype you cannot staff is more damaging than picking a less exciting one you can sustain for 12 months.
- The World Builder archetype creates a universe of references and lore that makes the audience feel like insiders over time.
- The Catalyst archetype centers the brand as a connector of people rather than a source of information.
- The Helper archetype is the default choice for service businesses where the product is expertise delivered as assistance.
- A content brainstorm conducted inside the archetype frame produces ideas the team is already excited about, which solves the buy-in problem before launch.
- Brand archetypes collapse the gap between 'we need a social strategy' and 'here is a list of specific videos we will make next month.'
- The Performer archetype is high-ceiling and high-risk — it requires consistent on-camera charisma and collapses if the talent becomes unavailable.
Steal the framework-as-content playbook.
Frameworks travel — name the taxonomy, audit the resources, then deliver case studies. The teach IS the lead magnet.
- Open with the deliverable in line one, receipts in line two — Oren names 'archetypes' inside 8 seconds and Cut30/Fortune 500 inside 60.
- Plant the prerequisite step everyone else skips — 'audit your resources before you pick' is the load-bearing insight; lead with the thing readers don't already know.
- For every named item in your framework, ship the four-part pattern: definition / question to ask / content type it produces / 2-4 case studies with brand names.
- Single-setup shoot + aggressive yellow word-pop captions + PIP brand B-roll = a 22-minute video you can produce in one day with one camera.
- Ad-reads as tactical demos, not ad-breaks. Frame the sponsor as a bonus tutorial inside the flow (Oren's Framer shader demo is the model).
- Triple-funnel close: live workshop (high-intent) -> newsletter cheat sheet (asset capture) -> paid bootcamp. Each CTA hits a different temperature.
- Steal the 'two-account method' for any founder-led brand — founder personal account funnels into brand main, brand doesn't depend on founder.
Terms worth knowing.
- Brand archetype
- A recurring personality pattern drawn from psychology and marketing theory that defines the role a brand plays in a customer's life — such as the Helper, the Oracle, or the Performer — used to guide voice, content, and strategy.
- Oracle archetype
- A brand social media role centered on sharing expert knowledge and predictions, positioning the brand as a trusted authority that consumers turn to for insight.
- Performer archetype
- A brand social media role built around entertainment — videos, humor, spectacle — where the brand earns attention through enjoyment rather than information alone.
- World Builder archetype
- A brand social media role that creates an immersive universe around a lifestyle or aesthetic, drawing audiences into a world they want to be part of.
- Catalyst archetype
- A brand social media role that sparks conversation and mobilizes community action, positioning the brand as an agent of change rather than a content publisher.
- Helper archetype
- A brand social media role that earns trust by solving problems and providing practical value, often through tutorials, how-to content, or direct customer support in public.
- Resource audit
- A pre-strategy assessment of what a brand actually has available — team size, budget, production capabilities, content cadence — to ensure the chosen content strategy can be realistically staffed and sustained.
- CMO
- Chief Marketing Officer — the executive responsible for a company's overall marketing strategy, brand positioning, and communications.
- Brand persona
- A semi-fictional personality profile that defines how a brand speaks, acts, and presents itself — including tone of voice, values, and character traits — used to keep all communications consistent.
- Content cadence
- The frequency and scheduling rhythm at which a brand publishes content on social media or other channels, such as posting three times per week at set times.
Things they pointed at.
Lines you could clip.
“A lot of brands have an idea for some amazing thing they wanna do on social. But rarely does anyone actually ever do the big idea. Why not? Because they're constrained.”
“A lot of people work in social media. Not a lot of people make social media actually bang.”
“If you have a brand that just can't make anything interesting and you're spending money going nowhere — use that same budget to do something interesting. This is the time.”
“Stop trying to be everything to everybody and lock in on one archetype.”
“There's a story behind every screw, every bolt, every welding piece. You'll be surprised how deep people nerd out about them.”
Word for word.
Don't just watch it. Burn it in.
See every word as it's spoken — crank it to 2× and still catch all of it. The same dual-channel trick behind Amazon's Kindle + Audible.
The bait, then the rug-pull.
Oren John opens with a sponsor-tagged cold-cut to the thesis: archetypes are the secret weapon for brand social media. By second eight he has named the deliverable, by minute one he has stacked the receipts (hundreds of Cut30 brands, Fortune 500 workshops), and by minute three he has reframed the problem most strategy videos miss — the issue isn't picking a strategy, it's matching the strategy to the resources you can actually staff.
Named ideas worth stealing.
The Five Brand Social Archetypes
- The Oracle
- The Performer
- The World Builder
- The Catalyst
- The Helper
Decision tree for which role your brand plays on social media — each archetype maps to a different resource profile (expert vs. cast vs. creative team vs. relatable creator).
Resource Audit Prerequisite
- Who can be on camera
- Who can design (internal/agency/budgeted)
- What can you showcase (what is going on at the company that you can make content about)
Cross-reference what you have against what each archetype requires BEFORE picking. Brands fail because they pick the cool-sounding archetype, not the one they can staff.
Oracle's Four Content Types
- Historical explainers
- Category comparisons (is X or Y better for Z)
- Why things are the way they are
- Predictions for the future
Sub-framework inside the Oracle archetype — gives Oracle-type brands a four-pillar content matrix.
Two-Account Method
Run brand main account for typical content + founder personal account for expertise-driven top-of-funnel. Founder feeds the brand, brand doesn't have to rely on founder.
Organic-to-Paid Bridge
Tangential informational content from a creator-on-main reduces paid ad friction — brand recognition makes the click easier when the same brand's ads show up later. Marpipe case study.
How they asked for the click.
“If you have questions about this or wanna workshop this for your brand, the community call info is below... All of these archetypes, I will have the cheat sheet for down below as well.”
Triple-funnel close: live community call (high-intent), HYPER newsletter for the cheat sheet (asset-gated), Cut30 bootcamp for paid program. Each CTA targets a different temperature.









































































