The Brand Memory Architecture maps how your brand is actually stored, retrieved, and reconstructed in people’s minds — and identifies whether that cognitive infrastructure is working for or against you.
Your brand has awareness. People have heard of you. But when they try to describe what you do, they get it wrong. When they recommend you, they recommend you for the wrong thing. When they compare you to competitors, the comparison happens on dimensions you’d never choose.
This isn’t a messaging problem. It’s a memory problem. Your brand exists as a collection of associations, triggers, and reconstructed narratives in other people’s minds — and you have almost no visibility into what that structure actually looks like.
Customers and prospects describe what you do using language you’d never use. The market has built its own version of your story — and it doesn’t match yours.
Every person who refers you tells a different story. The narrative mutates with each retelling, and you have no control over which version spreads.
Brand tracking shows healthy awareness numbers. Pipeline says otherwise. People know your name but don’t think of you when the buying trigger fires.
Competitors occupy stronger positions in the same mental categories. When buyers think about the problem you solve, a competitor’s name surfaces first.
Brands are not stored as brand guidelines in people’s minds. They’re stored as layered memory structures — associations linked to triggers, organized into narratives, and constantly competing with other brands for cognitive space. The Brand Memory Architecture maps all four layers so you can see exactly where the structure is strong, where it’s degraded, and where competitors have the advantage.
Most brand work starts with what you want to say. This framework starts with what people actually remember — and works backward to the interventions that reshape it.
What people spontaneously link to your brand. Words, feelings, images, experiences. The raw material of memory — some intentional, most not. Inventoried through the Spontaneous Association Test.
What activates brand recall. Situations, needs, conversations, contexts that cause your brand to surface in memory. Mapped through the Memory Trigger Inventory.
The story that forms when associations connect. Not your brand story — the story people construct from fragments of memory. Revealed through Brand Story Telephone.
How your memory structure compares to competitors occupying the same cognitive territory. Where you dominate, where you’re invisible, and where you’re being displaced.
This isn’t just an internal exercise. We bring in perspectives from customers, partners, and market observers who reveal how the brand actually lives outside the building — not how the team hopes it does.
The exercise no brand audit includes. We trace how your brand narrative mutates as it passes from person to person — what gets amplified, what gets dropped, and what gets invented. This is the real shape of your word-of-mouth.
Not feature comparisons or positioning maps. We map which brand occupies which mental territory in your buyers’ minds — and identify the cognitive real estate that’s available, contested, or already lost.
CEO/Founder · CMO · VP Marketing · VP Sales · Head of Product · External Stakeholders
6–8 cross-functional, with external stakeholder input. Inside perspective alone is not enough.
A structured workshop that maps how your brand actually lives in people’s minds — the associations, triggers, and mental shortcuts people use when they think about you. It identifies which memory structures are helping you and which are actively working against you, then builds a plan to reshape them.
Petrichor’s proprietary framework with four layers: Association Layer (what people link to your brand), Trigger Layer (what activates those associations), Narrative Layer (the story that forms when associations connect), and Competitive Layer (how your memory structure compares to competitors occupying the same cognitive territory).
$7,500 for a 2.5-hour facilitated session including pre-workshop stakeholder interviews, all workshop materials, and 5 post-workshop deliverables within 48 hours.
6–8 participants, cross-functional — CEO/Founder, CMO, VP Marketing, VP Sales, Head of Product, plus external stakeholder input from customers, partners, or advisors who can represent how the brand is perceived outside the building.
Brand Memory Map, Association Inventory, Memory Trigger Assessment, Competitive Memory Analysis, and a Brand Memory Scorecard — all delivered within 48 hours of the session.
When customers recognize you but can’t accurately describe what you do, when word-of-mouth is inconsistent or off-message, when brand equity isn’t converting to pipeline, before a rebrand or brand refresh, or when you suspect the market’s mental model of you has drifted from reality.
Within 48 hours you receive all 5 deliverables. The Brand Memory Map becomes the foundation for messaging, content strategy, and brand architecture decisions. Petrichor follows up at 30 days to assess whether memory triggers are being activated and associations are shifting.
Traditional brand audits measure awareness and sentiment. This workshop maps the actual cognitive infrastructure — how your brand is stored, retrieved, and reconstructed in people’s minds. The Brand Story Telephone exercise reveals how your narrative mutates as it spreads, which no survey can capture.
Complete facilitator guide, slide deck, interactive worksheets, scorecard template, and pre-work document. Everything you need to run a structured session with your leadership team.
Or book a facilitated session for the full experience.
We’ll discuss whether this workshop fits your situation — and which layer of your brand’s memory architecture needs the most urgent attention.
Book a Workshop