The Journal — No. 02

When Values Meet Growth, Something Has to Give.

On the brands that mean it, the brands that perform it, and the moment you discover which one you're working with.

There is a conversation I have had many times, with many founders. It goes something like this.

The brand has been growing. The early customers found it precisely because it stood for something: provenance, craft, considered production, a genuine point of view about how things should be made and why. The story resonated. The press followed. And then, quietly, gradually, almost without anyone noticing, the thing that made the brand worth caring about started to cost more than the business wanted to pay for it.

Not all at once. Never all at once. That's not how it happens.

A few years ago I was brought in to lead a brand transformation for a business with real potential and almost no coherent narrative. The values, such as they were, had been written on a wall somewhere and promptly forgotten. The mission existed on a website page that nobody had read since the day it was published. The supply chain was functional but unexamined. The founder was smart, commercial, and focused on growth above almost everything else.

I gave my honest assessment. And I was clear about one thing: if I was going to help build a narrative, I would need assurance that the business would support it. That the story we told about provenance and craft and considered production would be backed by actual provenance, actual craft, actual considered production. That the narrative wouldn't be a layer applied to the outside of the business, but a reflection of what was genuinely happening inside it.

The founder's response was immediate and unambiguous. Nobody really cares about this stuff, he said. It's marketing. It makes people feel better about their purchases. It doesn't actually change anything.

I said the project wasn't for me.

There was a silence. And then something shifted. He leaned in, not because I had persuaded him, but because he realised I meant it. That I was genuinely prepared to walk away. And so we began.

What followed was, for a time, genuinely good work. The brand found a narrative that was true to what it was making and how it was making it. The story and the supply chain moved together. Customers responded not just to the product but to the conviction behind it — that particular quality of trust that builds when a brand says something and then demonstrably does it.

But businesses scale. Budgets tighten. The pressure to deliver the same results with less resource is a conversation that happens in every growing business, and it is in that conversation that you discover whether the values were truly foundational or merely convenient.

The erosion, when it came, was gradual. A lack of transparency around the numbers. Production decisions made under pressure that a year earlier would have been questioned. The same language in the marketing, the same narrative on the website — but the craft and consideration that had given that language its credibility quietly softening beneath it. I pushed back. On some things, I held the line. On others, the gap between what the brand was saying and what it was doing grew in ways that were difficult to close from the outside.

I understood what the founder was trying to do. The commercial logic was not wrong. But I had seen this before, from the other side.

The narrative always loses that fight, no matter how good it is.
— On values and growth

At Kingdom of Origin, I was the founder feeling the pressure. The conviction was genuine, the standards were uncompromising, and the commercial architecture was not built to sustain them at scale. The need to grow collided with the cost of doing things properly, and something had to give. In my case, I made the decision before the standards did. It was the right call. It didn't make it easier.

What I have come to understand, standing on both sides of that equation, is that the tension between values and growth is not a problem to be solved. It is a condition to be managed — and the only way to manage it is to plan for it before it arrives.

The brands that hold their values under commercial pressure are not the ones with the most passionate founders. Passion is abundant. The brands that hold are the ones that built the commercial architecture to support their convictions before the pressure came. That means a clear plan. A commercial forecast that accounts honestly for what it costs to do things properly — not the optimistic version, the real one. An understanding of what needs to happen between where the business is now and where it wants to be, and what will be required at each stage to get there without dismantling the thing that made it matter.

It means not getting ahead of yourself. Solid foundations before ambitious scaling. The right people hired at the right moment, people who understand the standards and have the authority to hold them, not a team asked to deliver the same quality with less support and less transparency.

It means knowing, before the pressure arrives, which things are negotiable and which are not. Because under pressure, everything feels negotiable. And once you have made one exception, the second one is always easier to justify.

The brands I believe in most are the ones where the founder has thought all of this through before they needed to. Where the values are not a story told to customers but a set of genuine operating principles that shape decisions at every level of the business — including the uncomfortable ones.

The world does not need more brands with beautiful narratives and hollow supply chains. It has plenty of those. What it needs — what the market is increasingly demanding, and what the most sophisticated consumers are increasingly able to detect — are brands that mean what they say. All the way down.

Get the foundations right. Build the commercial structure to support the conviction. Hire people who understand what you are trying to do and give them the authority to protect it. Do those things, and the narrative will take care of itself.

The world is your oyster. But only if you've built something solid enough to deserve it.

Vanessa Radley is the founder of Radley Creative.
Continue reading All journal entries
No. 01

What Kingdom of Origin Taught Me

On building something that mattered, and what it really cost.

Founder · Brand · Sustainability
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