Selected work 2001 to present
BrandCom's work doesn't fit the mould of a traditional branding and marketing consultancy and that's deliberate. Look across what we've done and it spans conservation, technology, food, sport, heavy industry, and energy. You could look at it and think these people are all over the show. But there is a common thread running through every single project: brand treated as the organising system. That's what connects a national conservation initiative, an Olympic swimming suit, a tax refund platform, and an aluminium smelting technology. Strategy first. Always.
Strategic Projects
These are engagements where brand strategy drove business strategy shaping not just expression, but how organisations and ventures were built, positioned, and made to work in the real world.
Events · Sport
From the start, we set out to create one of New Zealand's most iconic events right off the bat, not after twenty years. We named the organising company Iconic Adventures. We wanted to become New Zealand's largest off-road event in our first year and cement ourselves as a must-do event and a rite of passage. We had a resolute brand strategy to back up that confidence. Twenty-five years on, Motatapu is still the largest off-road event in New Zealand.
We were acutely aware that the athlete experience would become the brand experience, and the brand experience would become the product that would sustain the event in the long-term. We set out to create something people would want to return to year after year, and to talk about long after they had finished. That clarity shaped every decision from day one.
While the isolated landscape and the point-to-point historic route from Wanaka to Queenstown was certainly eye-candy, we committed ourselves to providing the athlete with the thrill of finishing a big-time event on a modest amount of training and a modest entry fee.
After hours in the high country, athletes were brought back into Arrowtown and through a corridor of people, noise, energy, and affirmation. The act of finishing felt visible, shared, and deeply earned. That moment was not incidental it was the brand being the organising system.
In year one the event became New Zealand's largest mountain bike event, its largest off-road running marathon, and its third largest marathon overall. Today, after 25 years, Motatapu is still the largest off-road event in New Zealand.
Food & FMCG · Capital Formation
BrandCom's involvement began at company formation defining strategy, shaping the commercial logic, and building the narrative that guided capital raising and execution. The Information Memorandum was widely regarded as one of the strongest produced in New Zealand. Geoff became CEO, leading Mt Cook Alpine Salmon to Deloitte Fast 50 status and placement with The French Laundry, Napa Valley.
The Information Memorandum was deliberately constructed so that the story could be understood quickly and intuitively. The photography carried much of the narrative weight, and the captions were written to do real work taken together, the images and captions alone conveyed the core strategy, the product logic, the market positioning, and the long-term intent of the business.
From the outset, Mt Cook Alpine Salmon was conceived as an eco-sustainable brand a rigorous proposition. Its sustainability credentials were unmatched by any salmon farm in the world, encompassing pristine water sources, low-density farming, and an uncompromising approach to quality and environmental stewardship. Sustainability sat at the core of the proposition and became the foundation of its premium value.
Geoff went on to act as Chief Executive, guiding the company through its formative growth phase. Under his leadership, Mt Cook Alpine Salmon achieved Deloitte Fast 50 recognition and won six New Zealand Food Awards, including the Supreme Award.
This project illustrates how BrandCom approaches strategic work. When brand is treated as the organising system, strategy, capital, operations, and market execution align naturally. Storytelling becomes a practical tool not just for communication, but for clarity, confidence, and scale.
Technology · Capital Formation
Conceived on a piece of paper in a Queenstown café. The first fully automated tax refund system in New Zealand and the first non-government platform ever to connect directly with the IRD mainframe. A process that took a skilled IRD operator 22 minutes was reduced to under five seconds. BrandCom formed the company, raised the capital, built the system, and took it to market.
The core invention was an integrating system a layer that interfaced sequentially with three independent computer systems, collected and validated data, executed the process, and returned the result. That system reduced a process that took around 22 minutes for a skilled Inland Revenue operator to approximately five seconds. It was the first non-government platform ever to connect directly with the IRD mainframe.
Building the system was one challenge. Getting people to trust it was another. In the original business plan, BrandCom allocated $150,000 to build the system and $500,000 to market it recognising that credibility would be central to success. People were being asked to provide their IRD number, address, and bank account details at a time when online transactions were still new territory for many.
BrandCom's marketing campaigns drove 1.5 million individual users to the platform in a single month, and at peak they were adding more than 20,000 new customers a day. As early as 2007, Geoff met directly with the Minister of Revenue to demonstrate the system. It would take another twelve years for the government to automate its own processes.
Brand Stories
Brand stories are how complex ideas are made understandable, relatable, and usable. Much of BrandCom's work involves translating things that are difficult to explain complex organisations, large-scale projects, emerging technologies, or unfamiliar ideas into brand stories people can grasp, trust, and act on. A tagline such as Harcourts Queenstown's "Known, Trusted, Proven" is in fact their brand story in a tagline. The examples here span very different formats long-form commercial narratives, photographic briefs, print-led storytelling, and live conversation. What connects them is not the medium, but the underlying philosophy: storytelling used for strategic purpose.
Business Launch Collateral · Professional Services
When the brand story is clear, everything else has a place
The starting point was not visual style or creative execution. It was the brand story itself, used as the strategic device around which everything else was organised. The brief defined who Peer Review were, how they worked, and what mattered to them, and it set the direction for every decision that followed.
That strategic work was captured in a detailed photographic brief written by Carryn Colton. Rather than describing how the work should look, the brief articulated what needed to be understood in language drawn directly from the people inside the business. Each of the principals was interviewed in depth. The words used throughout the work are their words, taken from real conversations about how they think, how they operate, and the role they play for their clients.
The photography was captured during those interviews, allowing the creative execution to respond directly to the story as it was being told. Because the strategy, language, and imagery were developed together, the finished work feels integrated and coherent.
This project is included here as a lead example because it shows how BrandCom brings strategy, storytelling, and creative execution together and how brand strategy, when taken seriously, drives business strategy in practice. The original photographic brief and the finished work are shown below side by side, allowing the thinking and the outcome to be viewed together.
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Brand Story · Food & FMCG · US Market
Strategy led the story, the creative made it unforgettable
The challenge was deceptively simple: explain why this salmon was different. In reality, the task was far harder. The product was frozen, unfamiliar, and operating at the very top end of a highly sceptical chef market. As we often joked at the time, marketing a dead fish is one of the hardest things you can do.
The strategy was built around story not marketing claims or product features, but a coherent narrative that connected place, purity, farming conditions, process, and craft, and framed Saikou as something genuinely distinct. That story set the spine for everything that followed.
The creative execution is where the work really comes together. The photography carries much of the narrative weight, and the captions are deliberately written to tell the core story even if the rest of the text is never read. Image and language work together paced, restrained, and confident, allowing chefs to absorb the idea quickly and intuitively. A photo, in this case, really was worth a thousand words.
It was on the back of this brochure that Mt Cook Alpine Salmon secured placement with The French Laundry, regarded as one of the world's great restaurants a defining moment for the brand in the US market. The project demonstrates how BrandCom thinks strategically before acting creatively, and how strong creative execution, when tied tightly to a clear brand story, can carry meaning, credibility, and commercial intent at the same time.
📄 The full Saikou brochure PDF can be made available contact us directly.
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Think Piece · Industrial Decarbonisation · Thought Leadership
The captions carried the spine of the story and the visuals did real explanatory work
The EnPot technology fundamentally changed how aluminium smelters could consume electricity, with implications for energy systems, industrial economics, and the integration of renewables. It was also, by its nature, difficult to explain. Highly technical. Abstract. Easy to lose people early.
The challenge was not to simplify the technology, but to translate it to create a narrative that allowed people outside the engineering and smelting world to understand why it mattered. This think piece was written to do exactly that. It reframed an intricate electro-chemical process into a story about energy, flexibility, economics, and consequence, positioning the technology within the wider systems it affected including national grids, renewable intermittency, industrial competitiveness, and policy.
The structure mattered as much as the words. Strong visual sequencing, carefully written captions, and deliberate pacing allowed readers to grasp the idea even if they didn't read every paragraph. The images carried meaning. The captions carried the spine. The text provided depth for those who wanted it.
Importantly, the work broadened the audience making the technology accessible not just to engineers and investors, but to policymakers and people operating elsewhere in the business and policy ecosystem. This project is a clear example of the discipline required to truly understand complex technology, and then translate that understanding into brand storytelling that a layperson can follow, engage with, and trust.
📄 The full EnPot think piece can be uploaded as a PDF link to follow.
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Information Memorandum · Capital Formation · Water Resources
Storytelling designed for capital raising, not promotion
The Jade Aquifer Information Memorandum was developed as a long-form brand story, designed to bring clarity and coherence to a complex opportunity. It brought together place, science, sustainability, scarcity, market positioning, and long-term value into a single narrative that could be understood, remembered, and shared.
Rather than leading with technical detail or financial modelling, the document focused on shaping meaning first helping investors and partners understand what the opportunity was, why it mattered, and how it should be valued.
At the time, BrandCom was applying the same storytelling discipline used in brand and organisational work to ventures involving capital formation and long-horizon thinking. Information memoranda became an extension of brand strategy translating complexity into clarity and giving structure to decision-making. The creative execution played a critical role: the document was designed to be visually compelling and carefully paced, using imagery, layout, and restraint to support the story rather than overwhelm it.
The Jade Aquifer project reflects a consistent belief: when strategy and storytelling lead, creative execution follows with purpose, and together they become part of the organising structure of a venture.
📄 The full Jade Aquifer Information Memorandum can be uploaded as a PDF link to follow.
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Live Conversation · Managing Water Resources · 2025
In 2026, the discipline is the same the conversation can now be direct
This project shows how brand storytelling now unfolds in real time, through conversation. In this SIM-PAC Live Conversations from the Edge interview, Geoff Matthews speaks with Daniel Lambert AM about the proposed Ngarluma Water Desalination Project a $7 billion, 150-gigalitre industrial water solution for the Pilbara region of Western Australia.
Rather than being captured in a document or brochure, the brand story here emerges through dialogue. The conversation moves fluidly between scale and detail from water scarcity and industrial demand, to First Nations engagement, environmental responsibility, funding structures, and long-term economic impact. Strategy, story, and commercial logic are revealed as the discussion unfolds.
This format reflects a shift in how complex projects are now understood. Storytelling is no longer static or linear it is conversational, transparent, and public, allowing people to hear how ideas are formed, tested, and explained by those closest to the work. In this case, the story carries the full weight of the business strategy: a privately funded, renewable-powered desalination model with global relevance for water-stressed industrial regions.
This example shows how BrandCom's approach to storytelling has evolved with the medium from information memoranda and print, to live interviews and owned platforms while remaining grounded in the same core discipline: translating complexity into clarity, and strategy into something people can understand, trust, and act on.
Watch Conversations from the Edge
Gallery
Below is a collection of projects we remember fondly for a variety of reasons. Some are creative in nature. Some are small in scale. Some were cultural, exploratory, or simply enjoyable to make. In some, BrandCom's way of thinking is clearly visible. In others, it sits more quietly beneath the surface.
Mt Cook Alpine Salmon
Metropolitan Bakery & Milkbar
MacGregor's Pies
Artemis Natural Remedies
Blind Date Records
Pathway to Zero Carbon
Harrex Group
Harrex Group Munro
WildFusion
Demand Side Response
TerraCyclic
FastDry Flooring Systems
EcoLambnz
Stoney Creek Rural Series
UCU
Dialed in Motion
Pavola Lights
Tiger Hooks
Our Bulls Don't Break
The Place on the Hill
Yunca Wood
Saikou Mt Cook Alpine Salmon
Halo Pastry
Ovenrise
AVA Fully Frameless Showers
Motatapu
EnPot Business Plan