Every successful company has one thing in common: they know exactly who they are and why they exist. Not the generic "we help businesses grow" stuff, but the real, specific reason they get up each morning. Your identity isn't just marketing fluff, it's your north star for every decision, hire, and project you take on.
For a research-first company, this becomes even more critical. You're not just another consulting firm or tech shop. You're the team that digs deeper, thinks longer-term, and brings insights others miss. That's your superpower, but only if you own it and communicate it clearly.
Finding your "why"
Start with the problems you're genuinely excited to solve. What keeps you up at night thinking "someone should really figure this out"? Maybe it's helping companies navigate emerging tech without getting burned. Maybe it's bridging the gap between academic research and real-world application. Whatever it is, that passion becomes your mission.
Your mission should pass the "dinner party test": can you explain what you do and why it matters in two sentences that actually make people interested? If you're fumbling for words or using buzzwords, keep digging until you find the real reason you exist.
What makes you different
Every company thinks they're special, but most can't articulate why. Is it your research approach? Your team's unique background? The specific industries you focus on? The way you combine different disciplines? Get specific about your differentiators, then double down on them.
The truth is simple: trying to be everything to everyone makes you nothing to anyone. Better to be the obvious choice for the right people than a maybe for everybody. When someone has a problem that perfectly fits your identity, they should immediately think of you.
Your identity becomes your filter for opportunities, your guide for growth, and your magnet for the right people.