Before you can market something, you have to decide what it actually is.
When a product lives between categories, clarity doesn't come from features — it comes from framing.
I led the development of foundational messaging and narrative direction for Bisk Amplified, a workforce education platform built by Bisk Education. The platform was designed to sit at the intersection of higher education, employer demand, and workforce transformation.
It wasn't just a new product. It was a new way of framing how education connects to work — which meant the first challenge wasn't marketing. It was definition.
The offering spanned multiple audiences simultaneously — universities, employers, and learners — and the category it was entering was still being defined by the market. Internal teams had different interpretations of what the platform was, what it was for, and who it was speaking to.
Without a clear narrative foundation, three things were at risk: messaging would fragment across channels, go-to-market efforts would lack a coherent center, and the platform would mean something different depending on who was explaining it.
When something new is being built, the first challenge isn't marketing. It's definition. You can't scale a message that doesn't exist yet — and you can't build one without first deciding what role this thing plays in the world.
This wasn't about describing features or writing a tagline. It was about answering a more fundamental question: what does this platform make possible that didn't exist before — and why does that matter now, to these specific people?
Until that was clear internally, no external messaging would hold.
Three audiences. One coherent story.
A core part of the work was building distinct audience lenses — separate but connected views of the platform's value, each speaking to a different set of motivations without fragmenting the overall narrative.
Universities
Positioned around program reach, employer alignment, and the ability to make credentials more relevant to the market they're training students for.
Employers
Positioned around workforce readiness, talent pipeline, and the ability to shape learning outcomes toward real job competencies.
Learners
Positioned around career relevance, credential value, and the confidence that what they're learning connects directly to where they want to go.
I developed a narrative architecture designed to align internal teams and external messaging simultaneously. This meant starting with a core narrative spine — a single, clear articulation of the platform's purpose and role — that every audience-specific message could branch from without contradicting the whole.
The goal was not just to create copy, but to build a system that made future copy easier, faster, and more consistent. Something teams could hand to a new hire, a campaign agency, or a sales partner and have them immediately understand what Bisk Amplified is and why it matters.
The narrative foundation informed outputs across every layer of the platform's communication:
Rather than reacting to individual content requests, this system allowed teams to operate from a shared understanding — making every downstream piece faster and more coherent to produce.
Teams aligned around a unified narrative for the first time. Messaging remained consistent across audiences, channels, and partners without needing to be rebuilt from scratch each time. The platform entered market with a clear, differentiated position in a category that was still being defined.
Instead of multiple interpretations depending on who was in the room, Bisk Amplified had a coherent story that could scale — and a system that made scaling it possible.
When the story is clear internally,
everything else moves faster externally.
Messaging Hierarchy
Universities, Employers, Learners
Messaging & Creative
Page Copy
Internal Narrative Docs