Blair and Co. approached the Cherish engagement as a connected strategy exercise rather than a series of standalone deliverables. Brand and competitive analysis came first, establishing where Cherish sat in the market relative to the large national players with overwhelming finish inventories and the smaller local shops with limited customization. The competitive gap analysis identified that Cherish’s genuine differentiator was the process and the experience, not just the product, and that the existing brand language was not communicating that clearly enough. The buyer segmentation work drew on Blair and Co.’s proprietary segment database customized for the specific Cherish purchase context, producing eight priority segments including At Long Last, Expecting, Failed Honey Dos, Honey Donts, Move Downs, New Home Upgraders, Steak and Lobster, and Terrible Twos, each with estimated audience populations, demographic profiles, lifestyle narratives, advertising channel recommendations, and product type mapping. Two segments, Cheapskates and Getting Ready to Sell, were identified as segments to actively exclude from targeting to reduce wasted ad spend. The sales funnel review mapped the full customer journey from brand investigation through to post-sale continued engagement, identified the four primary go-dark points where customers were ceasing contact, and assigned responsibilities between marketing and sales at each stage. The brand development work produced a revised colour palette, typography system, logotype options, and a Golden Circle brand framework covering the Why, How, and What of the Cherish business.