Alex garnier

Alex garnier

Welcome, am Alex Garnier at alexgarnier.com, Storyteller and Brand designer. I spent over a decade in the animation movie industry, shaping world, universe, bringing character to life Now I help my clients to create their unique and Bold universe and stories. On this podcast I share my journey as as storyteller and brand designer Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

  1. Why your Business fall flat

    7. APR.

    Why your Business fall flat

    Most businesses keep explaining their product like that’s enough. It’s not. Nobody connects to a list of features. Nobody remembers another polished paragraph about efficiency, quality, innovation, or how your solution “helps brands grow.” That kind of language is everywhere, and that’s exactly the problem. It doesn’t create desire. It doesn’t create meaning. It doesn’t create a world people want to step into. After years working in animation, including on an award-nominated feature, one thing became impossible for me to ignore: audiences don’t fall in love with explanation. They fall in love with a universe. They connect to a feeling.A point of view.A texture.A rhythm.A set of values made visible.A world that tells them, without screaming it, “you belong here.” That’s what too many businesses miss. They think branding is describing what they sell more clearly. I think that’s only the surface. The real work is building an emotional universe around what you do, so people can recognize themselves inside it. A product answers a need.A universe answers identity. That’s why some brands are bought once, and others become magnets. So yes, explain what you do. But stop acting like explanation is the same as connection. It isn’t. If your audience understands your offer but feels nothing around it, you haven’t built a brand. You’ve built a brochure. And brochures don’t create loyalty.Worlds do. Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

    9 Min.
  2. What 10+ YEARS of animation movie told me as a STORYTELLER and BRANDING

    14. MÄRZ

    What 10+ YEARS of animation movie told me as a STORYTELLER and BRANDING

    #Istorytelling #entrepreneurship I’ve had the privilege of working on films like Nimona, which was nominated for an Oscar in 2023 for Netflix. Over the years, I’ve also worked with Disney and other studios in the film industry, and one thing this journey has taught me is this:Make a bold statement to the world.People do not connect deeply with a product alone. They connect with a vision. They want to know where you come from, what you believe in, and where you are leading them. Your perspective, your ideas, and the way you see the world matter more than the thing you are selling.We want to hear your story.We want to feel your voice.We want to understand the rhythm of your world, the energy of your universe, and the reason behind what you do.That is what makes people remember you.In storytelling, clarity is everything. There is a principle many people know: KISS — Keep It Simple and Stupid. The idea is not to make things dull, but to make them clear, strong, and easy to understand. Simplicity is powerful. A message that is too complicated gets lost. A message that is simple, honest, and bold has impact.And do not be afraid to be a little goofy, original, or different from other businesses.That difference is not a weakness. It is your strength.In animation, we often talk about the golden pose, the key pose that says everything in one clear image. It is the pose that defines the emotion, the action, and the intention of the character. Business works the same way. Your brand needs its own golden pose: a clear way of expressing who you are, what you stand for, and why people should care.How do you express your story in a way people can immediately understand?How do you communicate your message with clarity, energy, and emotion?How do you make people feel something?Because life is a story. Business is a story too.It has highs and lows, tension and transformation, challenges and victories.And at the center of that story is your audience.Who is your buyer persona, really?What do they look like?Where do they live?What do they love?What do they struggle with?What problem are they trying to solve?And how can you help them reach the transformation they are looking for?Too many businesses only talk about what they sell.The strongest brands talk about why they exist, who they serve, and what journey they invite people into.People are not just buying a service or a product.They are buying meaning.They are buying trust.They are buying a world they want to belong to.So do not just sell.Tell a story. Build a world. Share a vision.Because in the end, people may forget the features of what you offered, but they will always remember how your world made them feel. Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

    1 Std. 42 Min.
  3. Embody your persona when creating your business

    13. MÄRZ

    Embody your persona when creating your business

    #storytelling #branding #entrepreneurshipI see too many people explaining what they sell instead of going back to the real reason why they started their business in the first place.And that changes everything.I come from the world of film and animation, where building a character is never just about surface-level details. It is not enough to know their age, their job, or where they live.You need to go deeper.What do they believe in?How were they raised?What shaped their way of seeing the world?What are their values, their wounds, their ambitions?What do they wear?How do they speak?What do they eat?Do they go to the gym?What kind of people do they admire?What magazines do they read?What kind of life are they trying to build?That is how you create a character that feels real.And that is also how you create a brand that feels alive.Too many businesses say, “we have customers.”But who are they really?What is their story?What do they fear, desire, avoid, hope for?Because if you do not truly know the person you are speaking to, how can you expect to create a message that resonates?In movies and TV shows, when we build a world, we do not stop at the main character.We think about the entire universe around them.Where do they live?What does their home feel like?What does their daily life look like?What kind of culture surrounds them?What colors, objects, sounds, and habits belong to their world?Branding should work the same way.A business is not just a logo, a service, or a product.It is a universe.It is a point of view.It is a story people must be able to step into.And if you, as the founder, are not deeply connected to that universe…if you do not know why it exists, who it is for, and what emotional world it belongs to…why should your audience feel connected to it?Why should they stop, pay attention, trust you, or remember you?People do not connect with offers first.They connect with meaning.They connect with identity.They connect with stories that make them feel seen.That is why storytelling matters so much in business.Not to “make things sound nice.”But to build something true enough, deep enough, and human enough that people can recognize themselves inside it.Because the strongest brands are not the ones that simply explain what they do.They are the ones that make people feel:“This is for me. This understands me. This world speaks my language.” Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

    58 Min.
  4. This one mistake business entrepreneurs make

    11. MÄRZ

    This one mistake business entrepreneurs make

    #storytelling #branding Ever wonder how the biggest animated films went from a single spark of an idea to a full‑blown cinematic experience? In this video I break down the evolution of storytelling, the art & science behind crafting unforgettable tales, and how today’s tools let YOU bring your vision to life no endless crew, no endless paperwork required.Before it required huge energy and time and people to bring a story to life. like hundreds of people, though processes, papers, pencils, sketches, drawings, concept art, storyboards for the goal of creating one story that people want to know more, to dive into it. Today, we have all the tools available; no more excuses. You have everything to be able to tell your story. Brainstorm first, and create a board with all your thoughts and your ideas, bad or good at the beginning everything is an idea, then you can connect the dot and make creativity sparks. you won't create a powerful story in a day. It needs time to process all the information and to shape it in a way it will be powerful and beautiful. Story is an art and a science. The science of structuring it in a way it's compelling and make sense and become an art when you can admire it, and feel the flow of emotion capturing you when you hear it, almost like it's giving you goosebumps. “ I want to share the vibe of storytelling and branding with my perspective of animation movieringing a story from mind to screen was a colossal undertaking. It required a sprawling team, countless hours in cramped studios, layers of drawings on paper, and a maze of approvals before a single frame could even be imagined. That was the old pipeline—hundreds of people, intricate paperwork, endless sketches, and a process that felt as much about logistics as it was about creativity. Today, however, the rules have shifted. The tools that were once the exclusive domain of large studios are now at the fingertips of every creator, and the excuse of “too many people needed” has become a relic of the past.You no longer have to wait for a guild of artists to draft concept art or a council of producers to green‑light a storyboard. Instead, you can sit down, open your laptop, and begin the brainstorming session that will ultimately give birth to your story. Start by creating a digital board—whether it’s a physical whiteboard or an online platform like Miro or FigJam—and dump every idea onto it, no matter how rough or unfinished. The first wave of ideas is a flood of possibilities; they’re not yet refined, but they’re the raw material that will shape the narrative. As you go through this stage, you’re connecting dots, spotting patterns, and allowing creativity to spark. It’s in this chaotic space that the foundation of your plot is laid, and the seeds of conflict, theme, and character start to take root.But storytelling is more than a chaotic brainstorm. It’s an art that needs the science of structure to resonate. The narrative arc be it the classic Hero’s Journey, a three‑act structure, or a more experimental rhythm provides the framework that makes a story compelling and coherent. These structures guide the pacing, build tension, and deliver payoff in a way that feels satisfying to an audience. They’re the invisible scaffolding that holds your ideas together, ensuring that each beat serves the larger purpose of the story.And yet, a well‑structured plot is only half the battle. The true magic lies in the emotional flow—those moments that make the audience feel a chill, a rush, or a warm ache of nostalgia. It’s about crafting scenes that capture the viewer’s heart and hold it. It’s about weaving humor, tragedy, wonder, and fear into a tapestry that feels alive and authentic. That emotional resonance turns a simple narrative into an experience that lingers long after the credit... Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

    1 Std. 14 Min.

Info

Welcome, am Alex Garnier at alexgarnier.com, Storyteller and Brand designer. I spent over a decade in the animation movie industry, shaping world, universe, bringing character to life Now I help my clients to create their unique and Bold universe and stories. On this podcast I share my journey as as storyteller and brand designer Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.