Will Travis joins Zen & Callsigns for a conversation that moves far beyond branding and business. What starts as a story about creativity, advertising, and global agency success becomes something deeper: grief, reinvention, fatherhood, masculinity, failure, resilience, identity, and the long road back to authenticity. Will reflects on losing his father as an infant, growing up in a house full of strong women, struggling with dyslexia and bullying, building a persona to survive, and then using that persona to rise through the worlds of branding, design, and leadership. From New York and San Francisco to Bali, Saatchi, Sid Lee, and the founding of Elevation Barn, this episode is about what happens when success stops being enough and a man has to rebuild from the inside out. Main Themes Childhood loss and carrying the legacy of an absent fatherGrowing up with strong women and becoming a listenerBoarding school, bullying, ADD, dyslexia, and gritPersona, identity, and “the cloak” we wear to survive and successBuilding a career in branding and creative leadershipRejection, resilience, and using obstacles as fuelMarriage, ego, collapse, and recovery9/11, business collapse, physical injury, and total life disruptionRebuilding through friendship, nature, mountains, and fatherhoodTurning down status and choosing family over egoThe origins and philosophy of Elevation BarnSuperpower versus nemesisPresence, calm, and learning to live from a deeper centerAI, technology, and the hunger for real human connection Notable Story Beats Will recalls being born while his father was dying of cancer and growing up as the vessel for his father’s legacy.He describes a simple but vivid childhood shaped by solitude, imagination, strong women, and not much money.At boarding school, he was bullied, struggled academically, and was told he was “thick,” later learning he was dyslexic and ADD.A pivotal lesson came from his stepfather after academic failure: when you hit a wall, work back from it until you find a way over, under, or around.He entered branding and advertising almost as an extension of learning how to hear “no” and keep moving.America became a major turning point, giving him confidence, momentum, and eventually career breakout.He helped build a powerful design and branding agency culture, including the “Noise” books, and landed major clients like MTV, Columbia TriStar, Ford, PepsiCo, AT&T, Nike, and Sony.At the height of success, ego overtook balance. He lost his marriage, then the dot-com collapse and 9/11 compounded personal and professional breakdown.He rebuilt through physical challenge, mountains, friendship, fatherhood, and eventually a reevaluation of what mattered most.He turned down a major role at Saatchi & Saatchi because he recognized it would cost him the life he actually wanted.Elevation Barn emerged from a simple but powerful insight: people in transition often need a process, a peer group, and honest reflection more than more noise, more status, or more information. The cloak: a persona can protect and propel you, but you have to know how to take it off.The wall: every obstacle has a way over, under, or around it.Superpower as nemesis: the thing people rely on you for is often also the place where you are hardest to help.False summits: growth often requires going back down before you can climb higher.The backpack of expectancy: modern life stacks pressure, identity, and performance until people forget who they are.Branding for a person: just like a company, a human being needs clarity, direction, and a North Star.Belonging matters more than performance theater.Presence and quiet create space for truth to emerge. Elevation Barn website: www.ElevationBarn.com Will’s personal site: www.willtravis.com