The Nitty Gritty\n\n* Why Ali\u2019s new brand message is all about shifting the way her clients see themselves\n* How she draws a connection between health and politics \u2014 and positions her opinion in a way that her ideal customers breathe out: \u201cfinally, someone gets it!\u201d\n* What writing exercise she used to inform her new website copy (and exactly what her company\u2019s new position is)\n* Why you should always ask your customers for feedback, plus the exact process Ali used to choose a logo that spoke to them\n\nIn this episode of What Works, we welcome Ali Shapiro, MSOD, certified holistic health counselor, and founder of Truce with Food\xae to talk about her recent rebranding and repositioning of her business.\nWe cover everything from what she\u2019s learned as a health coach and her own experience with cancer as a teenager, to the importance of using customer feedback to inform branding decisions, to bringing politics into your business as a way to truly serve your customers.\nListen to this episode to learn more about Ali\u2019s health journey and her experience working with women who are fed up with the status quo \u2014 and are looking for radical shifts toward true healing.\nWe release new episodes of What Works every week. Subscribe on iTunes so you never miss an episode.\nHow Ali knew it was time to reposition.\n\u201cI realized that as I got more resilient, I actually became healthier. I really started to see with my clients that if I could help them with a research-based but client-proven process to focus on that emotional piece, their healing was exponential.\u201d \u2014 Ali Shapiro\nFor Ali and her clients, experiencing true healing isn\u2019t just about what you eat. It\u2019s about how food and emotions work together to cultivate and activate natural healing within the body.\nAli knew that positioning her work around both the body and the emotions would be more difficult than just talking about food. At the same time, she felt that it might be too much for people \u2014 would they resonate with it? Would they want to work with her? Ultimately, she knew that bringing together food and emotions was crucial for her clients to experience true healing.\nFortunately, her clients responded well and told her just how much of a relief it was, despite the hard work. Why? Because it gave them answers. They were finally understanding aspects of themselves that they never had.\nThis was the foundation of her rebranding and repositioning.\nThe importance of asking for customer feedback as you rebrand.\n\u201cI didn\u2019t end up going with the logo because I didn\u2019t want to turn people off before they really understood what it was about. Always ask your customers and clients \u2014 even your ideal clients are going to have a range of reactions.\u201d \u2014 Ali Shapiro\nAs Ali worked with her clients, she realized that her work was founded on liberating women so they can get answers and feel their absolute best. As she rebranded, Ali wanted a logo that represented the work she did \u2014 and ended up with two that she loved.\nOne logo was a dynamic logo of a woman\u2019s body behind bars \u2014 and the bars faded away \u2014 it was a literal representation of her work. Ali loved it, but when she asked her customers, it was a split: half of them liked it while others felt that it didn\u2019t totally encompass her work \u2014 and in a way, it didn\u2019t align with the experience they had with her. So\u2026 instead of using the logo that she liked the most, she decided against it based on customer insights.\nWhy Ali brings politics into her business (and her branding)\n\u201cWhen you start talking about who has power, and who doesn\u2019t,