15 years inside businesses that were working – and businesses that were not.
Vanessa’s career has been built entirely inside the operational reality of businesses – not consulting from the outside in, but working within the systems, the decisions, and the dysfunction that most strategists never see up close. She has worked across industries including SaaS, professional services, retail, home services, and hospitality, in companies ranging from startups to established mid-market organizations.
Her background spans marketing strategy, customer experience design, organizational operations, and leadership development across more than 28 industries and business sectors – from SaaS and e-commerce to beauty, luxury branding, automotive services, health and wellness, real estate, consumer packaged goods, and local service businesses. She holds a Bachelor’s in Marketing Management and has pursued graduate study in Digital Marketing. More than the formal credentials, it is the accumulation of real-world experience across that breadth of industries – diagnosing what is actually wrong in organizations that are growing, stalling, or quietly breaking down – that shapes how she works today.
“I have sat inside enough organizations to know that the story they tell externally and the experience they deliver internally are rarely the same story.”
The marketing was not the problem. It was never the marketing.
The pattern became impossible to ignore. Businesses would invest in marketing – good marketing, sometimes excellent marketing – and it would not work. Not because the campaigns were wrong, the creative was weak, or the channels were mismatched. But because something underneath the marketing was working against it.
The customer experience contradicted the brand promise. The internal team was not aligned on what the company actually stood for. Leadership was making decisions based on assumptions the market had already disproven. The governance structure could not hold a direction long enough for any marketing strategy to take root.
In each case, the business was spending money trying to fix a marketing problem that was actually an organizational problem. And no one was building the bridge between the two.
“You cannot market your way out of an organizational problem. But you can diagnose it precisely enough to fix it.”
Catwalk Marketing and InBrand Theory™ were built to close that gap.
Catwalk Marketing was founded on a single principle: find out what is actually wrong before recommending anything. Not what the client thinks is wrong. Not what is most comfortable to address. What is actually costing them money, customers, and organizational capacity – right now.
The Catwalk Marketing Audit addresses the execution layer: the channels, the messaging, the presence, the competitive position. Seven domains, evidence-based findings, specific priority-ranked recommendations.
InBrand Theory™ addresses the structural layer: the seven organizational health pillars that determine whether a company can perform at the level its marketing promises. The Internal Brand Index produces a 100-point scored profile of the organization’s actual condition – not its intentions, not its values statement, but its operational reality.
Together, the two programs cover every layer of the problem. Which one a client needs depends on where the breakdown actually lives – and the Free IBI Baseline tells them in ten minutes.