


A rebrand is easy to judge when you only see the final result. What rarely gets seen is everything that gets scrapped along the way.
Kevin, Lauren, and Julia walk through the rebrand of Cami Aesthetics. The name stayed, but almost everything else changed. That decision highlights one of the hardest parts of any rebrand. How far can you push something before it loses recognition, and how much do you hold onto before it starts to feel outdated.
The conversation starts with creative direction. Early concepts leaned into the clean, minimal aesthetic that most med spas default to. White spaces, polished visuals, safe design choices. But that direction started to feel interchangeable. Instead of blending in, the team chose to move in a different direction, pulling from nostalgia and editorial inspiration. Not in an obvious way, but through color, typography, and the overall feel of the brand.
That shift ties directly to patient psychology. The idea of restorative wellness becomes a core theme. Patients are not always looking to become someone new. They are often trying to get back to a version of themselves that feels familiar. That insight shaped the creative decisions across the brand, from visuals to messaging.
Execution is where those ideas get tested. Real patients were used in the photography instead of staged models, which changes how the brand feels immediately. The website was built to handle a wide range of treatments without overwhelming the user, using filters, concerns, and anatomy mapping to guide navigation. Instead of forcing users through multiple pages, information is surfaced in a way that keeps the experience intuitive.
What stands out most is how iterative the process is. Early ideas did not make it. Concepts evolved. Some instincts were right, others needed to be reworked. The final result is not one decision, but a series of refinements that align creative direction with how patients actually think and behave.
A rebrand at this level is not cosmetic. It is a shift in how the business shows up and how patients experience it from the first interaction onward.








