At SPEC Labs, we work with life sciences innovators who are transitioning from incubation to commercialization or what we call the “graduation stage.” It’s an exciting (and often intense) time: scaling your science, building your team, raising capital, and stepping into the market.
And while you’re laser-focused on data, partnerships, and milestones, there’s one piece that can quietly shape your success across all of those fronts: your brand.
That’s why we’re thrilled to share this guest post from Noel Fenez, founder of Alister, a creative agency that helps early-stage science companies build brands people actually connect with. Noel’s piece challenges a common default in biotech branding: the sterile, overly clinical look and offers practical ways to bring more clarity, warmth, and humanity into how you show up.
Whether you're refining your pitch deck, relaunching your website, or just starting to think about how your company presents itself outside the lab, this is essential reading for graduation-stage founders.
Let’s dive in:
Graduation-stage life sciences startups, those moving beyond incubation and into the next
phase of growth, often face a pivotal branding challenge: they default to a clinical, overly sterile look.
Whitewashed websites. Stock photos of gloved hands. Helvetica-heavy logos. A sea of corporate blues and greys. It’s familiar. It feels “safe.”
And it makes sense. You’re operating in a regulated industry. Your science is complex. You’re pitching to investors, not selling sneakers. But the truth is, this overly technical aesthetic can become a liability, especially as you move toward commercialization, partnerships, and scale.
At Alister, we work with early- and growth-stage health and science companies, and we’ve seen this mistake play out repeatedly. Fortunately, it’s also one of the easiest traps to avoid, if you’re intentional.
There’s a persistent myth in biotech branding: that sterile equals serious, and clinical equals credible. But research shows that emotional resonance has more staying power than technical accuracy alone. The strongest brands, especially in science and health, combine clarity, credibility, and connection.
Here’s why this matters at the graduation stage:
Your brand is often your first handshake. Whether it’s a pitch deck, a landing page, or your LinkedIn banner, it shapes perceptions before you ever enter the room.
“Warmth” doesn’t mean ditching scientific integrity. It means expressing your company’s human side and making your work more accessible, compelling, and memorable.
Here’s how graduation-stage teams can start doing exactly that:
As you graduate from incubator to independent company, the stakes shift. You're no longer just proving your science; you’re building your presence in the market. And in this phase, your brand does a lot of the talking.
Done well, your brand communicates:
The graduation stage is when your brand needs to mature, just like your business model, team, and tech. But maturity doesn’t mean sterility. It means being intentional about how you show up in the world.
In our experience, the life sciences companies that stand out aren’t just the most advanced, they’re the most relatable. The ones who build trust early. Who lead with purpose. Who aren’t afraid to sound and look like real people solving real problems.If your brand feels a little too clinical?
That’s not a flaw. That’s a starting point.