YoStella: Build a Better Business - Inspiration for Improving Your Brand, Marketing & People
Each year on Fat Tuesday, New Orleans throws a “Stella and Stanley” party. This annual event honors local boy and world-famous author Tennessee Williams and his masterpiece, A Streetcar Named Desire.
The movie version is notorious for the scene where Stanley, Marlon Brando in a tight white vest, yells “Stella-a-a-a-a-!” up the tenement stairs to his wife. “Stella” might be the most repeated movie line ever and Brando never needed to act again except, he said, for the money. Like a legendary actor, businesses need to cultivate their craft: building an amazing brand, elevating creativity, and growing authentic connections.
At StellaPop, we believe every business has a masterpiece in them.
YoStella: Build a Better Business - Inspiration for Improving Your Brand, Marketing & People
Get Elevated: Why Pretty Brands Succeed More Often
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Your gut knows before you do. That instant calm on a clean site and the uneasy flinch on a cluttered app aren’t vibes—they’re your brain running design psychology in the background. We pull back the curtain on the invisible cues that shape trust, clarity, and choice in seconds.
We start by exposing the creator–viewer gap, where intent collides with perception. Then we unpack how color acts as a primal signal, showing why green sells “fresh” for HelloFresh and reframes Sprite as crisp and light against heavy colas. You’ll learn to pick palettes that do the persuasive heavy lifting instead of hoping a clever caption carries the message. From there, we introduce the gut check: a ruthless five- to twenty-second test to see if a stranger would immediately get what your brand, deck, or landing page is saying—without you in the room to explain it. You’ll hear how to run solo resets to fight snow blindness and how to do unprimed group tests that surface the truth fast.
Finally, we tackle the aesthetic–usability effect: the hard truth that if it looks better, people believe it works better. We connect this to cognitive load, exploring how visual order lowers friction, builds perceived reliability, and even buys forgiveness when small bugs appear. Whether you’re shipping an app, pitching a strategy, or emailing a client, design becomes the wrapper that signals competence before content can speak.
By the end, you’ll have a practical toolkit: use color to signal the attribute you want believed, validate clarity with real-world attention spans, and polish aesthetics to earn trust. Plus, we flip the lens to your life as a buyer with a simple pause that can save money: ask whether you want the thing—or the feeling its design created. If this conversation sharpens your eye and your work, follow the show, share it with a friend who ships products, and leave a quick review telling us which brand design fools you most.
Snap Judgments On Websites
SPEAKER_00Have you ever had that experience where you land on a website, maybe you're looking for, I don't know, a new bank or just trying to buy shoes, and within like three seconds, you just relax.
SPEAKER_02Oh, absolutely. It's an immediate, almost physical exhale. Yeah.
SPEAKER_00You feel like, okay, this is a good place. I'm safe here.
SPEAKER_02Your shoulders drop a little.
SPEAKER_00But then conversely, have you ever looked at a product or an app that should have been simple, but you just instantly felt confused or even a little bit repelled by it. You can't point to a specific typo or a broken link, but your brain just starts screaming, get out.
Framing The Design Psychology Lens
SPEAKER_02That is your primitive brain just taking the wheel. It's judging the environment for threats or for incompetence before your conscious brain even has time to read the first headline.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell And that's second judgment. That is exactly what we are digging into today. We are looking at the invisible strings that pull at us every time we open a website, look at a logo, or pick up a product.
SPEAKER_02Aaron Powell We're doing a deep dive into design psychology. It's such a fascinating topic because it sounds like it's just about making things look pretty, right? Or choosing between Helvetica and Ariel.
SPEAKER_01Right.
SPEAKER_02But it's actually about survival and trust and how our brains process information in a really chaotic world.
SPEAKER_00And we're drawing from a really insightful guide by Stella Pop. It's called Three Quick Tips to Get Your Business Started with Design Psychology.
SPEAKER_02And they've pulled in definitions from the UX collective to keep us grounded in the, you know, the science of it all.
SPEAKER_00What I really like about this source is how it bridges that gap. It takes these high-level academic concepts.
SPEAKER_02Neuroscience, cognitive psychology.
SPEAKER_00And it translates them into three very specific actionable things that, frankly, businesses get wrong all the time.
SPEAKER_01All the time.
SPEAKER_00And just to set the stage for you listening, our mission today isn't to teach you how to use design software. I can barely resize a photo without distorting it.
SPEAKER_02We are definitely not talking about kerning or pixels or vectors today.
SPEAKER_00No. We are talking about the thinking behind the visuals. We're decoding why certain logos make you hungry or why green makes you think healthy, even when it's on a soda can.
SPEAKER_02And why pretty things actually make us feel like they work better, which is a cognitive bias that is just so fascinating to unpack.
Creator Vs Viewer Misalignment
SPEAKER_00Okay, so let's get into it. The Stellipop guide opens with a concept that seems simple, but is actually the root of almost all communication failures.
SPEAKER_02It says there are two sides to every story in design.
SPEAKER_00Right. The creator and the viewer.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. This is the fundamental conflict.
SPEAKER_00So the creator is the business, the designer, or I guess even me making a PowerPoint slide for a meeting.
SPEAKER_02Yep. And the viewer is the customer, the audience, your boss.
SPEAKER_00Okay. But here's the problem, and the source is really blunt about this. The creator and the viewer are almost never seeing the same thing.
SPEAKER_02Never.
SPEAKER_00Why is that? I mean, if I design a red button and I put it in the middle of the screen, we both see a red button, don't we?
SPEAKER_02Physically, yes. The photons hitting your retinas are the same.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_02But psychologically, no way. As the creator, you are just burdened with context. You know why you put the button there, you know what it does, you know the whole history of the product. You're looking at that button through layers and layers of intent and background knowledge.
SPEAKER_00I see. It's the curse of knowledge.
SPEAKER_02Precisely. You cannot unknow what you know. But the viewer, they have none of that. They are just a person trying to accomplish a task. And if that button doesn't scream its function in a microsecond, they don't see a button, they see an obstacle. Or even worse, they don't see it at all.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell The source has a pretty harsh quote about what happens when this alignment fails.
SPEAKER_02Aaron Powell They do. They say that if these two sides don't align, if the viewer misunderstands the creator's intent, the design has, and I'm quoting here, no purpose nor result.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Wow. No purpose nor result. It's just a total failure.
SPEAKER_02A total failure.
SPEAKER_00That feels incredibly high stakes. It implies design isn't just about decoration, it's about translation.
SPEAKER_02Aaron Powell It is. The source references the UX collective here to define what design psychology actually is, and it's a bit of a mouthful. They call it a combination of neuroscience, cognitive psychology, social psychology, and human-computer interaction.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Okay, hold on. That sounds like I need a PhD just to pick a font for my resume. Can we break those down? Human-computer interaction sounds particularly robotic.
SPEAKER_02It sounds technical, but just think of it this way: it's the study of the conversation between a person and a machine.
SPEAKER_00The conversation.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. When you swipe right on a screen and the screen moves, that's a conversation. You did something, the machine responded. If the machine responds in a way you didn't expect, like if you swipe right and it deletes your file.
SPEAKER_00The conversation breaks down badly.
SPEAKER_02The conversation breaks down. So design psychology is just approaching that conversation through the lens of human behavior.
SPEAKER_00So it's empathy, basically.
SPEAKER_02It's operationalized empathy. The source emphasizes that every line, every shape, every graphic and text choice, it's all there to elicit a specific emotion. The goal isn't just to be there.
SPEAKER_00Right.
SPEAKER_02The goal is to sell or to build trust or to evoke empathy.
Defining Design Psychology Fields
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell, I think that's where a lot of people, myself included, get tripped up. We think design is about expression. Like, oh, I want to use this font because I think it looks cool.
SPEAKER_02And that's the creator mindset taking over again. The viewer mindset doesn't care what you think is cool.
SPEAKER_00Right.
SPEAKER_02The viewer wants to know two things. Can I trust you? And what do you do? And if your cool font makes me squint, I don't trust you.
SPEAKER_00That's a great distinction. So the Stella Pop guide gives us three specific ways to bridge this gap, three tips to get out of our own heads and into the viewer's head.
SPEAKER_01And the first one is about the most primal signal we have: color.
SPEAKER_00Tip number one.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00Study the psychology of color.
SPEAKER_01Mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_00Now I feel like we've all heard the basics. You know, red is passion, blue is calm. Is there more to it than just that, or is that just like horoscopes for designers?
SPEAKER_02Aaron Powell There is a lot more to it. It's not just about the feeling, it's about the association. And how that association well, it manipulates your perception. The source uses the word persuade, which I think is fascinating. Yeah. Color persuades us to believe things about a product that might not even be objectively true yet.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Okay, give us the example from the guide. They focus heavily on green.
SPEAKER_02They do. So let's do a quick test. When you see green in a branding context, what words just pop into your brain?
SPEAKER_00Trees, grass, salad. Money, maybe?
SPEAKER_02Aaron Ross Powell Okay, yeah. The source lists. Growth, organic, natural, caring, fresh, and earth. It's a biological connection. We are hardwired to see green and think life or sustenance.
SPEAKER_00And the guide brings up two brand examples to prove this. One is HelloFresh and the other is Sprite.
SPEAKER_02So let's look at HelloFresh first. That's the straightforward one. They send you meal kits. Right. They want you to feel like the food is farmed to table.
SPEAKER_00Sure. If the HelloFresh logo was, I don't know, a greasy industrial gray or a warning sign yellow, I'd probably hesitate to eat the chicken.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. The green acts as a shorthand. It says this is safe to eat. It does the heavy lifting before you even read the menu. But Sprite. Yeah, Sprite. Sprite is the one that really shows the power of design psychology in action.
SPEAKER_00Because Sprite is soda. It is high fructose corn syrup and carbonated water. It is literally the opposite of a salad.
SPEAKER_02It is definitely not a salad. But think about the soda market context, right? You have Coke and Pepsi. They are brown, dark, heavy liquids.
SPEAKER_00They feel dense.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. So how does Sprite compete? They don't try to out-cola the colas, they pivot. They use green to signal crisp, clean, thirst quenching.
SPEAKER_00And lemon lime, which are fruits.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. By wrapping a sugary soda in green branding, they are borrowing the psychological credibility of nature. They're persuading your brain to categorize the drink as fresh rather than heavy.
SPEAKER_00That is actually kind of brilliant when you think about it. It's all about framing.
Tip One: Color As Persuasion
SPEAKER_02It's incredibly effective framing. It manages expectations. If Sprite were in a brown can, it would taste wrong because your brain would be expecting cola. The green primes your tongue for that citrus flavor.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell So for you listening, the takeaway here isn't just use green if you like nature. It's it's use color to signal the attribute you want people to believe you have.
SPEAKER_02Precisely. Look at your banking app. It's probably blue.
SPEAKER_00Stability, trust.
SPEAKER_02Right. Because you don't want a creative bank. You don't want an exciting bank. You want a boring, stable, blue bank.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell But what if I pick the wrong color? What if I think my green logo looks fresh, but everyone else thinks it looks like, I don't know, algae.
SPEAKER_02That is a very real risk. Color is subjective to a degree, and that brings us perfectly to tip number two.
SPEAKER_00You have to verify your assumptions.
SPEAKER_02Because you literally cannot trust your own eyes.
SPEAKER_00The source calls this the gut check.
SPEAKER_02And this is, in my opinion, the most practical tool in the entire guide. The gut check is a method to validate if the message you want to get across is what's actually getting across.
SPEAKER_00Because going back to the beginning, if the creator and viewer don't align, you fail. So how do we do a gut check? Is this just trusting my own gut?
SPEAKER_02Actually, it's about testing other people's guts. Or if you're alone, it's about tricking your own gut. The source breaks it down into two types: the solo gut check and the group gut check.
SPEAKER_00Okay, let's start with the solo version. I'm working late, I've been staring at a slide deck or a logo for six hours, my brain is fried. How do I check myself?
SPEAKER_02The first step is the hardest, and almost nobody does it. You have to walk away. The guide says you need to leave the design alone for a day or two.
SPEAKER_00A day or two? In this economy, that feels like an eternity when you've got a deadline.
SPEAKER_02It's necessary. You are suffering from what designers call snow blindness. You literally cannot see the flaws because your brain is filling in the gaps with what you know should be there. You need to let the creator part of your brain cool down so the viewer part can wake up.
SPEAKER_00Okay, so I take a break, I come back 24 hours later, then what?
SPEAKER_02You take a quick look.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_02And the source is specific here. Five to twenty seconds.
SPEAKER_00That seems incredibly short. Why not study it?
SPEAKER_02Because your customers aren't going to study it. In the real world, you get a glance, maybe three seconds on a website, two seconds on a billboard as you drive by.
SPEAKER_00Okay.
SPEAKER_02If the message doesn't land in that first blink, it's gone.
SPEAKER_00So I look for five seconds, then I write down what exactly?
SPEAKER_02You write down your immediate visceral reaction, feelings, thoughts, associations. And you have to be brutally honest. If you look at your new sleek tech logo and your first thought is potato.
SPEAKER_00You write down potato.
SPEAKER_02You write down potato. I feel like potato is rarely the goal for a tech startup.
SPEAKER_00Rarely.
SPEAKER_02But if you don't write it down, you'll rationalize it away. You'll say, oh, well, I can see why it looks like a potato, but if I explain the backstory and the heritage of the brand.
SPEAKER_00But you won't be there to explain the backstory.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. And that's why the group gut check is the gold standard. This is where you bring in one to three other people.
SPEAKER_00Okay, friends, family. Or do I need experts?
SPEAKER_02Ideally, people who are somewhat representative of your audience, but friends work in a pinch. However, and this is the rule that if you break it, it ruins the whole experiment, they must not know the end goal.
SPEAKER_00Wait, really? So I can't tell them, hey, tell me if this looks like a luxury coffee brand.
SPEAKER_02Absolutely not. The second you say luxury coffee brand, you've primed them. Their brains will actively look for evidence to confirm your statement.
SPEAKER_00Ah, I'm leading the witness.
SPEAKER_02You're corrupting the data. They'll say, Oh yeah, the brown is very coffee-like. You want an unbiased appraisal. You just show it to them and ask, what is this? What does this company do?
SPEAKER_00That sounds terrifying.
SPEAKER_02It is the scariest part of the creative process because if you show them your coffee logo and they say, it looks like a toxic waste disposal company.
SPEAKER_00Your heart just sinks.
SPEAKER_02It sinks. But I guess it's better to have your heart sink in a private meeting than after you've spent$10,000 printing the cups.
SPEAKER_00That's the ROI of the gut check right there. It simulates the harsh reality of the market without the uh financial cost.
SPEAKER_02It's pure reality testing.
SPEAKER_00I love that.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_00So we've used color to signal emotion. We've used the gut check to verify clarity. Now we get to the third tip, and this one. Honestly, this one made me rethink how I judge everything.
SPEAKER_02You're talking about the aesthetic usability effect.
SPEAKER_00Yes. This sounds like a mouthful, but it explains so much about modern tech and why I buy things I probably shouldn't.
SPEAKER_02It's a heavy hitter in the UX world for sure.
HelloFresh And Sprite Case Study
SPEAKER_00So let's break down the name aesthetic usability. What does that actually mean?
SPEAKER_02In short, it refers to a specific subconscious user belief. The source defines it as if it looks better, it works better.
SPEAKER_00Even if that isn't true. Even if the pretty app is actually full of bugs and glitches.
SPEAKER_02But even then, our brains are, I mean, they're hardwired to assume that a clean, aesthetically pleasing design implies that the product or the idea behind it is efficient, orderly, and functional.
SPEAKER_00That seems so superficial. We're taught don't judge a book by its cover, but this is saying we judge the contents of the book by the cover.
SPEAKER_02We absolutely do. The source calls this the hard truth. It says, and I'm quoting in essentially it means that one of the most basic contributing factors in design psychology is making the design pretty.
SPEAKER_00Making it pretty. It sounds so dismissive, but there's a real reason for it, right? It's not just vanity.
SPEAKER_02No, not at all. It's about cognitive load. Think about it. If you look at a website that is cluttered with mismatched fonts, jarring colors, things slightly misaligned, your brain has to work hard just to figure out where to look. It feels heavy.
SPEAKER_00It feels like work.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. But a clean, beautiful design feels effortless. And your brain interprets effortless to look at as effortless to use.
SPEAKER_00So let's hypothetical this. If I have two apps that do the exact same thing, let's say they're both calculators. App A is ugly, clunky gray buttons, maybe a bit pixelated. App B is sleek, beautiful, nice drop shadows, good spacing. I'm going to assume app B creates better math.
SPEAKER_02Aaron Powell Well, you won't assume the math is different, but you will assume app B is less likely to crash.
SPEAKER_00Okay.
SPEAKER_02You will assume the developers of App B were smarter and more careful. And here's the kicker. If App B does have a bug, say it freezes for a second, you are more likely to forgive it.
SPEAKER_00Why?
SPEAKER_02Because you've already established trust based on the visuals. You think, oh, it's just a glitch. But if the ugly app A freezes, you say Well, of course. Look at this piece of junk. Exactly. The beauty buys you patience. It buys you a halo effect.
SPEAKER_00This connects right back to what we said at the start about trusting a website in three seconds. It looked orderly, so I assume the business was orderly.
SPEAKER_02It's a shortcut. Our brains are lazy. We use beauty as a proxy for competence. And for anyone listening who is building a business or even just writing an email to a client, this is crucial.
SPEAKER_00How so?
SPEAKER_02You might have the best data in the world, you might have the smartest strategy. But if you present it in a document that looks like it was thrown together in 1998, people will assume your strategy is outdated too.
SPEAKER_00So you can't just rely on being smart or right. You actually have to wrap it in a package that signals intelligence.
SPEAKER_02The Stellipop guide sums it up by saying a clean design attracts consumers. It's the entry fee. If you don't pay the entry fee of looking decent, people might never stick around long enough to find out how smart you actually are.
SPEAKER_00That's a really humbling realization for us non-designers. We like to think content is king, but design is the castle the king lives in. If the castle is falling down, nobody visits the king.
SPEAKER_02That's a great analogy.
SPEAKER_00So bringing this all together for you, the learner listening right now, we aren't all graphic designers. We aren't all launching soda brands, but we are all creators in some way, aren't we?
SPEAKER_02Oh, 100%. Every time you send an email, create a report, or even dress for an interview, you are designing an experience. You are trying to bridge that gap between your intent and the viewer's perception.
SPEAKER_00So let's recap the toolkit we've uncovered today from the Stellipop Guide.
SPEAKER_02Sure. First, color drives association. It's not random paint, it's a signal. If you want to signal growth or freshness, look at green. But more importantly, ask yourself what feeling you're trying to trigger and pick the color that does the heavy lifting for you.
SPEAKER_00Second is that reality check, the gut check. You just cannot trust your own brain because you know too much. You have to step away.
Tip Two: The Gut Check Method
SPEAKER_02And don't lead the witness. Show your work to someone who knows nothing about it. If they don't get it in five seconds, don't explain it. Fix it.
SPEAKER_00And finally, the aesthetic usability effect.
SPEAKER_02Beauty breeds trust. If it looks better, people believe it works better. Don't treat aesthetics as an afterthought. It is a core part of how people judge functionality.
SPEAKER_00It really does change how you walk through the world. Once you know about these invisible strings, you just can't unsee them.
SPEAKER_02You really can't. You start seeing that every billboard, every cereal box, every app icon is trying to hack your brain a little bit.
SPEAKER_00So here is the challenge for you, the listener. The next time you are about to buy something, whether it's a$5 coffee or a$50 subscription stop, for just a second.
SPEAKER_02And ask yourself the question the source leaves us with What type of psychological response is this branding eliciting?
SPEAKER_00And ask yourself the hard question Am I buying this because it truly works? Or am I buying it just because it looks like it works?
SPEAKER_02That's the question that saves you money.
SPEAKER_00Thanks for diving in with us today. Keep your eyes open out there.
SPEAKER_02See you next time.