Both anchor brand to AI creative. Built for different buyers.
Brandflux is built for agencies running 5–50 client brands and teams shipping campaigns weekly. Typeface is built for global enterprises with a procurement cycle. If you can self-serve onto a $149 Professional plan and you'd rather skip the security review, you're in Brandflux's lane.
What's actually the same.
Both treat brand as a persistent object the AI reads from (palette, type, voice rules, imagery) rather than re-stating the brand on every prompt. Both cover more than one format (images, reels, captions). Both ship on-brand output by default rather than corrected back to brand after the fact. Both let you save Brand Audience and Channel Audiences and target variations at them. Worth saying out loud, because the differences that follow are about who the product is shaped for, not whether the underlying premise is sound.
Where they diverge.
Multi-brand is first-class, not bolted on.
Brandflux is built around the agency creative director who runs creative for 5–50 clients. Professional ships guest reviewers and 10 isolated brands; Studio lifts the cap to unlimited, adds API access, and runs review and delivery pages on your own domain (branded client surfaces). No separate enterprise contract for a third brand. The pricing model encodes it: tiers gate features, not headcount, so a three-person shop gets the same Pro-tier features as a thirty-person one. Typeface treats brand-multiplicity as a governance feature; deeper multi-brand workflows arrive through the enterprise tier, with the sales motion that comes with it. See how the agency tier is shaped.
Time to first variation is measured in seconds.
Brandflux extracts a Brand DNA from a URL or brand kit in about 45 seconds, then returns 8–12 on-brand variations per brief in about 12 seconds. You sign up in the morning and ship a campaign in the afternoon. Typeface is structured around an enterprise deployment plan (pilot, configuration, security review) so first output sits later in the timeline. Different timeline, different buyer.
Self-serve pricing: tiers gate features, not headcount.
Brandflux is self-serve, and tiers gate features, not headcount. Freelancer $29/mo (1 seat). Small Team $79/mo (up to 5 seats, 3 brands). Professional $149/mo (up to 15 seats, 10 brands) with guest reviewers. Studio $249/mo (unlimited seats and brands, API + webhooks, branded client surfaces on your own domain). A 4-person agency runs on Professional flat. No per-seat math. All taxes included. Typeface is enterprise-sales-led: pilot, contract, procurement. Full plan details.
Who picks which.
Pick Brandflux if…
You run creative for more than one brand, you want to start producing output the same afternoon you sign up, and you need agency-friendly economics, not a custom contract. The model is built around the seat you keep adding to a Studio that already covers guest reviewers and branded client surfaces on your own domain.
Pick Typeface if…
Your security team requires pre-deployment review, your buying cycle includes procurement and a pilot phase, or your stack needs the kind of governance an enterprise vendor builds out by default: audit log depth, dedicated CSM, IT-led integrations. Procurement-led shops will find Typeface's playbook more familiar.
Compare-page questions.
Point us at your brand.
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