Tristar Physical Therapy
Brand Voice Guide
The verbal source of truth for how Tristar sounds
Owner · Jordan Black, PT, DPT
verbal half of the brand system
Verbal brand system

How Tristar sounds.

This is the verbal source of truth for the Tristar brand — the words half. The visual half (colors, type, layout) lives in the design system; together they define how Tristar shows up. Every patient- and public-facing message should trace back to the mission below.

Owner
Jordan Black, PT, DPT
Footprint
8 East-Tennessee locations
Scale
~30 providers · ~6,500 visits/mo
Signature phrase
“Positive, unforgettable experience”
·

The mission — voice anchor

Every patient- and public-facing message should be able to trace back to this one statement.

“Our mission at Tristar Physical Therapy is to provide a positive, unforgettable experience, while helping you achieve your personal goals and a better quality of life.” The mission

Experience comes first

We lead with how care feels — a “positive, unforgettable experience” — before the clinical outcome. Not just fixing shoulders; the whole visit.

It's the patient's goal

“Your personal goals,” “a better quality of life.” External voice is second person and centers what the patient wants.

Aspirational, but plain

A big promise in everyday words. No jargon, no hype — the ambition carries on plain language.

·

The values — TRISTAR

The core values spell TRISTAR. They sit beneath the mission as the behavioral layer — the voice flows directly from them.

T
Teamwork
We-first language; shared wins and shared problems.
R
Reliable service
Specific and dependable; say what we'll do, then do it.
I
Integrity
Straight talk; never spin a number or bury a problem.
S
Service-driven
Center the patient's experience and needs, not our convenience.
T
Trustworthy
Honest about challenges; no hype, no overselling.
A
Authentic
Write like a real person — plain, human, no corporate filler.
R
Results
Tie the work to real outcomes and the patient's own goals.
01

Voice in one line

Tristar sounds like an owner who's in the trenches with the team — warm, direct, and honest, grounded in real numbers, never corporate.
If a piece of writing could have come from a faceless HR department or a marketing agency, it isn't Tristar.
02

The five voice principles

1Warm and encouraging

The team works hard in a demanding field. Lead with appreciation and assume good intent. Recognition is specific: “Maryville hit 87% arrival rate three weeks running” beats “great job everyone.”

2Direct

Get to the point. State the ask, the news, or the number up front — never bury it under throat-clearing. Short sentences. Plain words.

3Owner-in-the-trenches

Jordan runs the practice and knows the work. The voice is a leader who understands what a full schedule or a slow front-desk day feels like — not someone issuing directives from above.

4We-first

“We,” “our team,” “the practice.” Wins and problems are shared. Prefer “let's” or “we” over “you need to.”

5Honest about challenges — always with a path forward

Tristar navigates real pressures: reimbursement, audits, tough financial stretches. Don't sugarcoat and don't catastrophize. Name the problem plainly, then give the next step. Never end on the problem.

03

Tone by audience

The five principles are constant; the register shifts by who's reading.

AudienceRegisterLengthWhat matters most
Leadership / directorsCandid partner-to-partner; data-forward; assumes business literacyLongerTreat them as co-owners of the outcome. Share the real picture, including hard numbers.
Providers (PTs/OTs)Appreciative and coaching, never scolding; respects clinical expertiseShort–medTie asks to patient care and specifics. Coach, don't correct in public.
Admin / front deskClear, practical, supportive; they're the front lineShortGive exact steps or scripts. They set the tone for every patient.
PatientsReassuring, plain, human; second person; zero clinical jargonShortThe experience and their goals — echo the mission. Make them feel cared for, not impressed.
Referring physiciansProfessional, concise, credible; outcome-focusedShortLead with the patient result. Respect their time. Earn the next referral.
04

Do / Don't

Do

  • Open with the point or the appreciation, then the detail.
  • Use real metrics when they sharpen the message: arrival rate, visits/day, RPV, referrals, no-show rate.
  • Pair every problem with a next step or path forward.
  • Use “we” and name specific people, clinics, and wins.
  • Write the way Jordan talks — like a person, not a policy.

Don't

  • Use corporate filler: circle back, synergy, leverage, at the end of the day.
  • Bury the ask or the news in paragraph three.
  • Over-apologize or hedge (“just wanted to,” “sorry to bother”).
  • Hype or oversell — credibility comes from being straight.
  • Drown a message in numbers; cite the few that matter.
  • Scold or single out a provider negatively in a group message.
05

Lexicon

Preferred

  • Morristown — never “Morristown HQ.”
  • Providers for PTs and OTs collectively.
  • The practice, our team, the clinics for the organization.
  • Arrival rate for kept appointments.
  • Patients — always people, never “cases” or “volume” in patient/provider comms.

Avoid

  • Distancing corporate-speak (see the Don't list).
  • Clinical jargon in any patient-facing message.
  • Hype adjectives — “amazing,” “world-class,” “best-in-class.” Let specifics carry the weight.

On-brand language — patient & public-facing

  • “Positive, unforgettable experience” — the signature phrase; “unforgettable” is a protected brand word.
  • “Your personal goals,” “a better quality of life” — frame outcomes as the patient's own.
  • “Real results,” “physical goals,” “everyday quality of life” — outcome language, always tied to the patient.
  • “Professional excellence with a positive environment” — pairs clinical expertise with the experience.
  • Second person — talk to the patient (“you,” “your”), not about them.
06

Quick reference — the Style Block

The condensed version, sized to paste into Claude's writing-style setting or a project's custom instructions.

Write in Tristar Physical Therapy's voice: an East Tennessee PT practice owner (Jordan Black) speaking to his team. Warm and encouraging, but direct — lead with the point or the appreciation, never bury it. Owner-in-the-trenches, not a distant executive. Use “we” and “our team.” Be honest about challenges and always pair a problem with a next step; never end on the problem. Ground claims in real numbers when they help (arrival rate, visits/day, RPV, referrals) but don't drown the message in metrics. Plain words, short sentences, no corporate filler (“circle back,” “synergy,” “leverage”), no over-apologizing, no hype. Say “Morristown” (not “Morristown HQ”) and “providers” for PTs/OTs. Shift register by audience: candid and data-forward for directors, appreciative and coaching for providers, clear and practical for front desk, reassuring and jargon-free for patients, concise and outcome-focused for referring physicians.
07

Before / after

Off-voice

“Per our ongoing commitment to operational excellence, all team members are required to ensure patient arrival metrics are optimized moving forward. Please circle back with your director.”

Tristar voice

“Our arrival rate slipped to 79% last week — below our 85% target. That's a few empty slots a day per clinic we can win back. Front desk: let's get confirmation texts out the night before. Directors: I'll have the by-clinic numbers to you Friday so we can see where to focus.”