I’m Terence Meghani. I do brand identity, marketing, web development, and photography — mostly for businesses in Hertfordshire and London who need someone who can own the whole thing rather than handing pieces of it to three different suppliers who’ve never spoken to each other.
How I got here
I started my first business at 16. It didn’t last, but it taught me more about actually running something than any course would have — how to sell, how to follow through, and how to notice when a plan isn’t working and change it rather than defending it. I never went the traditional design-school route. Most of what I know came from doing the work, badly at first, on real projects with real budgets, and from travelling enough to see how differently businesses operate outside whatever bubble I’d have stayed in otherwise.
Before I worked for myself, I was in sales and marketing at Staples and at Three (Hutchinson UK) — jobs that taught me how to read a client’s actual problem rather than the one they think they have, and how a business decision looks from the other side of the table. At 23, I started the business that’s turned into what I do now: helping brands tell their story properly, through design, marketing, and photography, rather than treating each of those as a separate purchase.
What I actually do
Four things, and I treat them as one connected job rather than four separate services:
- Brand identity — logo, colour, typography, and the messaging underneath it, built to hold up outside a mood board.
- Marketing — campaigns built around what a business actually offers, not a generic template dressed up with the client’s logo.
- Website development — sites built to convert, not just to look good in a portfolio screenshot.
- Photography — because most brand identities fall apart the moment real photography is needed and nobody planned for it.
Who I’ve worked with
The range is wide on purpose. I’ve rebuilt the identity for a laundrette, resolved cyber-security messaging for News UK, worked on brand campaigns for Royal London, and helped the NHS communicate more clearly with the public. Locally, that’s meant projects like Protech Motors, Triage Vets, Kemp Services, and The Hollybush Bar & Restaurant — each one different, but built the same way: understand the business properly before touching the design.
What clients say
“The custom website designed by Terence transformed our business. His SEO expertise helped us rank higher and reach new audiences.” — Rishi, Xclusive Services
“Terence played a crucial role in resetting our cyber messaging. His efforts have had a lasting impact on our communication strategies.” — Mun, News UK
“Thanks to Terence’s marketing and web design skills, our sales and market presence have significantly improved.” — Kush, La Royale Banqueting Suites
How I actually work
I don’t believe small businesses need to choose between cheap and generic, or expensive and slow. Most of the value I add comes from doing the strategic thinking myself rather than farming it out, and from staying involved after launch rather than disappearing once the invoice is paid. If something breaks on a Tuesday, you’re talking to the person who built it, not a support queue reading from a script.
If you want to see what that looks like in practice, the rebranding and website maintenance pages both cover real examples in more depth. Or just get in touch — I’d rather have the actual conversation about your business than have you read a bio guessing at it.
Got something like this — or nothing like it?
Tell me what you're starting, or what's broken.
