Three colors with roles beats ten colors without them
The most common startup palette mistake is addition without structure. The team picks a hero color, adds a second for variety, then keeps extending — until the product has seventeen colors and none of them have defined jobs. The minimum viable palette structure is three colors with explicit roles: a primary action color (buttons, links, CTAs), a background neutral (the surface the product lives on), and an accent (for emphasis, status, or energy). This three-color system with clear roles produces more visually coherent products than any expanded palette without role assignments. The Brand Starter Kit is built around role-first organization: each color token has an explicit purpose, which means the palette works immediately in implementation even without a detailed brand guide.
