I Generated 200 Brand Images.Only 3 Were Usable.
I jumped into Midjourney thinking I'd batch-generate a brand's entire visual identity in an afternoon. The math seemed obvious: more prompts, more options, higher odds of landing something good. What I found was the opposite. Ninety-five percent of what came back was either technically broken, tonally off, or so generic it could've been made for any business.
The real work isn't in the generation—it's in the prompt architecture. Midjourney's documentation shows that specificity compounds. I wasn't saying "luxury real estate brand image." I was saying "luxury coastal real estate brand for Brevard County, warm neutrals with subtle maritime detail, 1970s aesthetic, shot on Hasselblad." That specificity cuts your usable output from 3 percent to maybe 40 percent. The difference is prompt discipline, not more generations.
What changed the math was treating Midjourney as a refinement tool, not a production tool. I'd generate 10 variations, pick one direction, tighten the prompt, iterate. That's how our AI automation services actually work with clients—it's a conversation with the tool, not a fire-and-forget button.
Pick one brand element you need (logo direction, color palette study, or packaging mockup). Write a 3-sentence prompt with specifics: audience, style reference, medium, and one constraint. Generate 5 times. Pick the closest one and describe what worked about it back into your next prompt. That's the actual workflow.
