Taylor Ashford

Baxter Gardens

Brand Positioning and Infrastructure for a Growing Firm

Baxter Gardens, a second-generation landscape design firm in Chesterfield, MO, had the design expertise to win larger, higher-margin projects, but their public presence did not reflect it, and their internal knowledge base was not built to scale. The company’s website looked indistinguishable from smaller, less specialized competitors. Meanwhile, decades of plant expertise—nearly 1,000 species, growing conditions, design applications—existed only in scattered spreadsheets, dependent on institutional memory rather than a reliable system.

The work needed to solve both problems at once: position the firm for the kind of projects they wanted and give them the internal infrastructure to support that growth.

Approach

I treated brand and operations as the same problem. A premium brand promises expertise, so the firm needed systems that could actually deliver on that promise.

On the brand side, I repositioned Baxter Gardens away from conventional landscaping marketing—bright greens, generic photography, long service lists—toward something closer to a design studio’s visual language: restrained color, editorial typography, quality photography. Their services are reframed around a clearer narrative—Design, Manage, Care—establishing them as a long-term partner rather than a one-time vendor, a distinction that wins larger and more complex projects.

Baxter Gardens Chesterfield homepage hero section showing an evening outdoor living space with lounge seating, string lights, and a “Your home starts here” headline. Baxter Gardens website page with Design, Manage, and Care navigation tabs, showing a landscape design sketch alongside text on balancing function and beauty in outdoor living spaces.

On the operations side, I converted their plant knowledge from static spreadsheets into a living, searchable reference tool for their team—organized by growing conditions, design application, and care requirements. The goal was simple: make institutional knowledge something the whole organization could rely on, not something that lived in one inbox or one person’s head.

Baxter Gardens plant database search page with a search bar, sort and filter controls, and a grid of plant photos including Foamy Bells and Kaleidoscope Abelia. Baxter Gardens plant detail page for Fun and Games ‘Eye Spy’ Foamy Bells, showing a description, a photo of the pink-flowering plant, and a specs table listing type, height, and width.

Outcome

Baxter Gardens now has a brand built for the clients they want to attract and a living database of nearly 1,000 plants that puts decades of institutional knowledge in reach of the whole team.