Our Perspective
What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.
The Real Constraint
Most transformations trip not on strategy, but on choices made day to day. When brand is treated as a marketing asset, those choices default to campaigns and content rather than direction and trade-offs. Functions then optimise locally, not collectively. The result is noise: inconsistent briefs, rework, and different interpretations of what “good” looks like, especially across regions and channels.
The better question isn’t “what should we say?” but “what must we choose?” Brand becomes useful when it sets the consequences of choice—who we serve first, what we build next, and what we stop—so execution coheres without chasing every request.
Brand As Choice Architecture
Think of brand as the organisation’s choice architecture—how priorities, behaviours, and experiences align to a single promise under pressure. That matters because structures are already hybrid and fluid. BCG observes that only 35% of companies now organise marketing purely by function, with most adopting mixed models to fit strategy; brand should be the common guide those models share.
Make the shift explicit:
- From campaigns to commitments: the promise you’ll be judged on, linked to growth goals.
- From guidelines to guardrails: decision principles that clarify trade-offs.
- From messaging to measures: outcomes that prove trust, speed, and relevance.
Governance In Motion
Governance isn’t bureaucracy; it’s momentum management. A simple rhythm scales faster than a thicker brand book. Establish quarterly narrative reviews to reset the story against shifting conditions, keep a short set of decision principles visible in planning, and use a shared playbook so teams don’t reinterpret fundamentals every time.
In our experience with scale-ups and mid-market organisations, the moment that changes behaviour is a single end-to-end experience released without compromise—a product launch, onboarding flow, or service fix that demonstrates the promise in full view. One proof beats twenty slogans because it rewires belief and sets a new baseline.
Leadership Implications
When brand is the compass, leadership owns coherence, not just creativity. That means a few uncomfortable, valuable choices:
- Appoint a senior sponsor for alignment, empowered to stop low-impact projects early.
- Tie incentives to delivering the promise across teams, not isolated activity metrics.
- Track cycle times for decisions and customer confidence signals as leading indicators.
The point isn’t a prettier story; it’s a faster organisation that moves with conviction. Treat brand as the mechanism that turns strategy into consistent decisions under uncertainty, and the next phase of change starts to compound rather than reset each quarter.
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