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Published on: February 8, 2023
Video Market & Brand Trends

The Power of Emotion in Brand Connection: A Strategic View

Summary

As organisations scale, decisions slow and price pressure mounts. What once felt clear becomes a tussle between rational proof and emotional pull. Brand strategy restores coherence by mapping decision moments and sequencing reason, then feeling. The result: faster decisions, margins that hold, deeper loyalty.



Watch The Video

In this video, Dipendra Mistry, CSO and Managing Partner, explores how using the dual power of logic and emotion strengthens loyalty and accelerates sales.


→ Watch more videos in this playlist on YouTube

Our Perspective

What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.

The Real Choice

Leaders often treat reason and emotion as a zero-sum trade. That framing is costly because emotion sets the agenda, while reason reduces risk. Ignore either and you either don’t get chosen or don’t get approved. The commercial question isn’t “which matters more?” but “when does each matter most?” In considered purchases, people first seek reassurance that you understand the problem, then look for proof they won’t regret the move.

Forbes observes that emotional attachment explains around 43% of business value, with product features contributing closer to 20%—so treating feelings as an afterthought leaves growth on the table.

Map Decision Moments

High-performing brands map decisions, not departments. Start at the trigger: what prompts the search, who influences it, and how risk is perceived. Then separate the choice moment from the justification moment. The first needs clarity and relevance; the second needs evidence and social proof.

  • Identify where reassurance unlocks momentum and where proof clears risk.
  • Track influencers across the journey—users, budget holders, and approvers.
  • Decide which signal each moment demands: relief, confidence, or credibility.

In our experience with leadership teams at inflection points, the brands that cut through are the ones that codify these moments and assign the right signal to each.

Reason, Then Feeling

When message architecture starts with reason and finishes with feeling, conversion tends to rise. Lead with the problem solved, stated plainly. Then underpin it with proof—comparative metrics, references, and specifics. Close with meaning: why it matters to people, not personas.

  • Anchor on outcomes your buyer must defend; avoid feature-led sprawl.
  • Use one signature proof per claim; don’t bury confidence under data.
  • End with a human frame: time back, reduced anxiety, clearer progress.

This sequence earns trust and helps people prioritise you over safe sameness.

Equip For Consistency

Emotion isn’t created by campaigns; it’s reinforced in every cue. Service, sales, onboarding, and support either align behind a single value story or work at cross purposes. Forbes notes that eight in ten customers feel more emotionally connected when service actually resolves their issue—a reminder that operations are branding in practice.

  • Build a proof library with validated metrics, quotes, and cases.
  • Script helpful phrases for sales and support to echo the same stance.
  • Establish review rituals where leaders judge both evidence and empathy.

Leadership Implications

If you want momentum without discounting, treat emotional connection as a design choice and make proof effortless to find.

  • Govern the message architecture; don’t outsource it to campaigns.
  • Fund journey moments that reduce perceived risk, not just media.
  • Measure decision velocity and margin resilience alongside awareness.

The organisations that master this balance will feel easier to choose and harder to replace, compounding advantage with each interaction.

Sources:

Further Resources

  1. Unlocking Strategic Choices: The Role of Brand Strategy
  2. How CEOs Align Brand and Strategy for Success
  3. When to Hire a Fractional Chief Brand Officer


If today’s topic resonates, we invite you to continue the dialogue — sometimes one conversation reframes the challenge. Start the conversation.

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Video Market & Brand Trends