Our Perspective
What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.
When Signals Matter
Leadership teams often wait for perfect evidence before shifting position. The problem is that markets rarely offer certainty; they whisper before they speak. The stronger move is to treat brand as a decision system that detects weak signals and guides resource allocation. That means looking beyond campaign metrics and reading what buyers, channels and talent are telling you about fit. BCG notes that in business‑to‑business settings, 97% of respondents see brand’s role in driving awareness and consideration, and 95% say it helps organisations stand apart, underscoring that brand is a strategic lever, not a label.
The prize isn’t a new strapline; it’s restoring coherence between what you sell, who you serve and how you price. When those three align, momentum compounds.
Where Misfit Shows
In our experience with organisations at inflection points, misalignment rarely announces itself; it shows up at the edges first. Look for pattern changes, not single anomalies.
- Price-led wins increase and discounting becomes a default rather than an exception.
- Pipeline tilts towards segments you didn’t design for, pulling product and sales off course.
- Buyers ask for outcomes that your current proposition doesn’t explicitly promise.
- Candidates and partners describe you using a category you don’t compete in.
Any one of these can be rationalised. Two or more point to a position that no longer matches the demand you’re actually encountering.
What Leaders Should Track
Create a lightweight system to separate noise from signal so you can adjust early rather than react late.
- Run a monthly cross‑functional review of win–loss reasons, sales cycle drift and channel pushback.
- Track buyer “jobs to be done” alongside product usage to see where value really lands.
- Monitor where repeat revenue concentrates and whether those segments support your margins.
- Compare language in briefs, tenders and reviews with your current messaging to test category fit.
This isn’t bureaucracy; it’s how you keep investment pointed at the markets that value you most.
Reposition With Intention
When evidence mounts, the answer isn’t a campaign refresh; it’s portfolio rebalancing across demand, offers and routes to market. That may mean prioritising a different buyer group, tuning pricing logic, or shifting channel emphasis. McKinsey finds that organisations excelling at integrated, multi‑channel experiences are growing share by more than 10% a year, a reminder that repositioning often succeeds or fails in the routes you choose.
Two practical implications for leadership:
- Anchor the narrative in measurable client outcomes and independent proof to make the shift credible.
- Stage the transition, moving budget and focus quarter by quarter as signals strengthen.
Handled this way, repositioning becomes a controlled evolution that restores clarity, accelerates growth and leaves you better placed for the next turn.
Sources: