Brand is inevitable
Most businesses assume people know who they are and what they do. But just because people recognise you doesn’t mean they’d choose you.
Your brand is what people have learned about you over time. Brand strategy is deciding what you want them to learn.
Whether you work on it or not, that learning is happening anyway.
That’s the part many businesses miss. The risk isn’t having no brand, it’s having one that was formed by accident.
Your customers don’t think about your business every day. They retain what’s clear, repeated, and easy to recall. If that isn’t intentional, the market fills the gaps for you, and it rarely fills them in your favour.
That’s when the symptoms show up: low inbound, prospects asking you to re-explain the basics, and recognition without recall or preference.
A brand you’ve heard me talk about in these emails and on our podcast is Nike.
Most people would say Nike is known for shoes. That’s the product. What I like about them is that they’ve built something much stronger.
Over time, through consistent and deliberate messaging, Nike has become associated with personal ambition. They don’t just sit on a shelf, they sit in a specific mental space.
That’s what it looks like when the “learning” is intentional.
It decides what problem you’re known for, what associations matter, and what stays in memory when you’re not there to explain it.
“Being known” isn’t the goal. Being known for something specific is.
You don’t get to choose whether you have a brand. You do get to choose whether you shape it, until it’s clear enough to be said in a few words, like “just do it”.
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This is taken from the weekly email written by one of our directors, Roberto Boi. Every Thursday he shares observations, ideas and perspectives from the work we’re doing day to day at Dilate. If you’d like to get it delivered straight to your inbox, you can sign up here.