Somewhere along the way, marketing forgot how greatness
actually happens.
We started treating dashboards like oracles. We mistook
metrics for meaning. And we convinced ourselves that if we just listened harder
to the data, the comments, and the focus groups, we’d stumble into brilliance.
That’s not true. It never has been.
Your audience is not the source of the next breakthrough.
They can only describe what already exists. They can’t imagine what they
haven’t felt yet.
Data doesn’t create culture. It documents it … after the
fact.
When you invite data into the creative process too early, it
doesn’t sharpen ideas. It sands them down. It rewards familiarity, penalizes
risk, and quietly pushes everything toward the center. Safe. Polite.
Forgettable.
That’s how brands spend millions and still disappear.
The brands people believe in don’t ask for
permission. They don’t optimize their way into relevance. They decide what they
stand for, build a world around it, and let the right people find them.
Liquid Death didn’t win by playing it safe and Apple didn’t
win by consensus. They won by conviction.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: If everyone likes your
brand, no one loves it.
Love requires edges. It requires taste. It requires the
courage to be misunderstood. Cult brands aren’t built by chasing approval, they’re
built by expressing belief so clearly that the right people feel seen and
everyone else self-selects out.
That’s not arrogance, it's leadership.
Metrics have a role, but not where most brands put them.
Data belongs in distribution, not creation. Use it to amplify what you’ve made,
not to decide what’s worth making.
Because algorithms don’t start movements. People do.
If you want attention, optimize. If you want devotion,
decide.
Stop asking what the audience wants. Create from belief.
Stop chasing relevancy and start creating gravity (and
gravity doesn’t ask for permission).
No comments:
Post a Comment