This newsletter comes from the hosts of The Marketing Architects, a research-first show answering your biggest marketing questions. Find us on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts!
This week, we're talking with Jenni Romaniuk, research professor at the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, about distinctive assets, mental availability, and why most brands are designing for aesthetics instead of memory.
—Elena
Fame beats uniqueness when measuring distinctive assets.
Jenni Romaniuk's research shows distinctive assets need both fame (how many people recognize it) and uniqueness (how exclusively it belongs to your brand). Both are important but without fame, you risk your brand not registering at all.
Stop confusing pretty design with effective branding.
Based on two decades of marketing science research, here's what actually drives brand growth:
"Jenni Romaniuk on Distinctive Assets"
This interview with Contagious explores how distinctive assets help people effortlessly recognize brands and why treating branding like fashion trends hurts long-term growth.
Marketing is memory-making.
“The chance to make a memory is the essence of brand marketing."
— Steve Jobs