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 tackling one of the most misunderstood topics in branding: distinctiveness. What does it actually mean to be distinctive? And how long does it take before a color, sound, or mascot becomes truly yours?
—Elena
Less than half of ads are correctly attributed to the right brand after viewing.
New research from System1 and the IPA database shows that while marketers assume branding is obvious, audiences often don't make the connection. This is why you need to pack ads with recognizable brand cues. Data from Kantar shows that including seven distinctive elements drives recall to 100%.
How to build distinctiveness that lasts.
Distinctiveness is about being recognizable at a glance. The brain needs shortcuts, and distinctive assets create them.
Here's what the research shows:
“We know what distinctive marketing looks like. Now let's agree what to call it.”
In this Marketing Week column, Mark Ritson calls for a ceasefire in marketing's terminology war over distinctive brand assets. The article breaks down research showing that the most effective ads share three traits: they make people feel something, they run for years, and they're clearly branded.
Memory over Novelty
“If you're not remembered, you're not bought."
— Byron Sharp, Professor of Marketing Science and author of How Brands Grow