What’s Driving Growth Right Now
Most insights explain the past. Ours are built to win what’s next.
This is where we call out what’s breaking, what’s working, and where growth is being created right now—so you can move before everyone else does.
The Logo Survived. The Brand Didn’t.
The Douglas clan coat of arms may be one of history’s earliest examples of a logo becoming a true brand. Through war, reputation, mythology, and cultural meaning, the symbol evolved into something people feared, respected, and emotionally understood. But over centuries, as the stories and relevance faded, the brand slowly decayed back into a logo. A lesson many modern marketers still haven’t learned.
Culture, Sound, and the Signal Most Brands Are Missing
Reggae and Caribbean-rooted music aren’t just globally popular— they’re globally effective. From Kingston to San Juan, these sounds now operate at pop scale while doing something most advertising struggles to achieve: they’re felt. Slower tempos, steady rhythms, and bass-driven immersion align with how the human body responds to sound. The question isn’t why this culture travels. It’s why more brands aren’t building against it.
Stop Selling the Product. Start Selling What It Means.
Product differentiation gets a brand noticed. Emotional differentiation gets it chosen. In crowded categories, features, ingredients, and claims are quickly copied. What lasts is the emotional meaning a brand creates—fun, confidence, belonging, trust, or aspiration. That’s what builds loyalty, premium pricing power, and long-term growth when product parity takes over.
Your Attribution Stack Is Lying to You
Closed-platform reporting is useful. It is also dangerously incomplete when marketers treat it like the whole truth. Shopify, HubSpot, Amazon, Adobe, and GA360 can all help measure performance. None of them should be mistaken for a complete map of demand creation. The real risk is not bad data. It is overconfidence in one dashboard’s version of reality.
Retail Media Without Brand Building Is Just Expensive Shelf Rent
Retail media is booming for a reason. But the closer a channel sits to purchase, the less it can do the work of building meaning, trust, and preference. When brands ask the shelf to compensate for weak brand equity upstream, retail media stops being a growth accelerator and starts becoming expensive shelf rent.
The Funnel Isn’t Broken. Demand Creation Is.
Too many brands are trying to close demand they never created. They overinvest in the bottom of the funnel, underinvest in awareness and consideration, and then wonder why growth stalls. The problem is not a lack of impressions. It is the absence of a system that makes those impressions matter.
The Growth Watchlist: March Edition
Five categories. Millions of lost users. And not one of them is a demand problem. From backyard staples to road trip essentials, the brands losing right now all made the same mistake: they stayed familiar while consumers moved on. Meanwhile, competitors didn’t just get better, they got more relevant. If your brand still relies on what worked yesterday, this one’s worth your attention.