24/12/2025
Branding ≠ Chasing Trends
Many brands today mistake trend participation for strategy.
using a trending symbol, political moment, or national imagery may create short term attention, but branding is not about reaction, it’s about positioning over time.
Marketing should never be an excuse for poor strategic thinking.
before launching any campaign or packaging, brands must ask:
• Will this still make sense 3-5 years from now?
• How does this affect brand reputation, not just sales?
• Are we building equity or borrowing attention?
Nationalism is not a Marketing Shortcut
Placing a national flag or patriotic symbol on FMCG products is often misunderstood as “supporting the country”.
In reality:
• FMCG brands are everyday choices, not ideological statements
• National flags turn products into political or emotional symbols, whether intended or not
• This create polarization risk, especially in diverse or international markets.
Patriotism is not proven by packaging.
It’s proven by:
• Product quality
• Fair pricing
• Local employment
• Ethical supply chain
• Or mayb CSR activities if necessary
True national contribution is operational, not decorative.
Marketing is a long term reputation game, it is not just about visibility, it is public communication with consequences.
Every campaign leaves a trace:
• On public perception
• On media narratives
• On regulatory scrutiny
• On partner trust
A campaign that performs well today but damages credibility tomorrow is not successful marketing, it’s a liability. PR impact should be evaluated before launch, not after backlash.
IP and Licensing are not optional
Using artworks, illustrations, fonts, or cultural assets without proper licensing is not creative flexibility.
It is:
• Intellectual Property Infringement
• Legal risk
• Reputation Risk
• A sign of immature brand governance
Strong brands treat IP compliance as:
• A baseline standard
• A sign of professionalism
• A form of respect for creators and consumers
If a brand cuts corners legally, consuemrs assume it cuts corners everywhere.
Again, Marketing should never enter political territory.
The moment marketing involves:
• Political symbols
• Ideological messaging
• National identity manipulation
It stops being marketing. It becomes Political communication. And these require entirely different governance, approvals, and consequenes.
Marketing is not about being loud.
Branding is about being consistent, credible and future proof.