For the past five years or so, purpose-driven anything—be it brands, marketing, companies or what have you—has found itself squarely affixed within the zeitgeist of our industry, the talk of today’s most prominent marketing thought leaders.
But what is there to debate? Should brands be purpose-driven? Of course they should, if for no other reason than the fact that brands are inherently purpose-driven.
Brands have a purpose, and they are driven by it, whether we like it or not. Brands are signifiers that conjure up thoughts and feelings on behalf of a company, product, person, organization, institution or entity. Their purpose, by definition, is to signify. And marketers use iconography, color, sound, explicit communications, endorsements, kinetics and the like to do just that.
Values vs. convictions
The question isn’t whether…