How every customer creates their own brand reality

How every customer creates their own brand reality

Many years ago I had the opportunity to work alongside Sergio Zyman, the former Coca-Cola CMO and one of the most visionary executives of his generation. A colleague once asked him, "Sergio, how many marketing strategies should you have?" Without missing a beat, he said, "How many customers do you have?"

While this might seem like a whimsical or even flippant response, there is a deep truth here. A company needs to stratify its messages to the Nth degree, to personalize for individuals as much as the budget can afford.

It dawned on me that Sergio's wish has come true, whether we know it or not. Every customer is receiving a personalized message about your company, and it has little or nothing to do with your marketing efforts. Everyone is forging their own brand reality. Let's find out why ...

The personalized brand reality

I've been thinking a lot about the fact that most of the human race no longer has any shared reality.

Thirty years ago, we would get our news and information from one or two daily newspapers, three network television stations, a couple of family magazine subscriptions, and maybe the radio during our commute to work.

So, there was a limited and common base of understanding. You might not agree with your neighbor, but at least you were debating the same facts that you gleaned from the evening news.

Today, through the infinite opportunity of the internet, we surround ourselves with whatever news and information supports our peculiar worldview.

There are endless resources that cater to every nuanced political and philosophical position. You can surround yourself with people and news sources that will logically support that the world is flat or that a man never landed on the moon.

A recent poll found that 15 percent of Americans believe in the QAnon conspiracy theory that the levers of government power are controlled by a cabal of Satan-worshiping pedophiles. That number is larger than the membership of the Protestant church in America. That sort of bizarro world reality could only occur now, in a world of self-selected internet news.

People in these reality bubbles will think you're crazy if you don't share their world view because everyone they know, and everything they read supports their perspective. How can you be so dense?

The internet has become a scaffolding that holds an individually-created reality in place.

This also extends to feelings and beliefs about products and companies.

Whether you believe that the Denver Airport is the headquarters for a secret society plotting to take over the world, that Coke can dissolve a human toothElon Musk is an alien, or that the COVID vaccine injects trackable microchips under your skin, you can immerse yourself in the right media to support whatever you want to believe.

It's an interesting dilemma from a business standpoint. People surround themselves with supporting media and there's probably nothing you can do to change their self-selected brand reality!

The Google assist

Our self-induced personal brand reality is supported and enhanced by the bubbles we're kept in by Google, Facebook, and other search algorithms.

If you and I searched for "best luxury automobiles," the result could be quite different for both of us, even if we're using the same terms. The results can be impacted by:

  • Where we live
  • Our past search history
  • Local advertisers
  • What our friends search for

... to name a few.

One time, my wife was searching for a very specific type of shirt for me. I started seeing ads for that obscure shirt in my own news feed ... although I had never searched for it! The algorithms knew we were connected and responded accordingly. I'm sure you have your own creepy examples of how these snippets of code hold our own personal realities in place!

The implications

If you think through the implications of these ideas, it's easy to see that Sergio's wish has come true, whether we like it or not. Our online reality has been fractured in millions of ways so that over time, our individual online experience conforms to our views and expectations. We are all surrounded by semi-permeable, or perhaps impermeable, brand bubbles.

In 2020, the average American spent nearly eight hours a day on the internet. Arguably, the internet is our reality.

I wonder if marketing strategy today is really about creating a brand story about a product, or is it finding a creative way to lure people out of their bubbles ... or keeping them in one?


I appreciate you and the time you took out of your day to read this! You can find more articles like this from me on the top-rated {grow} blog and while you’re there, take a look at my Marketing Companion podcast and my keynote speaking page. For news and insights find me on Twitter at @markwschaefer and to see what I do when I’m not working, follow me on Instagram.

Illustration courtesy of Unsplash.com

Jaqui Lane

Book coach and adviser to business leaders. Self publishing expert. Author. Increase your impact, recognition and visibility. Write, publish and successfully sell your business book. I can show you how. Ask me now.

3 年
Louis Diez

Founder, Donor Participation Project & Annual Fund Toolkit

3 年

Hence the value of community-building (AKA create your own bubble)?

Ryan Anderson

?? Stating and singing the obvious and not-so-obvious | Need a song and/or video for any occasion? DM me.

3 年

Thank you, Mark, as always, for your perspective. ?? Within what you're talking about is something that many people don't feel comfortable discussing: Truth. It's one thing being delivered ads for a shirt that two people will think differently about. That's an opinion that, arguably, doesn't matter. But when we believe something is "fact"/true, and we're mistaken, the ramifications can be life-altering. This past year plus has seen polarisation amped right up, with people holding fast to their "facts", and no middle ground, it seems, to neutrally dismantle beliefs/notions/ideas and agree on what criteria should be used for Truth. This is a great example of where "your Truth is your truth, and my Truth is my truth" can be dangerous. I mention this only because you touched on some stuff. When Truth and Opinion or Preference get mixed up, that can be dangerous. I think we all generally allow ourselves to become conditioned, for better or for worse - whether thanks to an algorithm, a news channel, a relationship, a job, a church or a buying habit. ?? Thanks again for bringing this up, Mark. I think I know what your natural follow up to #CumulativeAdvantage will be...

Rebecca Wilson

Succeed with Automation | Helping Busy Businesses Reclaim Time for Creativity by Integrating Workflow Automation & AI | 15+Yrs Business Operations | Curious about Continuous Improvement | Business Book Lover & New Mum??

3 年

Very interesting read Mark, thank you. I am genuinely concerned about the 'facebook effect' as I call it where algorithms serve up more of what you like/ dwell on further reinforcing your current opinion and closing you off to new perspectives. I also thought it was something that 'happened to other people' until the pandemic presented me with an opportunity to interact with very different people, virtually... Hadn't thought about it from a brand perspective, though.

Mark Herten

Ich bringe Unternehmen aus den Branchen Elektronik, Industrie und Green Tech in die K?pfe von Ingenieuren & B2B-Entscheidern. ?? B2B Marketing Fan ?? Podcaster ?? Community Builder

3 年

Really interesting thoughts. Thank you for sharing. And great picture, too.

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