Listening Intelligently 11 | The Trump Brand: When Controversy Becomes Currency
The Great Wave off Kanagawa, Katsushika Hokusai

Listening Intelligently 11 | The Trump Brand: When Controversy Becomes Currency

In the traditional playbook of brand management, controversy is typically seen as something to be avoided - a potential crisis that requires careful navigation and damage control. But what happens when controversy itself becomes the brand strategy?

The Trump brand presents a fascinating case study of this unconventional approach, challenging conventional wisdom about reputation management in the digital age.

The Algorithm Advantage: Converting Controversy to Visibility

In today's digital landscape, algorithms favour engagement above all else. While most brands carefully craft messages to avoid polarisation, the Trump brand has consistently leveraged divisiveness to maintain unprecedented visibility. Every controversial statement or action generates millions of interactions across social media platforms, keeping the brand consistently at the forefront of public consciousness.

This approach presents a stark contrast to traditional reputation management strategies. While most brands follow a careful path of:

  • Measured responses
  • Balanced messaging
  • Broad appeal
  • Risk mitigation

The Trump brand instead embraces:

  • Provocative statements
  • Polarising positions
  • Targeted messaging
  • Risk amplification

The Authenticity Paradox

What makes the Trump brand particularly interesting is its relationship with authenticity - a crucial element in modern branding. While traditional reputation management emphasises careful message crafting and strategic response to controversy,

the Trump brand has maintained a perception of authenticity through consistent inconsistency

The brand voice remains unchanging even (and especially) in the face of controversy, creating a unique form of trust with its core audience. This raises interesting questions about traditional reputation management strategies. While most brands follow the conventional wisdom of:

  1. Acknowledging mistakes
  2. Showing contrition
  3. Promising change
  4. Implementing improvements

The Trump brand often:

  1. Doubles down on controversial positions
  2. Attacks critics
  3. Reframes narratives
  4. Mobilises supporter base


The Strategic Implications

There are I believe three important lessons for brand strategists to reflect upon:

1. Algorithm Understanding

The Trump brand demonstrates deep understanding of how social media algorithms work. Controversy generates engagement, engagement drives visibility, and visibility maintains relevance. In an attention economy, this creates a self-sustaining cycle of brand awareness.

2. Audience Segmentation

Rather than trying to appeal to everyone, the brand accepts and even encourages polarisation. This creates incredibly strong bonds with core supporters while accepting complete alienation of opponents - a high-risk, high-reward strategy.

3. Consistency in Controversy

While the content may be controversial, the brand voice remains consistent. This creates a form of reliability that supporters can trust, even when (or especially when) facing criticism.


The Ethical Considerations

This strategy raises important ethical questions for brand managers. While the approach has undeniably been effective in maintaining brand visibility and core supporter loyalty, it comes with significant costs:

  • Societal polarisation
  • Erosion of traditional discourse norms
  • Challenge to conventional truth metrics
  • Impact on democratic institutions


Looking Forward: Implications for Brand Management

The Trump brand approach forces us to reconsider traditional approaches to reputation management. While most brands shouldn't adopt this high-risk strategy, elements of it deserve analysis:

  1. Algorithmic Awareness: Understanding how digital platforms reward engagement
  2. Authentic Voice: Maintaining consistency even during controversies
  3. Core Audience Focus: Sometimes accepting polarisation for stronger supporter bonds
  4. Strategic Controversy: Recognising when conventional wisdom about brand safety might be wrong


Traditional Crisis Management vs. The Trump Approach

The contrast between traditional reputation management and the Trump brand approach becomes particularly stark when we examine established crisis management frameworks. Let's analyse this through the lens of the atypical 5 Strategic Steps to Reputation Salvage:

1. Immediate Transparency

Traditional Approach:

  • Prompt acknowledgment of issues
  • Taking full responsibility
  • Demonstrating understanding
  • Respectful communication

Trump Brand Approach:

  • Immediate counter-narrative
  • Rejection of responsibility
  • Reframing of issues
  • Aggressive communication stance


2. Deep Listening

Traditional Approach:

  • Comprehensive sentiment analysis
  • Direct community engagement
  • Structured feedback mechanisms
  • Actionable insight generation

Trump Brand Approach:

  • Selective audience listening
  • Rally-style engagement
  • Social media monitoring
  • Base sentiment prioritisation


3. Concrete Action

Traditional Approach:

  • Quantifiable correction strategies
  • Internal protocol implementation
  • Transparent improvement plans
  • Organisational change demonstration

Trump Brand Approach:

  • Immediate counter-actions
  • Loyalty reinforcement protocols
  • Alternative narrative development
  • Base-energising initiatives


4. Rebuild Trust

Traditional Approach:

  • Core value alignment
  • Maintained transparency
  • Empathetic communication
  • Progress demonstration

Trump Brand Approach:

  • Base trust reinforcement
  • Selective transparency
  • Combative communication
  • Victory narrative maintenance


5. Long-Term Management

Traditional Approach:

  • Proactive communication strategy
  • Regular brand voice audits
  • Diverse representation
  • Cultural competency training

Trump Brand Approach:

  • Reactive engagement strategy
  • Consistent brand voice maintenance
  • Core audience focus
  • Cultural division leverage

This comparison reveals how the Trump brand has essentially created an alternative crisis management framework that, while opposing traditional best practices, has proven remarkably effective for its specific goals and audience.

Conclusion: A Toxic Masterclass?

The Trump brand represents either a brilliant adaptation to modern media dynamics or a cautionary tale of short-term engagement at the cost of long-term brand health - perhaps both simultaneously. What's undeniable is that it has rewritten many rules of brand management and forces marketing professionals to reconsider long-held assumptions about reputation management.

The key lesson might be that in an age of algorithmic content distribution and extreme polarisation, traditional reputation management strategies need careful reconsideration.

While few brands should or could adopt the Trump approach wholesale, understanding its mechanics should become crucial for modern brand managers

Whether this represents progress or regression in brand management theory remains debatable, but its impact on the field is undeniable. As we move forward, brands will need to find their own balance between engagement and responsibility, controversy and consensus, immediate impact and long-term sustainability.

A recent article in The Guardian discussed how, 200 years after its creation, Hokusai's "The Great Wave off Kanagawa" has become the defining image of our era. As Sarah E Thompson, curator of the Hokusai: Inspiration and Influence exhibition at Museum of Fine Arts Boston, poignantly asks:

"Are you a pessimist or an optimist? Who are the men in the boats? Will they make it? It's a landscape, but it's not just a view”

As the dawn of a second Trump term commences, brand managers find themselves in those same boats beneath the great wave of disruption. Some will see only the threatening surge of chaos, while others will recognise the opportunity to harness its momentum. The true test of modern brand management isn't just surviving the wave – it's understanding how to navigate it. Whether this represents progress or regression in brand theory remains debatable, but one thing is certain: those who can read these waters while maintaining their course will define the future of brand management in our algorithm-driven age.


About the Author: Jemima is the Founder of Hello Finch, a strategic brand and marketing agency for entrepreneurial businesses. Through Hello Finch, she helps organisations navigate the complex landscape of modern brand management, developing robust strategies that build, protect, and enhance brand value while maintaining authenticity in an increasingly algorithm-driven world.

Danielle James

Head of Pay & Reward | Payroll, Benefits & Total Remuneration Specialist | PgDip Strategic Leadership | 2025 EMBA Graduate

1 个月

Makes for very interesting reading Jemima Bird ????

Graham Hales

Founder of Shed-Light-Consulting - Ethical Consulting, Culture & Change, Coaching - Ex CEO Interbrand & big fish, Global CMO and Advisory Board roles

1 个月

Pandora's box is open!

Chris Perkins

Fractional Sales and Marketing | Customer focused strategy creating sales growth | AI collaborator | Fractional | Interim | Contract | Trustee | Author!

1 个月

Thanks a fantastic read. His whole approach is like a case study in malignant narcissism being projected through a brand. As menacing and destructive as it is, it is nonetheless incredibly effective.

Tim Watney

Co-Founder Chillibyte | Digital Marketeer

1 个月

What a great read, Jemima! The interplay between controversy, engagement, and authenticity in the algorithm-driven age is spot on!?

Leslie Butterfield CBE

Non-Exec Director. Brand Strategy, Positioning and Communications consultant.

1 个月

Excellent and provocative piece, Jemima. Good stuff!

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