The community's initial brand fully embraced a literal superhero theme with capes and pop-art graphics. They later realized this was a mistake, as it was "too superhero" and distracted from the core message of celebrating the everyday heroics of comms professionals.

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Don't rebrand for the sake of it. A successful rebrand should be a deliberate move to signal a fundamental shift in your business, such as an expansion, a new mission, or a deeper commitment to core values like sustainability. It's an external reflection of an internal change.

A successful rebrand doesn't create a new personality; it amplifies the company's true, existing identity. Just as money magnifies a person's character, a strong brand makes a company's core values—like community involvement—bigger, louder, and more public, forcing them to be more intentional.

Mailtrap's brand was built on the promise of *preventing* emails from reaching inboxes. When they launched an email *delivery* service, they faced a massive challenge: their new product's goal was the exact opposite of their original one. Overcoming this brand confusion and rebuilding user perception became a primary business obstacle.

After a visually appealing but off-brand "Get Hot" campaign, De Soi realized they had "lost the plot." They established a rule: every marketing initiative must align with their core brand promise of "transporting" the consumer. This created a disciplined filter to ensure all activities reinforce their central narrative.

A powerful brand shifts its focus from "look at me" to "sit with me." Instead of a solo spotlight demanding attention, think of your brand as a campfire that invites others to gather around. This community-centric approach fosters deeper loyalty and engagement.

Avoid clichés like a fountain pen for a copywriting service. Instead, choose a distinctive asset (mascot, sound) that has no inherent meaning in your category. This prevents confusion with competitors and makes your brand easier to recall, like Gong's bulldog mascot for sales intelligence.

Strict adherence to brand cohesion often stifles creativity and results in subjective boardroom debates. Brands achieve more by focusing on creating relevant, timely content that resonates with their audience, even if it occasionally breaks established stylistic guidelines.

A brand that tries to please everyone is memorable to no one. To build a truly strong brand, you must be willing to be disliked by some. Intentionally defining who your customer is *not* and creating polarizing content sharpens your identity, fostering a passionate community among those who love what you stand for.

Instead of competing with Nike on performance, Outdoor Voices intentionally created an aesthetic that was the complete opposite: simple, muted, and focused on recreation. The goal was a four-piece "uniform for doing things" that contrasted with Nike's shiny, black-and-neon intensity.

Grammarly's rebrand to Superhuman represents a strategic shift from a single-feature product to an ambitious platform. Elevating the "Superhuman" sub-brand to the parent signals a broader mission of empowering human potential across various tasks, not just correcting grammar. The key is focusing on "human" empowerment.

Comms Hero's Overly Literal Superhero Theme Became a Branding Mistake | RiffOn