Meta likely partnered with respected AI art generator Midjourney for its "Vibes" feature to avoid "slop" allegations. However, none of Midjourney's positive brand equity transferred to Meta. The partnership was still perceived as Meta's product, proving that brand goodwill is not automatically passed on, especially without active co-promotion.

Related Insights

Meta's rebrand from Facebook, much like Google's to Alphabet, was not just a name change. It was a strategic move to signal to both employees and the market that the company's ambitions extend beyond its original core product, creating the space and permission to build entirely new business lines.

Brands jumping on viral memes may see a temporary spike in views, but it's a hollow victory. Consumers remember the trend itself, not the brand's participation in it. This common social media tactic fails to build brand equity or impact the bottom line.

Just as a brand negotiates for shelf space with Walmart, it must also "sell" to AI algorithms. This means feeding them content that proves the brand drives "category growth" for the platform, thereby earning preferential treatment and visibility.

When competing with incumbents, a social tool's brand is a critical differentiator that cannot be easily cloned. An invitation from Partiful signals a specific vibe and energy for an event, which is part of the product experience. A technically identical feature from a company like Apple fails to replicate this brand-driven expectation.

Meta benefits from a "do nothing, win" position in consumer-facing AI. The company can avoid costly R&D for new social features, knowing that any successful AI-driven application developed by a competitor can be quickly replicated and scaled across its massive user base, similar to how it handled Stories.

If your brand isn't a cited, authoritative source for AI, you lose control of your narrative. AI models might generate incorrect information ('hallucinations') about your business, and a single error can be scaled across millions of queries, creating a massive reputational problem.

While AI video tools can generate visually interesting ads cheaply and capture views, they currently lack the authentic creative spark needed for true brand building. Their value lies in quick, low-cost content, making them a performance marketing tool rather than an asset for creating a lasting, memorable brand identity.

Peacework Puzzles advises that successful brand collaborations require a single, clear objective. Before partnering, decide if the main goal is enhancing brand equity, growing your audience, or driving revenue. Trying to achieve all three at once leads to misaligned expectations and less effective outcomes.

For premium brands like Coterie, the choice of retail partner is a branding decision. A retailer's reputation for quality reinforces the product's own values, while a poor retail environment like a messy shelf can actively dilute brand equity.

The backlash against J.Crew's AI ad wasn't about the technology, but the lack of transparency. Customers fear manipulation and disenfranchisement. To maintain trust, brands must be explicit when using AI, framing it as a tool that serves human creativity, not a replacement that erodes trust.

Meta's Midjourney Partnership Shows Strong Brand Goodwill Isn't Transferable | RiffOn