The pinnacle of branding is achieving "tribal belonging." At this stage, customers don't just consume the brand; they co-own it and become its most powerful advocates. The brand's community can sustain its power even in the absence of the core product.
Ty Haney, founder of Outdoor Voices, reveals a key community-building step: relinquish brand control. By empowering super fans to host local events, the brand turns them into 'co-owners' of the experience. This generates more authentic engagement and word-of-mouth than centrally-managed marketing ever could.
The ultimate PLG companies are consumer brands like shampoo, which sell on brand affinity, not commoditized features. As software becomes more commoditized, B2B companies must similarly build a strong brand theme that inspires users to associate with them, creating a more durable moat than features alone.
The Savannah Bananas create deep fan loyalty by "world building," not just branding. They've developed an internal mythology with its own rules and language (e.g., the significance of the number 11). This makes fans feel like they're part of an exclusive, immersive universe, similar to Disney or Marvel.
Stop viewing brand as a top-of-funnel activity. For elite companies, brand isn't a precursor to selling; it is the selling. It creates inbound demand that bypasses traditional conversion tactics like search ads or affiliate marketing, making it the most powerful and sustainable growth engine.
The sign of a truly “culty” brand is when customers integrate it into their core identity. A simple test is to ask: would a user proudly display their affiliation with your company in their social media bio? This signifies a shift from a transactional customer relationship to one where users are members and evangelists of a movement.
While customer experience (CX) focuses on smooth transactions, customer intimacy builds deep, lasting loyalty by fostering closeness. This is achieved through empathetic actions in "moments that matter," creating powerful brand stories that resonate more than any marketing campaign.
By empowering ambassadors to host local events, Outdoor Voices turned passive fans into active co-owners. This gave events authentic authorship, making them more powerful for attendees and creating a self-perpetuating flywheel of community growth and brand loyalty.
Don't dismiss the success of celebrity brands as unattainable. Instead, analyze the core mechanism: massive 'free reach' and 'memory generation.' The takeaway isn't to hire a celebrity, but to find your own creative ways to generate a similar level of organic attention and build a tribe around your brand.
Birdies founder Bianca Gates argues that real community isn't a marketing tactic. It emerges organically from a founder's genuine need for help, leveraging personal networks for everything from feedback to early sales. This desperation creates authentic early evangelists.
Collectibles have evolved beyond niche hobbies into a mainstream communication tool, similar to fashion or luxury cars. Consumers use them to signal identity, tribal affiliation, and status. Brands can leverage this behavior to build deeper connections and create a sense of community.