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To break through, brands must become part of pop culture. Instead of just buying ads, create cultural moments that generate their own headlines. Rohan Oza did this with Vitaminwater by structuring an unprecedented equity deal with 50 Cent, making the brand a topic of conversation.

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Marcus Collins explains that brands limited to their product (e.g., toothpaste) have little to talk about. However, a brand with a broader ideology (like Nike's belief that "Every human body is an athlete") gains entry and authority to engage in wider cultural discourse, creating significant energy and relevance.

To succeed today, product companies must also be media companies. Instead of solely relying on buying advertising, brands need to create and distribute their own content through owned channels. This strategy builds a direct relationship with the community, fosters loyalty, and creates a more sustainable marketing engine.

Building a successful CPG company isn't just about product and marketing. Rohan Oza identifies three critical skills: spotting opportunities early, building cultural relevance, and mastering the M&A process to secure a successful exit—a step many founders overlook.

To succeed today, a CPG brand's primary function must be content creation. The strategic imperative is to think and act like a media company that happens to sell a food or beverage product, not the other way around. This reframes the entire business model and priorities.

Hint Water's ad costs dropped after they promoted an article about the founder's story. The emotional narrative resonated so strongly that even non-customers shared it, effectively acting as a volunteer sales force. This builds brand equity beyond simple product features and discounts.

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.

There is no such thing as a boring brand. A marketer's core function is to find what is uniquely compelling about any product or company and build culture around it. Don't default to tying your brand to external trends; instead, create your own cultural moments.

Zara outfitted Bad Bunny for the Super Bowl halftime show but made none of the products available for purchase. This was a pure brand marketing play, using the massive cultural moment to shift its perception from fast fashion toward high fashion, prioritizing long-term brand equity over short-term sales.

Rather than just jumping on viral trends, brands can build more durable audiences by creating original, serialized content, much like a mini TV show. This strategy fosters loyalty and gives consumers a reason to follow the brand itself, not just its take on a popular meme.

Instead of a standard celebrity ad, The Gap produced a full-fledged music video with the group Cat's Eye, generating 500 million views. By creating culture (art, music) instead of just sponsoring it, The Gap transformed its marketing from an expense into a viral entertainment asset, driving its best growth in years.