A significant trend is the "renaissance of product" in advertising. After years of chasing abstract, higher-order purpose, successful brands like McDonald's and Heinz are finding creative gold by focusing on tangible product truths and the reasons consumers genuinely love them.

Related Insights

The debate over ad "quality" is often based on subjective opinions of brand fit. A more effective definition of quality is its ability to achieve the primary business objective: selling the product. Unconventional creative that drives sales, like Olay's "cat with lasers" ad, is by definition high-quality.

To truly change a brand's narrative, marketing's 'talking the talk' is insufficient. The product experience itself must embody the desired story. This 'walking the walk' through the product is the most powerful way to shape core brand perception and make the narrative shareable.

Malk's messaging evolved from focusing on what it lacked (gums, fillers) to highlighting the sensory experience of using the product. Recognizing that taste is paramount, the brand created assets showing the milk being poured into coffee or cereal. This shift from a rational, feature-based message to an emotional, benefit-driven one is key for brand maturation.

Enduring 'stay-up' brands don't need to fundamentally reinvent their core product. Instead, they should focus on creating opportunities for consumers to 'reappraise' the brand in a current context. The goal is to make the familiar feel fresh and relevant again, connecting it to modern culture.

Chick-fil-A spent millions trying to replace its long-running cow campaign, but research always confirmed "the market likes it." Effective marketing sticks with what demonstrably works, even if it feels repetitive or uncreative to the internal team. Don't change for the sake of change.

In an era of diminished direct marketing, the old mantra "make something people want" is insufficient. The new imperative is to "make something people want to talk about." This shifts focus to creating products with inherent virality and word-of-mouth potential, turning customers into a marketing channel.

The common mantra that every product must solve a problem is too narrow. Products like ice cream or Disney World succeed by satisfying a powerful desire or need, not just by alleviating a tangible pain point. This expands the canvas for innovation beyond mere problem-solving.

Brands miss opportunities by testing product, packaging, and advertising in silos. Connecting these data sources creates a powerful feedback loop. For example, a consumer insight about desirable packaging can be directly incorporated into an ad campaign, but only if the data is unified.

In a crowded market, brand is defined by the product experience, not marketing campaigns. Every interaction must evoke the intended brand feeling (e.g., "lovable"). This transforms brand into a core product responsibility and creates a powerful, defensible moat that activates word-of-mouth and differentiates you from competitors.

Simply adding a celebrity to an ad provides no average lift in effectiveness. Instead, marketers should treat the brand’s own distinctive assets—like logos, sounds, or product truths—as the true 'celebrities' of the campaign. This builds stronger, more memorable brand linkage and long-term equity.