What is Brand Strategy?
Brand strategy is the long-term plan for how an organisation positions itself in the minds of its customers, its employees, and the market. It is not a logo. It is not a campaign. It is the thinking that makes both of those things worth doing.
A working definition
Brand strategy defines what an organization stands for, who it is for, what it promises, and how it is meaningfully distinct from alternatives. It translates business intent into something that can be felt - in a product, in a conversation, in the way a space is designed, in who gets hired.
The test of a brand strategy is not whether it is beautifully expressed. It is whether it is true. A brand promise that the organization cannot consistently deliver creates expectations it cannot meet - which is more damaging to trust than no brand at all.
This is the distinction that most brand work fails to make clearly enough. Brand strategy is not the art of what to say. It is the harder discipline of deciding what to be - and then building the organizational coherence to actually be it.
The components of brand strategy
Where the brand sits in relation to competitors and the alternatives available to the customer. Positioning is not just a statement of difference - it is a choice about which customers the brand is genuinely for, and therefore which it is not. A brand that tries to be for everyone positions for no one.
Why the organization exists beyond the commercial objective. Purpose is most useful when it is genuinely connected to the business model - when it explains something about why the organization is structured the way it is, or why its product works the way it does. Purpose that is aspirational but disconnected from how the business operates is not brand strategy. It is copywriting.
The human characteristics that define how the brand behaves. Personality becomes most valuable under pressure - in a service failure, in a public crisis, in a moment of organizational ambiguity - when the organization needs something beyond a style guide to orient its response. If the personality cannot guide a decision, it is a description, not a strategy.
The specific promise made to the specific customer. Not a generic claim of quality or service, but a substantive statement about what the organization delivers differently - and why it matters to the people it is trying to reach. A proposition that could be made by any competitor in the category is not a proposition. It is noise.
How the strategy comes to life visually, verbally, spatially, and behaviorally. Expression is downstream of strategy. It is the point at which brand work becomes visible - and the point at which many organizations start, having skipped the harder strategic thinking that would make the expression coherent and durable.
What brand strategy is not
The test of a brand strategy is not whether it is beautifully expressed. It is whether it is true.
The relationship between brand and business strategy
Brand strategy should be derived from business strategy, not run parallel to it. Business strategy answers where the organization is going and how it plans to win competitively. Brand strategy answers how the organization will be understood and trusted in the service of that goal.
In practice, the relationship is bidirectional. A strong brand creates commercial options that a weaker brand cannot access: the ability to extend credibly into adjacent markets, to charge a sustainable premium, to attract better talent at lower cost, to recover from failure faster. These are strategic assets. An organization that treats its brand as a communications function rather than a business asset is leaving measurable value unrealized.
The organizations with the strongest brands are typically those that have been most disciplined about their positioning over the longest period - not those that have done the most visible brand work. Brand equity accumulates slowly and erodes quickly. The strategic discipline is in the consistency.
When brand strategy matters most
Brand strategy matters most at moments of organizational change: new market entry, repositioning after reputational damage, post-merger integration, launch of a new product or service line. These are the moments when the organization needs to make deliberate choices about how it will be understood - because if it does not make those choices, the market will make them by default.
- Entering a new market or category where existing brand equity does not transfer
- Repositioning after a significant change in the business model or competitive environment
- Post-merger or acquisition, when multiple brand identities need to be resolved
- Launching a new product or service that requires a distinct positioning
- When growth has stalled and the organization needs to understand whether the brand is part of the constraint
- Pre-IPO or investment, when the brand needs to be articulated clearly to external stakeholders
How Meridian approaches brand strategy
Brand strategy at Meridian begins with a diagnostic, not a brief. Before we develop strategy, we want to understand what the organization's brand currently means - to customers, to employees, and to the market. The distance between what the organization believes it stands for and what the market actually perceives is often the most important finding of the entire engagement. Strategy built without that diagnostic tends to reinforce existing assumptions rather than challenge the ones that are limiting growth.
From that foundation, we develop positioning and strategy that is commercially grounded and operationally honest. A brand promise the organization cannot deliver is a liability, not an asset. The strategies we build are ones the organization can actually be held to.
Creative Thinking
Brand strategies built around genuine insight - not category convention or the positioning adjacent competitors have already claimed.
Operational Expertise
Strategy calibrated to what the organization can realistically deliver, with a clear view of where it needs to build capability.
Commercial Understanding
Brand investment connected to pricing power, retention, talent acquisition, and the commercial outcomes that justify the work.