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David Brier | The Brandfather
68.8K posts

David Brier | The Brandfather
@davidbrier
Your brand is bleeding. I stop it. $9.8B built. 2X bestselling author. Daymond John calls it "Genius." Anti-bland everything. Weekly intel below 👇
Saturday = your secret weapon. Katılım Ağustos 2009
596 Takip Edilen42.6K Takipçiler


Jimmy Fallon cried in his car after a podcast interview.
Not because of the interview. Because of what happened after.
Steven Bartlett did something so simple, yet so specific, it moved him to tears.
Cost almost nothing.
This is what I call THE UNKNOWNS — the invisible layer your competitors will never copy.
New article breaks down:
• The 3 properties of unforgettable brand moments
• Why a $4 gesture outperforms million-dollar campaigns
• The exact framework to find yours
Read the full article👇
risingabovethenoise.com/brand-differen…
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@readswithravi 1000% if the MEDIUM is used as a canvas and not just boring text.
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Just published "Your Competitors Are Reading My Weekly Newsletter. You’re Just Getting My Highlights." medium.com/p/your-competi…

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My next newsletter "Monday Bonus: Closing The Genius Gap" is coming tomorrow. Subscribe to get it and stay in the loop on everything I'm creating.
david-brier.kit.com/posts/ via @kit

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Just published What Is Branding? The Art of Differentiation Explained medium.com/p/what-is-bran…

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Just published: "Monday Bonus: They said, "Name a country without the letter E.' " Check it out and subscribe to get everything I'm making.
david-brier.kit.com/posts/monday-b… via @kit

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Just published "10 Branding Truths That Will Make You Rethink Everything You’re Doing" medium.com/p/10-branding-…

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The Pillsbury Doughboy died at 71.
Most brands don't last seven months.
Cause of death: Yeast infection and repeated pokes to the belly.
He's survived by his wife Play Dough, three children — John Dough, Jane Dough, and Baby Dill — plus one in the oven.
Service will be held at 3:50 for about 20 minutes.
(I didn't write this. The internet did. But I'm stealing it.)
Here's the branding lesson hiding in this ridiculous obituary:
The Doughboy worked for 71 years because he was:
→ Immediately edible
→ Instantly recognizable
→ Impossible to confuse with anyone else
One giggle. One poke. One "Hoo-hoo!"
That's it. That's the whole brand.
No repositioning. No "refreshing the brand for Gen Z."
No committee deciding he should be "more relatable."
Just a chubby dough blob doing the same thing for seven decades.
Meanwhile, most brands can't stay consistent for seven months.
They panic. They pivot. They chase trends.
They kill what made them memorable in the first place.
The Doughboy never pivoted.
And that's why we're still talking about him.
R.I.P. to a legend who understood:
The best brand strategy is being unforgettable — being hot — and never apologizing for it.
Thanks to whoever originally wrote this.
If your brand isn’t rising to the occasion, let’s jump on a call.
I promise we'll get your brand rising.
DavidBrierCalendar.as.me/IntroductorySe…
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