Emotional branding provides a brand with many advantages. It increases attention and encourages sales. Your customers will develop an emotional connection to your brand, building up trust, and staying loyal. Your brand will acquire a spot in their everyday lives, thereby increasing its reach.
If this is used correctly, a brand can follow in Apple’s footsteps and become bigger than the products it sells. Increasing digitalization, wearable technology, 5G, and the influence of big data on the market opens up many new possibilities for emotional branding. In her bestselling book No Logo, the author and brand critic Naomi Klein warned of the ubiquity and monopoly of brands such as McDonald’s, Coca Cola, Apple, and Microsoft. As early as 1999, she pictured the brand-dominated world in which we live today.
Brands have even turned into political powers with an ever-stronger influence on people and social relations. The development of Amazon is a good example for this. Initially little more than a digital supermarket and bookstore, the company and brand “Amazon” grew into a film producer, a self-publisher (Amazon Publishing), and space tourism agency Blue Origin with plans to go to the moon.
A similar thing happened with Elon Musk’s Tesla and SpaceX brands. Not only will Musk possibly be the first private space agency to make it to Mars, but he also wants astronauts to drive around the red planet in Tesla vehicles. You can't get more visionary and emotion-packed branding than that.
On the other hand, brands such as Facebook and Google are regularly criticized for reasons relating to data protection, political influence through neuromarketing, and selling user data.
Given the potential power of a brand, it's increasingly important to not lose sight of the strategic, emotion and value-oriented emotional branding required to make customers the protagonists of their brand. A brand doesn’t have to be big enough to be in every city in the world. However, it does have to be valued and relatable enough to find its way into its customers’ hearts.