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Hi, it's Dan here.
(Please note! This article is not designed to be ideological. The intention is to try and capture the sense of a changing dynamic, and discuss what this means for brands going forward).
Reshaping the political and cultural landscape
Mr. Trump has been back in the White House for about a month. I think most could agree that his administration is rapidly reshaping the political landscape, in ways that extend far beyond Washington.
The argument here is that Trump’s return to prominence as the driving force of American Conservatism signals more than just a shift in rhetoric and policy.
Amplified massively by social media, MAGA is also driving a cultural reset, in which nationalism, traditionalism and economic populism extend beyond the realm of political positions, to become a part of consumers’ identities. This means that the playbook is changing, not just for politicians, but for the media, and any institution that engages the public. And brands too.
This is already a market reality for companies whose products no longer seem to operate in a neutral space. The political, cultural, and economic divides in America—and beyond—will force brands to rethink who they serve, how they communicate, and what they stand for.
The merging of brand and political values
Trump's brand of leadership embraces conflict: the language is often “Us vs. Them”. Globalists versus nationalists, elites versus working people, liberals versus traditionalists. This plays well in the ‘attention economy’ where increasingly brands are being pulled into this polarisation - whether they like it or not.
We’ve already seen recent manifestations of this. Bud Light’s short-lived partnership with a transgender influencer led to conservatives launching a nationwide boycott. Target faced similar backlash over its Pride collection. Oatly is too ‘woke’ a brand for some. Meanwhile, companies like Chick-fil-A and Goya Foods have benefited from leaning in to conservative values. The MyPillow founder has a regular slot on Steve Bannon’s War Room!
I’m sure consumers will continue to choose products and brands based on price, quality, features and so on. But attributes have always played a role too, and ideology or political-leaning is increasingly going to be a part of brand image and hence consumer decision making.
What Trump 2.0 means for brands
With the Trump Administration influencing the cultural conversation globally, brands will need to navigate a shifting landscape. Here’s four things I can imagine over the next few years:
- Polarisation as the default setting
The idea that brands can “stay neutral” is fading. Whether it’s social issues, corporate responsibility, or even platform choices (think X under Elon Musk), companies need to accept that most decisions can and will be politicised. The question is not whether to engage, but how to manage the fallout when you do. Joining Blue Sky for example will be seen as a brand action.
- DEI and ESG Reckoning
Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI) and Environmental, Social, & Governance (ESG) initiatives are (very publicly) under pressure. Republican-led states are pushing anti-ESG policies, while conservatives are rallying against companies seen as too “woke.” Companies that built their brand identity around progressive values will need to decide: double down, adapt, or step back? The wrong move could alienate stakeholders, or worse, the Federal Government! We can see which way Zuckerberg has gone already. How will an activist brand like Ben & Jerry’s respond? And it’s not just the US. In the UK, for example, BP is publicly rowing back from the Green Transition (‘It’s And, not Or”)! Less equivocal than ‘Drill Baby, Drill’...but still a shift to the Right.
- Brands acting more like media companies
Elon Musk has demonstrated that direct, unfiltered communication is a hugely powerful tool in shaping public perception. Legacy media (and traditional advertising) no longer controls the narrative. Social media, influencers, and brand-led content dominate mindshare. To cut through brands will increasingly seek to act more like media companies, controlling their message rather than relying on outside platforms to do it for them. Brands who understand how to win will increasingly seek to own or dominate their own channels. (Examples here are brands aligning very effectively to podcasts with a good strategic fit, or the way Liquid Death has generated huge noise around their viral, sharable content ).
- More emphasis on consumer nationalism
“America First” economic policies are back, and that means expectations around domestic manufacturing, supply chains and corporate loyalty will change. Brands that lean into American identity—whether through sourcing, messaging, or direct alignment with populist values—may find themselves rewarded by conservative consumers. But brands that are seen as “outsourcing” jobs will be targets for scrutiny. If Trump’s tariffs materialise then this will become a global issue: maybe even Made in Britain will make a comeback!
How should brands respond?
The challenge for brands in the Trump 2.0 era is going to be about understanding how consumers (in the US and globally) are internalising the populist / conservative world-view. Brands need to make strategic decisions about where to engage and where to stay quiet.
- If a brand has built its reputation on progressive values, it needs to be ready for pushback, and to have a clear strategy to deal with it
- If a brand wants to be neutral, it must tread carefully, avoiding knee-jerk responses to cultural moments that may alienate
- If a brand chooses to align with conservative values, it should do so authentically: consumers can spot opportunism a mile off
To close, maybe we can say that Trump 2.0 feels like something more than politics as usual. If so, then it’s a cultural shift that we can’t ignore. Brands need to think about what they now stand for, and be strategic and intentional about how and where they engage as they navigate the new normal.
Dan Read
Doer of innovation
Further reading:

Divided We Shop: How the Brands We Buy Reflect Our Political Preferences

Leading with Corporate Purpose amidst DEI and ESG Backlash

2024 Edelman Trust Barometer - Special Report: Brand and Politics – Edelman

How CEOs Can Navigate a Polarized World
Hi, it's Ben here.
Is death inevitable? Some scientists are challenging the conventional wisdom that death is the only certainty in life. And some Silicon Valley types are throwing serious cash at the problem.
But, as with almost everything, it’s a case of defining the problem properly. We might not all want to live forever. But the emerging field of longevity science is uncovering insights that can help us all live longer and, crucially, live more enjoyably, especially in our latter decades.
And hey – it’s February. If we’re going to talk about death, we might as well do it during the season sponsored by doom and gloom. So here’s the question for today: how much control do we actually have over when we kick the bucket?
Netflix’s Don’t Die elaborates the more extreme end of longevity science. Bryan Johnson gets up at 4:30am, takes over 100 pills a day, eats mostly brussel sprouts and is so healthy that images of his rectum have gone viral.
If this doesn’t appeal, Dr. Peter Attia might have some more applicable advice for you. If you’ll allow me to summarise his entire work into a single word, it’s exercise. Nothing can improve your life expectancy more than fitness. Just two and a half hours per week can increase your life by seven whole years.
In the words of Dr. Attia, ‘Exercise is the king of interventions. [It] has a greater impact on your life span and your health span than any of the other [ways to increase life expectancy].’ More than smoking or type two diabetes, for instance.
Of course, it's terribly annoying when the data tells us that hard work beats quick hacks. But such is life.
There are, of course, easier ways to live a long and healthy life. Moving to Sardinia works brilliantly, according to the data. A renowned Blue Zone, where the number of centenarians is unusually high, the data shows a correlation between how steep a village is and how long its inhabitants live. A ten minute walk up the hill to church most days is enough to measurably extend your days. And completely irradiate dementia, as the data seems to say. So many of these Blue Zones have little to no dementia at all. Residents live long, purposeful, active lives and their brains keep up.
So why does all this matter?
Well it turns out that sweatiness, as opposed to cleanliness, is next to godliness. Exercise is everything we need to do to keep the Grim Reaper at bay. Everything else falls into place, post workout.
I hope you enjoyed this foray into the fascinating world of longevity science. Please get in touch if it’s at all interesting to you.
Ben Mason
Independent Marketing Strategist and Co-founder & CEO of Athlete
PS. Longevity is now much more than a hobby to me. Six months ago I launched a startup called Athlete. Life insurance for people who workout. The fitter you are, the less you pay. It felt weird that the very companies who invest in our life expectancy were failing to measure its single biggest indicator. We take the data from your watch or phone and turn it into as much as a 50% discount on your premium. And our longevity coaching app will help you hone your exercise routines, all in the name of more, better years on the clock. Please do get in touch if this floats your boat.
Further reading:




Hi, it's Josh here.
Cast your minds back to 2020, when every Fortune 500 company suddenly discovered racism existed and pledged billions to fix it. Now, in 2025, we're watching those same companies compete to see who can backpedal fastest on their commitments.
So I find myself writing a newsletter I didn't think anyone would have to write in 2025. In defence of DEI.
My sister works for an amazing charity called Team Domenica, helping adults with learning disabilities get into the workplace - meaning I’ve seen up close the incredible impact having a workforce that reflects the community you serve can have. So it’s been particularly disturbing seeing this Trump-triggered ‘sunsetting’ of DEI initiatives across the corporate world.
But while the stampede away from diversity initiatives hits full gallop, here's a quick reminder: ditching DEI isn't just morally bankrupt – it's bad business.
Beyond equal: equity
DEI isn't about giving everyone the same starting line – it's about acknowledging that some runners have been competing with weighted vests. A 2023 study found that Black Americans still face an average $550,000 lifetime earnings gap compared to white peers. For college educated or higher black men, this rises to $1.4M, or 41%. Meanwhile, women still make up only 10% of Fortune 500 CEOs, despite representing over 50% of college graduates. The point isn't to lower the bar; it's to remove the systemic hurdles that keep talented people from reaching it.
It’s the economy, stupid
DEI doesn’t need to be a political issue, but it is a business one. And as luck would have it we already sit on a treasure trove of data that show us diversity is not only a source of power for businesses, but a real competitive advantage.
McKinsey’s latest diversity report found companies in the bottom quartile for executive team diversity are 66% less likely to outperform their rivals financially. More diverse teams report better EBIT margins, and are 70% likelier to capture new markets. The maths isn’t difficult. Diverse teams = more money.
So for those organisations able to row back these initiatives so easily it seems either a) you weren’t measuring the impact, or b) if you were measuring, you weren’t doing DEI right. Pick your poison.
The innovation imperative
We are seeing a huge surge in interest in our innovation capabilities recently, as categories feel crammed with ever diminishing space to play, and consumers aren’t responding to the arms race of incremental features and benefits. Whilst breaking this cycle demands new approaches, processes, and harnessing of new technologies, diversity can also be a secret weapon.
BCG's 2023 data shows companies with above-average diversity produced nearly double the innovation revenue of their peers (45% vs 26% of revenue from new products and services). We know innovation isn't about having the smartest person in the room – it's about having a diverse set of perspectives attacking the problem.
We see this time again. Until 2011, airbags were designed exclusively with male crash test dummies, resulting in women being 47% more likely to suffer serious injuries in car crashes. When Apple finally added female health tracking to the Apple Watch, five years after its launch, the feature generated over 70 million data points in its first nine months – a market hiding in plain sight. These aren't just oversight or mistakes – they're symptoms of a deeper problem that become more critical as the challenges we face grow more complex.
Tomorrow's challenges need today's changes
The challenges facing businesses, and humanity at large aren’t getting easier. They’re bigger, more complex, more interlinked than ever before, and require strategic imagination to decode and find solutions. They’re not going to be solved by rooms full of people who went to the same handful of schools and holiday in the Hamptons.
Early AI systems were great at recognizing pedestrians – as long as they had light skin and weren't using wheelchairs. Why? Because the training data and testing teams lacked diversity. The scientific community increasingly understands the power of diversity, as teams are becoming more diverse in demographics, international scope, and discipline. They seem to grasp what many businesses can’t - the solutions to complex problems won't come from teams that all share the same blind spots.
The biggest breakthroughs aren't coming from homogeneous teams iterating on what worked yesterday. They're coming from diverse groups who see problems differently, who bring different life experiences to the table, who question assumptions that others take for granted. When a team's collective blind spots align with the challenges they're trying to solve, you don't get innovation – you get expensive failures and missed opportunities.
Adapt or die
You can dismantle DEI programs today. But by 2045 $84.4 trillion in wealth will transfer to younger generations, who consistently rank DEI as a top factor in choosing brands and employers. Your competitors aren't just building more diverse companies – they're building companies that will capture the next generation of talent and customers.
It’s not about being perfect, but continuing to invest in broadening the talent pool you draw from, to bring diverse perspectives into the business. Because the data is clear: diverse companies perform better, innovate faster, and attract better talent. Continuing to invest in DEI isn’t just the right thing to do – it’s the smart thing to do.
The question isn't whether diversity matters. The question is whether you'll still be relevant when your customers, employees, and the world have moved on without you.
Josh Hedley-Dent
Senior Director - Client Growth at BeenThereDoneThat
Further reading:



Diversity matters even more: The case for holistic impact

How Diverse Leadership Teams Boost Innovation
Hi, it's Dan here.
How user-led is your organisation?
For the last few years I’ve been lucky enough to work as a trustee with a London charity called Unfold.
Unfold is a mentoring-based charity, helping those who face the most challenges get where they want to be.
I’ve learned huge amounts.
I’ve learned about what brings people to the UK and about what it takes to get up on your feet as an asylum seeker - into our healthcare system, into housing, into schools.
I’ve learned about the power of community and peer support groups.
I’ve learned about how charities work - and the commitment and talent of those who work in this sector.
Most of all though, I’ve learned about listening. Really listening.
Unfold has a fabulous CEO and she has driven a compelling vision for growth, such that we now help ten times more people than three years ago.
This vision is built upon a conviction that Unfold should listen to and be led by the people it serves.
We have therefore established both a Youth Advisory Council (YAC) and a Women’s Advisory Council (WAC) made up of volunteers from among our service users. These groups meet with the Operational team and with the Board multiple times a year. The sessions have been designed to enable feedback from our users on what they see as the most pressing needs for Unfold to address.
And it is now part of the Unfold constitution that both the Operational team and the Board are answerable to the needs of the WAC & the YAC. It’s become a requirement of our governance.
As marketers, we often talk about the importance of remaining anchored off the needs of our audiences - as a path to better product, better communications. And these days AI is enabling us to access these needs at previously unimaginable scale and speed. (BeenThereDoneThat has been working with an expert partner in the AI space on a concept called The Billion Person Focus Group - which tells its own story.)
However what if we, as marketers, radically committed to being user-led?
Not just as a tool for insight, but as a principle for governance.
What would that look like?
It's striking that while countless brands talk about being user-centric, almost none have taken the step of embedding users into their actual governance. In my time on the Dove business under Steve Miles, there were serious conversations about introducing young women into the governance model. But even Dove and the likes of Patagonia who are lauded for their progressive approaches haven't gone this far.
We've seen attempts: Facebook's much-publicized Oversight Board was created to give users a voice in content decisions, but without genuine power to influence platform governance, it became a fig leaf for business as usual. We've become skilled at gathering user feedback, at co-creation, at community engagement. But giving users genuine power? Not so much.
Of course, there are good reasons why. User-led governance is complex. It slows things down. It challenges established power structures. It requires genuine commitment to hearing difficult truths. And it demands that leadership teams are prepared to share control - perhaps the hardest ask of all.
But what if we went further anyway? What if a brand was genuinely accountable to its users - not just through focus groups or customer panels, but through constitutional governance? Where advisory councils had real power to shape direction and strategy. Where users weren't just consulted, but were decision-makers.
It might seem radical. But radical is a powerful point of difference. Just ask the young people and women who are helping shape Unfold's future - if you want to understand someone's needs, start by giving them a seat at the table.
The rest tends to follow.
Dan Gibson
Managing Director at BeenThereDoneThat
Further reading:

For more information on Unfold’s work and how to volunteer as a mentor, please see here.



Hi, it's Melanie here.
I turned 35 last year and, along with it, was unceremoniously dumped into the "35–45" demographic box. As Samantha Jones from Sex and the City might say, “Welcome to my box.” Except, unlike Samantha, I’m not strutting through life in a metallic crop top with cosmopolitans on tap. If anything, my life is more meal planning, failing said meal planning, and spending £600 a month at Tesco on emergency dinners.
But here’s the kicker: when branding agencies and startups dream up their archetypes—“Samantha, 35–45, female, cosmopolitan city-dweller, loves fun, fashion, eating out, and eating in (wink wink)”—it sounds suspiciously like me. Except it’s not. And when the campaigns and products land to market, it’s no surprise that they don’t capture me as a customer. Because (as much as my alter ego would like) I’m not a Samantha.
I’m the 30 something who spends 5–6 nights a week at home, 45 minutes from London’s Soho buzz, with my cat, two kids and a partner. I’m the one meal-prepping for the week (badly), splurging occasionally on a Michelin tasting menu but mostly on sushi takeaway, and tossing Perello olives, elderflower cordial and Tony’s Chocolonely into my Tesco basket to make the mundanity of life feel a bit more deluxe. I’m not one-of-a-kind—there are loads of women like me. But when brands lump us all into a single “demographic,” they lose us entirely.
Demographic Boxes Are Dead. Long Live the Micro-Tribe.
We’ve all heard it: “If you’re speaking to everyone, you’re speaking to no one.” But when it comes to pinpointing their people, brands are still terrified of leaning in. Instead, they cling to the safety of broad, one-size-fits-all demographics. And it’s a big problem.
Here’s the truth: the 35–45 Samantha box might have made sense in the 2000s. Back when media was still mass and Sex and the City was the pinnacle of aspirational marketing. But today? The world is more nuanced. Streaming algorithms serve us niche content. Social media connects us to micro-communities with oddly specific vibes. And as consumers, we expect the same level of intimacy from the brands we buy into.
Think about it: how nice is it when you meet someone and realise you share the same humour, music taste, and lifestyle quirks? You’re not just “35–45” and female. You’re someone who bonds over Schitt’s Creek quotes, avoids small talk, and actually loves a tacky family resort in Lake Garda for the mix of kid chaos and Aperol spritzes. That level of connection feels magical. So why is it so hard for brands to replicate?
The Fear Factor
I think it boils down to fear. Brands are scared that if they narrow their focus, they’ll alienate potential customers. But here’s the irony: by trying to speak to everyone, they alienate everyone.
It’s the equivalent of showing up to a party and saying, “I love… music! And food! And Netflix!” Cool. We all do. But what if you said, “I’m obsessed with mid-2000s emo bands, garlic bread, and The Great British Bake Off.” Suddenly, you’ve got people (albeit not the entire room) nodding along, ready to bond. The same goes for branding.
The brands that succeed today are the ones that aren’t afraid to alienate the wrong people to deeply connect with the right ones. Look at Glossier, who built a cult following by speaking to millennial women with skinimalist aspirations. Or Liquid Death, who turned water into a lifestyle brand for edgy, punk rock enthusiasts. Neither tries to appeal to the masses, but both have built wildly loyal audiences.
Enter: The Top Trumps of Branding
This brings me to my solution: the Top Trumps of branding.
Bear with me. About eight years ago, a good friend made me a personalised deck of Top Trumps cards. Each card ranked my family and friends on arbitrary traits—humour, karaoke talent, emotional availability. It was equal parts hilarious and horrifying to see your entire social circle ripped apart by a divisive ranking system.
But it got me thinking: what if brands treated their audiences like a pack of Top Trumps? Instead of lumping us into broad brackets, they could rank micro-communities by hyper-specific traits and build campaigns accordingly.
For example, instead of “Samantha, 35–45,” you get:
- Humour: Dry wit, thrives on sarcasm.
- Lifestyle: Primarily a routined homebody with moments of glamour + adventure
- Spending habits: Sensible, impulsive moments of ‘pick me ups’ + fundamental uppers to my life
- Brand kryptonite: Makes my life easier, makes my life more exciting
Building Brands for Humans, Not Brackets
The truth is, most of us aren’t looking for brands that understand our age bracket or income level. We’re looking for brands that get us. Brands that feel like they’re part of our crew—whether that crew is bonding over Real Housewives, the new Middle Eastern spot for a date night, or the unapologetic joy of staying in on a Friday night looking at my fig tree.
So here’s my challenge to marketers: stop speaking “demographic.” Start speaking human. Use the tools at your disposal—data, analytics, cultural nuance—to build micro-tribes, not mass audiences. And don’t just speak to these tribes—celebrate them, quirks and all.
Because if a campaign doesn’t make your audience feel like they’ve just met their new best friend? It’s already failed.
Let’s trade the tick boxes for Top Trumps and build brands that don’t just sell—but connect. After all, isn’t that what we’re all really here for?
Melanie Goldsmith
Co-Founder of Juicy Brick
Further reading:

Sentimental in the City 1 Podcast: Sex & The City, Season One

Eugene Healey on how people don’t always ‘identify’ with brands: and sometimes that’s for the best.

The X Factor makes me feel old

Hi, it's Jacob here.
There’s one trend I’ve been talking about more than any other with clients over the last two years. It’s a truly huge shift that affects nearly everything. And it isn’t AI. It’s neatly encapsulated by this chart that John Burn-Murdoch recently published in the FT:

As you can see from the charts, people over 40 spent roughly the same amount of time alone in 2023 as they did in 2010, in US, UK and Europe. The elderly spend more time alone than other age groups.
But the big shift is that 20-year-olds in the US and UK now spend 2 more hours alone per day than they did in 2010. And that your average 20-year-old now spends as much time alone as a 60-year-old. This is not a minor change in behaviour, like choosing yoga over pilates. Humans are a social species and we all go a little mad when we’re alone too much, as 2020-21 amply demonstrated.
A lot has been written about the impact of so much time alone on big societal issues like mental health, civic engagement and political polarisation. But for the stick-rattling community there are some more concrete and immediate implications that it’s interesting to think about.
People who don’t socialise much have far less incentive to drive. So young people’s increasing aversion to social contact might have a lot to do with the precipitous decline in driving among the under 30s:

Similarly, the rise in alcohol abstinence among the young is well-documented. The pat explanation is the rise in “wellness culture”. This probably displays a lot of marketing’s class bias, as can be seen by the pricing and marketing of alcohol substitutes on both sides of the Atlantic.

But a recent study that asked teenagers to self-report on why alcohol was drunk less by young people flags a second, almost as large effect: changing patterns of socialisation:

My cynical side says this effect may be even bigger than the research suggests. Concern about alcohol-related harm is the socially acceptable reason to give for not drinking. It’s rather more embarrassing to state that the reason you don’t drink is that you’ve got no one to do it with.
The same study also pulls out the popularity of weed as a substitute for alcohol. What it doesn’t mention, but I believe is extremely relevant, is that cannabis users worldwide report that the way they enjoy the drug is for physical pleasure rather than social lubrication. In other words cannabis is a better drug for solo consumption than alcohol.

Much has been made of the impact of online dating on how easy it is to find a potential partner. But it’s interesting to note that, despite the undoubted convenience of these services, they don’t really seem to be working:

What if the decline in birth rates and marriages across the world isn’t just because of people prioritising careers or concerns about money, could it be a clear consequence of simply socialising less? It’s hard to meet a partner if you just don’t meet anyone…
Matt Klein published a fascinating breakdown of Pornhub statistics. The one that jumps out for me is that “hentai” (animated porn) went from the 10th most searched term in the US in 2014 to the most searched term in 2024, with Gen Z users 193% more likely than average to view hentai porn in 2024. Maybe, for some, getting together with an actual human seems so unlikely, it's not even a fantasy anymore?
Another clear consequence is in eating habits. Research by OpenTable indicates a 14% rise in Brits dining alone, with young people particularly likely to do so: 79% of millennials and Gen Z indicated they plan to dine alone in the next year. Restaurants will need to adapt to this by adjusting the balance of table sizes they offer, as well as the types of dishes - fewer sharing platters and more single portion dishes is the obvious consequence. Indeed 50% of solo diners in the OpenTable research indicated they’d had difficulty getting a booking for one.
The standard scapegoat for all of this is social media. However the degree of social isolation is on a linear upward trajectory, whereas time on social media (and indeed time spent on all media) has virtually plateaued.

Burn-Murdoch’s data concurs. The big shift is less in spending a lot more time on social media, and more in doing alone what used to be done together. Primarily watching television as can be seen from American Time Use data from 2024:

I suspect there’s a second-order effect here. It’s not that people are doomscrolling instead of going out. It may be more likely that spending more time alone saps people’s confidence about going out, and causes them to lose the habit, so that they then spend more time alone.
I’ll leave the hand-wringing to other writers. For marketers there are some obvious winners and losers in terms of categories: there are clear challenges for alcohol, nightlife and fashion. There is a clear upside for gaming, streaming video, snacking, ecommerce and delivery food.
An unexpected but fundamental shift might be in social media itself. There’s been a decade-long decline in engagement with “traditional” social platforms that centre around “sharing” content from “friends”. The hit platforms of today are based around user preferences and content recommendation algorithms rather than social ties. This will only accelerate as genuine content is swamped out by AI slop.

In many ways the story of the last 20 years in marketing has been the declining relevance of constructed brand promotions in favour of organic spread - the classic “viral product” story. But as social ties are weakened and disrupted, this may become less prevalent. We’re certainly likely to see the continued rise of influencers as a channel - where social ties are declining, parasocial ones are rising. But perhaps we will also see that advertising begins to rise in importance again as the primary source of social cues about the “meaning” of products in people’s lives.
(disclaimer: the author has worked in advertising for most of his life)
Jacob Wright
Problem Definer & Marketing Consultant
Hi, it's Anna here.
I genuinely love making New Year's resolutions, and always follow through on those I set. But this year is different, I’m moving around too much to form habits or see clearly the path I’m on. So instead of goals, I'm working on a 2025 manifesto. More vibes and intentions than goals and ticklists. After two decades in advertising, it’s a familiar format for me.
Manifestos have been used for centuries by academics, artists, politicians and provocators to challenge conventions, spark debates and explore the irrational. The Communist Manifesto might be the most notable example. Widely referenced, though too dense to be widely read.
Centuries after Marx and Engles outlined a worker’s revolution, the manifesto is once again a trending Google search. There has been much speculation over Luigi Mangione's scrawled note and at the time of writing journalists are still unpacking why a Tesla Cybertruck was blown up in front of Trump Tower.
Despite these darker appropriations, manifestos continue to evolve as tools for radical imagination. While the Futurists once proclaimed the death of museums, more contemporary artist manifestos often explore the spaces between the self and the system. The Cyberfeminist Manifesto is one of my favourites, drawing a through line from the womb (“matrix” in Latin) to the internet matrix: “we are… saboteurs of big daddy mainframe.”
These creative proclamations often embrace contradiction rather than certainty, suggesting that perhaps the most radical act is to remain open to continuous transformation. Less destroying the old world and more imagining multiple possible futures simultaneously.
I wonder if this resurgence of manifestos will influence how we think of the form in advertising.
Thanks to agencies like Wieden+Kennedy, manifestos have been spilling out of pitch decks and onto our screens for years. Our commercial breaks are filled with booming voices declaring things like "where there are cooks there is hope" to sell butter. The most compelling brand manifestos succeed by doing what art manifestos have always done - they make the familiar strange again.
Diverging from Marx the advertising industry has developed a particular style of creative manifesto. Short sentences. Punchy sentiments. Fragmented like the way we consume media.
But, some brands use the creative format to express deeper corporate commitments. When Patagonia declared "Don't Buy This Jacket," they demonstrated how the sum of a manifesto can be bigger than the short sentences it contains. Their message carried weight because it emerged from decades of environmental activism - inviting us to reimagine our relationship with consumption.
Nike's "Just Do It" touches something deeper about human potential and Apple's "Think Different" simultaneously critiques and participates in corporate culture. Their impact comes from this intersection of style and substance rather than choosing between the two.
The most famous brand manifestos work at this meta-level, not just selling products but reframing how we think about entire categories of experience. They give us handholds on massive cultural shifts, creating what philosopher Timothy Morton might call a "hyperobject" - something too large to see in its entirety but that we can feel the edges of.
As we move deeper into an era where brands increasingly function as cultural actors, the role of brand manifestos becomes more complex. What happens when corporate declarations become our most widely-shared visions of possible futures? How do we navigate the space between authentic cultural contribution and commodified revolution? These are questions worth exploring as we continue to blur the lines between commerce, culture, and collective imagination.
As we step into 2025, an age where attention spans shrink but crises loom larger, perhaps the manifesto - brief, bold, uncompromising - is exactly the form we need. Or perhaps, brands should leave this form to the artists and the assassins and move on to something new?
Anna Rose Kerr
Freelance Creative Director & Consultant
Further reading:

A compendium of brand manifestos

The Cyberfeminist Manifesto (NSFW)

A beginners guide to the Communist Manifesto

Hi, it’s Giles here.
Dave Tomkins is a quiet, unassuming man living in a village in Hampshire, England. If you passed him on the street, you’d never guess that his life was once steeped in danger, deception and covert operations.
Imagine a plan so audacious, so seemingly outlandish, that it involved bombing a prison with a vintage World War II bomber in an attempt to assassinate the world’s most notorious drug lord, Pablo Escobar. This was the world inhabited by Dave Tomkins, whose life reads like a Hollywood thriller.
Today, Dave lives far from the battlefield, but his story is far from ordinary. Captured in the BBC documentary Dogs of War, Tomkins reveals the extraordinary layers beneath the surface of a man many would dismiss as just another face in the crowd. His life as a mercenary is proof that beneath the most ordinary of exteriors, there can lie extraordinary depths of experience and adventure.
But Tomkins' story isn’t just an outlier. It speaks to a broader truth: we often form snap judgments about the people we encounter based on their appearances, never knowing the full story. In reality, every person carries a rich inner world, a tapestry woven from experiences, desires, and often hidden potential.
This is where the psychology of "hidden depths" comes into play—a field that invites us to look beyond the surface and consider what lies beneath. The concept has its roots in early 20th-century psychology, particularly in the work of Sigmund Freud, who famously compared the human mind to an iceberg. Freud's theory suggested that much of our unconscious mind—the emotions, desires, and memories that shape our behaviour—remains hidden beneath the surface of conscious thought.
Today, this idea is further developed in modern psychology, where it emphasizes how much of our identity, motivations, and potential lie outside of our immediate awareness. By looking beyond external appearances and behaviors, we can start to understand the complexities of individuals—what drives them, what they fear, and what they are capable of, often without us even knowing.
This idea of hidden depths is vividly illustrated in Brandon Stanton's Humans of New York, a project that captures the extraordinary lives of seemingly ordinary people. Through his powerful portraits and candid interviews, Stanton uncovers the complex, often surprising stories of individuals living in one of the world's busiest cities. Take Tanqueray, for instance. A homeless woman whose infectious laughter and bright smile defy all the stereotypes associated with homelessness. Tanqueray’s story of addiction, hardship and resilience uncovers layers of strength and spirit that challenge our assumptions about people living on the margins of society.
Through Humans of New York, Stanton shows us that we should never judge a book by its cover. There is always more than meets the eye.
But the concept of hidden depths isn’t confined to extreme stories. In her book The Power of Introverts, Susan Cain explores how society often overlooks the quiet strengths of introverts. While we celebrate the outgoing, charismatic personalities of extroverts, Cain argues that introverts possess their own unique and valuable traits—traits that are often invisible to those who fail to look beyond the surface.
Just like Tomkins’ mercenary past or Tanqueray’s hidden resilience, introverts harbour hidden depths of creativity, empathy and insight. Cain urges us to recognize these strengths, not just as traits, but as essential contributions to the world around us.
The stories of Dave Tomkins, Tanqueray and introverts everywhere remind us of the importance of curiosity and empathy. When we take the time to look beyond the surface, we may just uncover extraordinary lives hidden in plain sight.
Giles Jepson
CGO at BeenThereDoneThat
Further reading:



Welcome to another episode of "BeenThereDoneThat Where Next?" - a series by BeenThereDoneThat, where our host and co-founder, David Alberts, delves into conversations with industry experts.
In each episode of this series, David poses three questions to his guests:
- What’s the biggest challenge you are facing today?
- In an ideal world, where do you imagine this could go?
- What’s the first step you would take to get us to where we need to be?
A note on safety and legality: This article discusses microdosing, which involves psychedelic substances that are illegal in many countries. The following information is purely educational and isn't advocating for any illegal activities.
Hi, it’s Rachel here.
My twenty plus years in marketing and innovation have taught me one fundamental truth: change is hard. Really hard. Whether we're trying to shift consumer behaviour or transform organisations, we keep bumping up against the same stubborn reality - humans resist change.
My fascination with why we fight change so hard has led me down some pretty unexpected paths. Beyond strategic consultancy, I now work as a coach specialising in personal transformation during the “messy middle" of life - that threshold where we often start questioning everything we've built, and wondering what the hell lies beneath our carefully constructed identities.
Most intriguingly, this work has led me to explore how microdosing - taking tiny amounts of psychedelic substances - can support deep personal change.
The worlds of marketing and psychedelics might seem worlds apart. Yet Silicon Valley has long known their value - Steve Jobs famously attributed Apple's creative breakthroughs to his early psychedelic experiences. Today, tech innovators will routinely pop a microdose along with their AG1 smoothie before meditating every morning, seeking the edge that's always separated visionaries from the rest: the ability to spot opportunities that others miss and build the future before anyone else can imagine it.
The latest neuroscience reveals why. Our neural pathways become more fixed with age, our habits more deeply entrenched. This creates a growing challenge for us as marketers as we try to connect with an aging population, and as organisations as we attempt to maintain genuinely innovative thinking.
Psychedelics promote new and unexpected neural connections, linking brain regions that rarely communicate. They enhance divergent thinking - our capacity to make novel connections and see fresh perspectives. In one early study, academics who'd been stuck on complex problems for months found breakthrough solutions after a single supervised session with LSD.
Over the years I’ve discovered 3 key principles about getting the most out of microdosing that are directly applicable to marketing and behaviour change:
- Emotion beats logic. With microdosing, you need to actually feel your intention and why it matters in your body, not just think it. Les Binet and Peter Field are right, as always: in an age of data-driven everything, lasting behaviour change still starts with emotion, not functional propositions.
- Movement accelerates transformation. Microdosing works best with tiny physical practices supporting your intention. The same applies in marketing - every click, like, swipe, or smile creates stronger neural pathways than passive consumption. In a world of endless content, physical engagement matters more than ever.
- Creativity requires pattern disruption. Microdosing shows us that experiencing the world differently requires us to break from our normal routines. Just as those academics found breakthrough solutions through shifted perspectives, innovation emerges when we disrupt our patterns and let different parts of the brain start talking. In an age of AI and automation, this human capacity for unexpected connections becomes even more valuable.
But these insights only scratch the surface. The most profound pattern that psychedelics disrupt isn't in how we think or create - it's in how we see ourselves in relation to the world.
Clinical research reveals something remarkable: people who experience the most profound benefits from higher doses of psychedelics are those who have an experience that dissolves their feeling of being one distinct individual, separate from everyone and everything else.
In these moments, people moved beyond their sense of being an isolated individual to experience deep interconnection - with other people and the natural world. That’s more than a shift in perspective; it’s a direct experience of what indigenous cultures have long known: we’re not separate observers of life, but intrinsically part of its web.
This strikes at the heart of what we do as marketers and innovators. We've built our industry on seeing ourselves as creators and others as consumers. We extract value from attention, from engagement, from resources both human and planetary. This positions us as puppet masters pulling strings from above the system, rather than as participants within it.
But what if instead of extracting value, we reimagined our role as creating it?
Not just making and selling things - we already do that - but building tangible positive change for people and planet through our work. This means stepping down from behind the puppet master's curtain, recognising ourselves as part of the living world, and rethinking our personal and collective responsibility from that place.
For me, this is psychedelics' most valuable lesson: when we shift from seeing ourselves as separate to recognising our place within the system, we can think beyond our narrow role as marketers and start playing a more meaningful part in creating the kind of world we want our great-grandchildren to inherit.
The real pattern disrupt isn't about what marketing can do differently - it's about each of us setting a personal intention about what we’re going to do differently, and allowing ourselves to feel exactly why that matters so much.
Rachel Lawlan
Strategy Consultant and Transformational Coach
Further reading:

Magic Mushrooms. LSD. Ketamine. The Drugs That Power Silicon Valley.

Psychedelic Agents in Creative Problem-Solving: A Pilot Study


In Conversation with Peter Field and Les Binet: Brand building through emotion
Hi, it's BeenThereDoneThat here.
We have been working hard over the last few weeks to create two new videos that showcase both our community and our approach to helping Marketing leaders unlock growth in today's dynamic business landscape. We would like to take the opportunity to share them with you.
Our first video spotlights our extraordinary global network – a carefully curated community of over 400 of some of the world's best strategic and creative talent. People who bring unparalleled expertise from 97 countries and the strategic minds behind some of the world's most successful brands. What makes them truly special is their diverse perspectives, who bring fresh thinking to every challenge.
Our second video delves into our innovative approach to solving modern marketing challenges. The last 10 years have been one of learning, experimenting and relearning to help build a methodology, set of tools and a platform that provides a flexible system to deliver breakthrough thinking at unprecedented speed. Whether clients need instant inspiration, end-to-end project support, or extended team capabilities, our platform adapts to their requirements.
We hope that these videos illustrate how BeenThereDoneThat continues to evolve and iterate to combine world-class expertise with tools and technology to enable Marketing leaders across the world to navigate and succeed in such a challenging landscape.
A huge thank you to our clients past and present, our community and everyone associated with BeenThereDoneThat who have contributed so much to getting to where we are today and we are excited about continuing to learn and develop into 2025 and beyond!
Your BeenThereDoneThat Team
Our Community video

Our Approach video

Hi, it's Anna here.
The word “hope” has been coming up a lot lately, as well as its shadow: hopelessness.
It feels like we’re all oscillating between the two. As I write this I’m feeling positive about tomorrow.
Tomorrow, I’ll be heading to the Dubai Future Forum: an event where futurists from across the world will come together and imagine better ways of being on this planet. The night I land, I’m going to an event called The Hopeful Dinner, which promises to be an immersive listening and culinary experience to foster dialogue about hope and creativity. Then, I get to spend three days hanging out with my favourite optimist.
Packing for the trip, I’ve had one of my favourite albums on repeat: Hopelessness by Anohni. It’s not what you’d call an optimistic record. Written during the Obama years (remember those?), it tackles themes of surveillance, climate catastrophe and drone warfare. It doesn’t shy away from the darkness. But beneath it all, there’s a defiance. We’re still here, after all.
That’s what hope feels like to me. It’s not about blind optimism or ignoring reality. It’s about creating something that pushes us forward, even (or perhaps especially) when everything feels difficult.
And lately, the 'difficult’ has been omnipresent.
Most meetings I’ve had in the past two weeks have started with a sombre check-in. Many of my clients and collaborators live in the United States, where the recent and incredibly divisive election has left them grappling with a feeling of political death.
As a creative community, we’ve just lost two brilliant artists far too young. While I didn’t know either of them personally, I’ve been pouring over their paintings and press clippings that have been shared in memorials on LinkedIn.
And then, of course, there’s Instagram, where death is violent and ever-visible.
A recent YouGov survey revealed that 58% of Brits would rather time travel to the past than the future, and 73% of young people feel anxious about what lies ahead. These numbers are bleak, but not surprising.
Sometimes it’s hard to imagine a brilliant tomorrow.
And yet, we have to try.
When I’m asked to define the kind of work I make or the themes that hold my favourite projects together, it’s about ideas that shift culture, even in small ways. There’s a perception that this kind of work lives exclusively in CSR or charity campaigns, but that’s not the case. I believe in using creativity to get people to imagine the world they want to live in, and to believe that those worlds are possible.
At RADAR, we’ve been working on a project called tomorrow.radio; it’s a platform for sharing small but meaningful stories of hope from communities across the world. The idea is simple: amplify what’s already good and working. It’s about real voices and real moments that show us things can get better.
We’re asking people to share what’s happening around them, on their streets and in their communities. From bees returning to gardens to otters returning to the River Lea. If you’ve got a story, and I’m sure you do, I encourage you to share it. Because hope isn’t a luxury; it’s vital. And right now, every bit of hope matters.
There’s no simple fix for the challenges we face. The world is complex, and change is slow and non-linear. But platforms like tomorrow.radio remind us of the small things in our lives that are moving in the right direction. And when we take the time to share those stories, we create something bigger: a collective belief that there’s plenty worth fighting for.
So, what’s happening near you that makes tomorrow feel like it could be brilliant? Let’s hear it.
Anna Rose Kerr
Freelance Creative Director & Consultant
Further reading:

Tomorrow radio: Add what makes you hopeful



What to do when someone you care about has lost hope
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