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Your biggest competitor might not be your competitor at all. In this episode, Amy unpacks the idea of the brand arena — the market, category, and cultural “neighborhood” where your brand competes and connects. And, just like in real life, where you think you live and where people place you aren’t always the same thing.
Drawing from a surprisingly relevant gin rummy story, Amy explains why so many brands misjudge their competitive set and why understanding your arena is foundational to building an authentic, aspirational, and actionable brand.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
Key Insight
Defining your arena isn’t about standing out first, it’s about being placed where your audience expects to find you. Then, within that arena, distinctiveness helps you rise above the noise.
Brand Hack
Make a list of the things your company does well. Then look up three competitors and identify what they claim to do well. Cross out anything that overlaps. What’s left is your starting point for differentiation.
Mentioned Concepts
Because brand isn’t a 4-letter word — it’s your best strategy and your strongest story. Learn more at BrandIsNotAFourLetterWord.com, where strategy and storytelling meet design.
By Amy JacksonYour biggest competitor might not be your competitor at all. In this episode, Amy unpacks the idea of the brand arena — the market, category, and cultural “neighborhood” where your brand competes and connects. And, just like in real life, where you think you live and where people place you aren’t always the same thing.
Drawing from a surprisingly relevant gin rummy story, Amy explains why so many brands misjudge their competitive set and why understanding your arena is foundational to building an authentic, aspirational, and actionable brand.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
Key Insight
Defining your arena isn’t about standing out first, it’s about being placed where your audience expects to find you. Then, within that arena, distinctiveness helps you rise above the noise.
Brand Hack
Make a list of the things your company does well. Then look up three competitors and identify what they claim to do well. Cross out anything that overlaps. What’s left is your starting point for differentiation.
Mentioned Concepts
Because brand isn’t a 4-letter word — it’s your best strategy and your strongest story. Learn more at BrandIsNotAFourLetterWord.com, where strategy and storytelling meet design.