Some of the most consequential decisions a brand makes never arrive looking consequential. They appear as cost decisions. Growth plans. New operating models. Policy changes. Shifts in KPIs.
Over time, these choices accumulate into patterns that shape what is rewarded and what is overlooked; what receives protection when pressure rises; what is held firm and what is negotiable; and what employees, customers, partners, and communities are asked to accommodate.
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This may be why “coherence” is appearing in conversations across disciplines: leadership, governance, education, AI, organizational design, brand and culture.
Different fields. Different ambitions. Each reaching for language to describe the need for the parts of a system to move together in ways people recognize, rely on and participate in.
Recently, I’ve heard coherence described as:
- Clarity of purpose: a stable reference point helping people judge whether a course of action belongs.
- Strategic integration: business, brand, culture, experience and innovation reinforcing one another.
- Discipline: holding a shared direction when priorities multiply and conditions keep changing.Each of these names a way a system holds together.
For brands, this is especially tangible because they come to life through more than marcoms: through culture, systems, and choices people make when there is no time to consult guidelines.
Coherence is lived integrity: the relationship between what a brand says, how culture guides decisions, and what people actually encounter over time.
If a brand is the human face of a business, culture is where that face becomes recognizable from within: in the choices made, the judgment trusted, and the behavior gradually normalized.
A brand may have a compelling ambition, a well-articulated purpose, and an integrated plan for growth. The question is whether those elements move from the same center in the accumulated experience of those inside and around it.
This is where coherence is felt.
In how people are treated when resources tighten.
In whether stated commitments guide choices when conditions are difficult.
In whether customer insight changes the system or simply informs the next campaign.
In whether people have the clarity, trust and agency to bring a brand promise to life with integrity.
These are the places where strategy becomes culture, and culture becomes the brand.
They reveal the underlying logic of an organization: whether its systems reinforce the value it seeks to create, and whether it is building a future people genuinely choose to belong to.
Brand should strengthen competitive position, pricing power, and enterprise value. The Blake Project helps make that happen.
When a brand is structurally aligned, and culture, decisions, and experience move in coherence, purpose, strategy, and experience become living patterns rather than adjacent conversations—patterns people recognize, trust, and contribute to.
If this gives language to something you are seeing in your own organization, share it with someone helping to shape what comes next.
Contributed to Branding Strategy Insider by Anne Bahr Thompson, Author, Do Good, Embracing Brand Citizenship to Fuel Both Purpose and Profit.
At The Blake Project, we help leaders turn brand into a disciplined driver of financial performance — strengthening pricing power, competitive position, and enterprise value. Email us to start a conversation about enduring profitable growth. For The EBITDA.
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