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Paths to purchase have become increasingly fragmented, and while brands now have more opportunities than ever to reach consumers, they also face unprecedented competition for attention. At the same time, GenAI has unleashed an explosion of content. The very tools that fuel creativity also produce an abundance of brand generated content that often looks and sounds alike.

In this environment, effective and sustained brand marketing has never been more valuable, allowing brands to earn attention, build trust, and stay top of mind when consumers make choices, all of which directly influence growth.

The Financial Impacts of Brand Marketing

BCG’s latest research quantifies just how significant brand investment has become to fueling short- and long-term performance. Cutting $1 of brand spending today costs companies $1.92 in future investment to regain lost share, up from $1.85 in 2022. Moreover, three out of four marketers now believe that brand cuts cause more damage than they did five years ago, reflecting the rising financial cost of lost consumer attention. (See Exhibit 1.)

Companies that cut brand spend must work harder to regain lost mind share

The evidence shows that brand marketing behaves like capital. When sustained, it compounds. When underfunded, it depreciates quickly, requiring disproportionate reinvestment to recover.

Rethinking Brand Marketing

In light of these realities, leaders must rethink their brand marketing approach. Winning now requires success on two fronts: Externally, brands must influence consumers effectively. Far from being a discretionary expense, our analysis shows that brand marketing is a measurable investment that drives consumer attention, trust, and top-of-mind recall. (See Exhibit 2). These outcomes directly shape how consumers navigate choices, which brands they remember first, and ultimately whose products or services they buy.

what do we mean by brand marketing?

Internally, brands must elevate their partnership with finance, bringing greater rigor to how brand marketing is measured and demonstrating the tangible financial returns it delivers for the organization. New metrics such as First-Fast Response (FFR) detect early shifts in consumer associations, giving leaders a clearer view of whether their brand is breaking through or blending in—and what this means for future sales. (See the sidebar “What Is First-Fast Response?”)

What Is First-Fast Response?
First-Fast Response (FFR) is a research approach that captures the immediate cognitive associations consumers make between a brand and their needs. By analyzing speed and frequency of top-of-mind responses, FFR allows marketers to statistically link these associations to future sales outcomes. FFR is 2.6 times more responsive and four times more predictive of future sales versus unaided awareness.

Organizations with high budget-share on brand marketing consistently deliver higher returns than peers that underinvest. This holds true across revenue growth, total shareholder value, FFR, and funnel conversion. (See Exhibit 3.)

Brand marketing investment pays
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Five Drivers of Above-Market Brand Returns

Every organization starts from a unique position, shaped by its current market share and growth goals. For example, incumbents aim to reinforce existing mental associations to defend high share, while challengers seek to build new associations to capture share where they are advantaged.

Two-thirds of high-maturity marketers—those with the strongest capabilities, integrated channels, and active use of AI—cite influencing target audiences’ decisions as their top brand objective.

Across this spectrum, BCG’s analysis of 2,400 consumers and 130 senior marketing leaders reveals a clear pattern. Brands that achieve above-market returns anchor their activation on five tenets. These interconnected practices help them lift performance and hold their ground in a noisier, faster market.

Brand as a Strategic Investment

Brand marketing now sits closer to the core of performance than it has in years. With AI democratizing creativity, brand distinctiveness has become the last true competitive moat.

With AI democratizing creativity, brand distinctiveness has become the last true competitive moat.

Companies that achieve above-market returns treat brand as a measurable, strategic investment, not a discretionary line item. They focus on building distinctiveness, trust, and recall at the moment of choice, and they measure brand health with the same financial rigor as any other growth lever.

The practical next step is to treat these five drivers as an operating checklist. Leaders who work this way can transform brand into a lever that strengthens growth, pricing power, and commercial resilience in the short and long term.