A critical look at the overstated importance of digital marketing and the return to an integrated brand ecosystem. Emphasis was placed on clicks over emotions, leads over relationships, KPIs over human connections, and hyper-specialization in digital strategies over a holistic brand vision. Agencies, tech consultancies, software companies, and semi-senior teams—mesmerized by the immediacy of platforms—announced the end of events, physical activations, immersive retail, and meaningful merchandising. It was even claimed that everything could be resolved with a well-crafted brief for Meta or Google.
-
Today, brands like Ferrari, Gucci, and Lego—who never entirely abandoned their physical essence—have demonstrated that this path was a short-sighted illusion. They maintained—and enhanced—a holistic ecosystem approach, wherein the digital realm serves as an enabler, not the focal point.
-
Moreover, branding is not merely graphic design or copywriting; it is about the tangible creation of every detail that extends the DNA of emotion and proposition, the truth, and the unique value of the brand idea. It is how a brand ecosystem or universe communicates a language. It is culture manifesting.
-
Likewise, Puma, Ray-Ban, Monster, Red Bull, McLaren, Victoria's Secret, Netflix, and many others have returned to the coherence of an ecosystem-driven effort led by a Head of Culture model. This necessitated a return to strategic and action-oriented leadership, with seasoned resources possessing diverse competencies and skills, often with extensive experience in various roles and companies.
THE MAJOR ERROR: BELIEVING THAT DIGITALIZATION WOULD REPLACE EXPERIENCE
Efficiency was confused with effectiveness, and even more so with excellence. Indeed, launching a campaign on TikTok is cheaper and faster than setting up a pop-up in the Miami Design District. However, the impact is not the same. The former generates views; the latter cultivates believers.
New and emerging brands, like Rare Beauty and Rhode, have grasped this: they leverage digital channels to amplify, not to replace. Their brand journeys, expert sessions, and immersive experiences are the heart of their strategy. The digital realm serves as the megaphone.
THE 3 PILLARS THAT LEADING BRANDS HAVE NEVER ABANDONED (AND THAT ARE ESSENTIAL TODAY)
1. The Phygital Ecosystem: Ferrari does not sell cars; it offers membership to a club of passion and a lifestyle. Their track experiences, collector events, brand boutiques, and launches in exclusive locations generate organic content that is subsequently amplified digitally. The physical and real—manifested expansively—feeds the digital.
2. The Role of the Head of Culture: In Gucci, this role—filled by individuals with decades of experience in fashion, art, and sociology—defines narratives, collaborations with artists, and the curation of retail experiences. This is not done by a community manager, a design agency, or an influencer expert.
3. Experience as Product: Lego recognized that its value lies not in the bricks but in the ritual of building. Their flagship stores, theme parks, and workshops are natural extensions of the brand. They are not "activations"; they embody the brand itself.
THE SOLUTION: THE HEAD OF CULTURE AS THE STRATEGIC CORE
This role—which visionary companies are beginning to adopt—is not just a "senior community manager." It is a world architect, someone who:
- Understands sociology, trends, and art,
- Grasps the business and its numbers,
- Coordinates design, product, retail, PR, and digital teams,
- Makes investments in experiences, not merely in advertisements.
Concrete Examples:
- Ferrari: Their Head of Culture approves everything from event designs in Mugello to collaborations with artists like Takashi Murakami.
- Gucci: Their culture and art team defines everything from in-store curation to partnerships with museums.
- Lego: Their experience department designs not only toys but also parks, films, and educational workshops.
DISRUPTIVE CONCLUSION: DIGITAL IS TACTIC, NOT STRATEGY
The brands that will survive in 2026 and beyond are those that understand that:
- Digital marketing is a channel, not an end goal,
- The physical experience is irreplaceable for building loyalty,
- The Head of Culture is the most crucial role in the modern C-suite,
- Investment should be redistributed: 50% experiences, 50% amplification.
It is not about returning to the past but rather integrating the best of both worlds.
Digital measures; physical evokes emotion. (And that is what is truly relevant, even before immediate or short-term sales.)
The algorithm reaches millions; the experience touches the soul.
For those who do not understand this—continue purchasing clicks.
For those who do—invest in building universes.
Read Smart, Be Smarter!
https://infonegocios.miami/subscribe-to-newsletter
Contact: Marcelo.Maurizio@gmail.com
Infonegocios NETWORK: 4.5 million Anglo-Latinos united by a passion for business.
Join us and stay informed.
© 2025 Infonegocios Miami.
Infonegocios Miami—Economic, Cultural, and Business Intelligence with a Global Lens