When we think of a brand, we often picture catchy logos, memorable jingles, or viral campaigns. Yet in contemporary marketing a brand is, above all, a promise —a coherent story that earns trust because it aligns what we say with what we do—. The same principle applies to leadership. Every leader, whether a local shop owner, an entrepreneur, or a head of state—functions as a living brand. Their identity (what they claim to be) and their reputation (what the public perceives) are reinforced or fractured with every decision.
In that sense, President Gustavo Petro’s recent push to rally crowds on May 1st in support of a labor referendum shows what happens when a leader’s brand drifts away from the two essentials of success: suitability and relevance.
In brand positioning, suitability answers a simple question: Can this brand deliver on its promise?
When aspiration clearly outstrips execution, a leader’s brand loses credibility. For an entrepreneur or sales manager, the lesson is obvious: don’t offer delivery dates your logistics team can’t meet or promotions your cash flow can’t support. Coherence is an intangible asset that devalues at the first breach of trust.
A relevant brand understands its audience’s context and adjusts its message to add value. May 1st is traditionally a day to spotlight labor struggles; turning it into a stage for political pressure shifted the conversation from the institutional arena (Congress) to the public square, diluting the date’s original meaning. The result was ideological noise that solved little about minimum wage, informality, or productivity—workers’ concrete concerns.
For small-business owners, the analogy is clear: if your storefront screams “limited-time sale” but customers find minimal or confusing discounts, you lose both attention and trust. Relevance isn’t about shouting louder; it’s about speaking better —at the right moment, on the right channel, on what truly matters—.
The government framed the “people in the streets” as an alternative source of legitimacy. Yet when a march appears orchestrated (and funded by taxpayers), the narrative stops feeling spontaneous and turns tactical —a massive photo that fails to translate into effective public policy—.
Business has its own vanity metrics: bought social-media followers, inflated reviews, or traffic numbers that never convert. A strong leader measures brand identity not by the volume of applause but by the depth of impact—satisfied customers, engaged employees, and strengthened communities.
The administration suggested that street pressure could replace the law. Without solid institutions—or, in business terms, clear processes—operations devolve into perennial improvisation. Inflated promises without support eventually erode governability (or, for a company, customer loyalty).
In a marketplace where attention is fleeting, trust is the most valuable currency. A leader-brand that squanders it faces a far higher cost to rebuild than if it had nurtured credibility step by step.
A solid leadership brand isn’t built on decibels but on harmony between intention and achievement. When suitability and relevance converge, a leader’s identity becomes a powerful asset: it inspires teams, engages customers, and leaves a positive mark on society or the market.
Colombia’s experience under President Gustavo Petro reminds us, that mobilization —like any marketing tactic— must serve a greater end: delivering tangible, sustainable results. Otherwise, the crowd’s echo fades and the brand—whether personal, corporate, or political—stands exposed as little more than a mirage.
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