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Dr. Uche Nworah: Branding goes beyond packaging and visibility

Renowned marketing communications practitioner and brand strategist Dr. Uche Nworah says many organisations still misunderstand what branding truly means, reducing it to logos, colours, packaging, and digital visibility rather than strategic identity.

According to Nworah, strong brands are not built on aesthetics alone but on clarity of identity, values, personality, culture, communication, and customer experience. He explained that while logos and campaigns are outward expressions, the real brand exists beneath the surface and determines whether a business becomes enduring or forgettable.

Drawing from over two decades of experience across Nigerian, African, and international markets, Nworah noted that the strongest brands are those that know exactly who they are and communicate that identity consistently over time. He described brand identity as the “soul” of a business, warning that confusion and inconsistency are among the fastest routes to irrelevance.

He also highlighted the distinction between brand identity and brand image, stressing that while identity reflects how an organisation defines itself internally, image is shaped by how consumers actually perceive the brand externally. According to him, branding failures often occur when there is a disconnect between the two.

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Nworah criticised businesses that imitate competitors or constantly reinvent themselves to follow trends, arguing that such approaches create generic brands with no authentic personality. Instead, he emphasised the importance of storytelling, brand personality, memorable naming, recognisable communication style, strong products, and sensory experiences in building emotional connection and differentiation.

Speaking on African brands, Nworah said the continent possesses immense untapped branding potential rooted in culture, creativity, authenticity, and entrepreneurial energy. However, he noted that many African businesses dilute their uniqueness in a bid to appear international, despite authenticity being what global audiences increasingly value.

Ultimately, he believes branding goes beyond visibility or promotion and is fundamentally about meaning, trust, emotional connection, and long-term consistency. According to him, the brands that endure are not necessarily the loudest, but the ones that understand themselves clearly and communicate that identity with conviction.

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