The Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility: Why the Second Slice of Pizza Never Feels as Good as the First

The Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility Why the Second Slice of Pizza Never Feels as Good as the First; and What Marketers Can Learn From It There is a moment in almost every all-you-can-eat buffet where optimism collides with economic theory. The first plate feels glorious. The second is still enjoyable. By the third,

The Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility: Why the Second Slice of Pizza Never Feels as Good as the First2026-05-26T15:29:43+00:00

Quiet Luxury: The Marketing Strategy of Saying Everything by Saying Very Little

Quiet Luxury The Marketing Strategy of Saying Everything by Saying Very Little There was a time when luxury marketing shouted. Big logos. Gold trim. Monograms large enough to be seen from space. If someone bought something expensive, the assumption was that they wanted everyone else to know about it too. But over the last decade,

Quiet Luxury: The Marketing Strategy of Saying Everything by Saying Very Little2026-05-26T15:01:59+00:00

The Mandela Effect: Why Millions of People Remember Things That Never Happened

The Mandela Effect Why Millions of People Remember Things That Never Happened There are few things more unsettling than confidently remembering something… only to discover it apparently never existed. You swear a film quote was different. You distinctly remember a logo looking another way. You could have bet your mortgage that a celebrity died years

The Mandela Effect: Why Millions of People Remember Things That Never Happened2026-05-26T08:37:17+00:00

When Southampton Lost the Narrative: What “Spygate” Teaches Us About Crisis Communications in Sport

When Southampton Lost the Narrative What “Spygate” Teaches Us About Crisis Communications in Sport There is an important distinction to make before anything else. Southampton F.C. did not lose the “Spygate” case simply because of bad communications. They lost because, according to the English Football League, the club admitted to multiple breaches of regulations

When Southampton Lost the Narrative: What “Spygate” Teaches Us About Crisis Communications in Sport2026-05-22T08:29:26+00:00

When Brand Ambassadors Go Wrong: The Marketing Risks of Celebrity Endorsements

When Brand Ambassadors Go Wrong The Marketing Risks of Celebrity Endorsements There is an old marketing idea that if people admire someone, they may subconsciously transfer some of those positive feelings onto the brand they represent. In theory, it makes perfect sense. If a world-famous athlete drinks a certain sports drink, wears a particular

When Brand Ambassadors Go Wrong: The Marketing Risks of Celebrity Endorsements2026-05-18T13:43:06+00:00

Reebok, Joe Foster and the Marketing Reinventions That Built the Brand

Reebok, Joe Foster and the Marketing Reinventions That Built the Brand How a Bolton running shoe business became one of the most fascinating case studies in sportswear marketing Reebok is one of those brands that feels as though it has lived several lives. At different points, it has been a British running shoe pioneer, an

Reebok, Joe Foster and the Marketing Reinventions That Built the Brand2026-05-21T11:57:45+00:00

Cult of Personality: When Brands, Politics, and Business Stop Being About the Product

Cult of Personality When Brands, Politics, and Business Stop Being About the Product There is something strangely powerful about people who become bigger than the thing they actually represent. Sometimes it is a politician. Sometimes it is a business leader. Sometimes it is a celebrity entrepreneur selling electric cars, turtlenecks, trainers, protein powder, or the

Cult of Personality: When Brands, Politics, and Business Stop Being About the Product2026-05-18T12:56:07+00:00

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP): Why £10 Doesn’t Always Mean £10

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) Why £10 Doesn’t Always Mean £10 There’s a moment that many marketers (and travellers) have had. You land in a new country, order a coffee, and either: feel like you’ve just pulled off the deal of the century, or wonder whether you’ve accidentally bought the café. Same product. Same category.

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP): Why £10 Doesn’t Always Mean £102026-05-18T12:13:01+00:00

Storytelling in Marketing: Why Facts Tell, but Stories Sell

Storytelling in Marketing Why Facts Tell, but Stories Sell Marketing has always been about persuasion. But the way we persuade has evolved. Once upon a time (and yes, that’s deliberate), it was enough to list features, shout about price, and hope for the best. Today, that approach feels about as effective as reading out a

Storytelling in Marketing: Why Facts Tell, but Stories Sell2026-05-11T15:43:22+00:00

Why Consumers Rarely Switch Dog Food; And What Finally Makes Them Do It

Why Consumers Rarely Switch Dog Food And What Finally Makes Them Do It If you want to understand the pet food market, you need to understand one uncomfortable truth: Most consumers are not actively choosing dog food. They are repeating it. Despite the rise of premium brands, raw feeding, and increasingly vocal communities, a large

Why Consumers Rarely Switch Dog Food; And What Finally Makes Them Do It2026-05-11T15:28:25+00:00