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	<title>Brand Strategy - Republica</title>
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		<title>Local culture as a competitive advantage in brand strategy</title>
		<link>https://republica45.com/local-culture-as-a-competitive-advantage-in-brand-strategy/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Carolina Frère]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 May 2026 08:53:55 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Brand Strategy]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>In some European office, someone is presenting a deck. The slides all look the same: approved palette, tone of voice validated across seven markets. The brand is ready to scale....</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://republica45.com/local-culture-as-a-competitive-advantage-in-brand-strategy/">Local culture as a competitive advantage in brand strategy</a> appeared first on <a href="https://republica45.com">Republica</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p data-start="62" data-end="239">In some European office, someone is presenting a deck. The slides all look the same: approved palette, tone of voice validated across seven markets. The brand is ready to scale.</p>
<p data-start="241" data-end="421">The world has globalised. And with it, a conviction has taken shape: that visual and narrative consistency are enough to sustain relevance. For a long time, that seemed sufficient.</p>
<p data-start="423" data-end="550">But global consistency is not the same as local rootedness. And without rootedness, cultural authority is difficult to achieve.</p>
<p data-start="552" data-end="793">The connection to the local market is often superficial. A few appropriated symbols here, a local expression there. The central logic never changes. What’s missing is something else. Something more demanding. Harder to fit into a slide deck.</p>
<p data-start="795" data-end="853">What’s missing is belonging to the market you are part of.</p>
<p data-start="855" data-end="1201">Bad Bunny understood this before many people with far more impressive credentials. In January 2025, he released <em data-start="967" data-end="989">DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS</em> at a moment when the industry continues to push Latin American artists toward calculated neutrality. A globalised sound with less accent, more crossover appeal, lyrics that work equally well in Miami and Madrid.</p>
<p data-start="1203" data-end="1414">The album went in the opposite direction. It talks about the gentrification of San Juan, uses decades-old rhythms without updating them to sound contemporary. It lets them sound exactly as they are. Old. Theirs.</p>
<p data-start="1416" data-end="1623">He didn’t translate Puerto Rico for the world. He offered Puerto Rico to the world and allowed the rest to follow as a consequence. What becomes exportable is not neutrality. It is the intensity of identity.</p>
<p data-start="1625" data-end="1687">The same principle applies to brands, especially smaller ones.</p>
<p data-start="1689" data-end="2237">A small brand does not have the budget to build cultural authority from scratch. It does not have years to slowly sediment a narrative. But it can do something else. It can attach itself to existing meaning. And there is a difference between attaching and parasitising. This is not about placing a logo on a roll-up banner. It is about recognising that there are institutions, spaces and communities that already carry symbolic weight the brand does not yet possess, and that a genuine association transfers legitimacy in a way no campaign can buy.</p>
<p data-start="2239" data-end="2624">A craft beer brand that partners with a producers’ market with forty years of history is not simply finding distribution. It is affiliating itself with a territorial narrative. A regional retailer that supports a historic sports club is not engaging in corporate social responsibility. It is saying: we are from here, just as you are from here. And that is not a tagline. It is a fact.</p>
<p data-start="2626" data-end="2842">In a market like Portugal, where trust is built through recognition and familiarity, legitimacy is not a soft asset. It is the difference between a brand that endures and one that disappears when the budget runs out.</p>
<p data-start="2844" data-end="2905">The wrong question is: how do we make this brand more global?</p>
<p data-start="2907" data-end="3043">The right question is different: how do we make it rooted enough that, even within a limited geography, it possesses cultural authority?</p>
<p data-start="3045" data-end="3175" data-is-last-node="" data-is-only-node="">Because in the end, a brand’s strength does not lie only in its consistency. It lies in its ability to make sense where it exists.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://republica45.com/local-culture-as-a-competitive-advantage-in-brand-strategy/">Local culture as a competitive advantage in brand strategy</a> appeared first on <a href="https://republica45.com">Republica</a>.</p>
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