Why Cultural Relevance is Make-or-Break for Modern Brands

In today’s hyper-competitive markets, brands can’t just make good products and expect to succeed. They need another layer of benefits contributing to perceived value: cultural relevance. Having cultural relevance means being connected to what people care about, what they talk about, and what matters in their daily lives.

Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank recently put it perfectly when he said his company is “regaining cultural relevance” as part of turning around the brand’s struggles. His comments highlight a truth that many companies are learning the hard way: without cultural relevance, even great products can get lost in the crowd.

Cultural relevance isn’t about following every trend or being trendy for the sake of it. It’s about understanding your audience so well that your brand becomes part of their identity and lifestyle. When a brand makes this connection, customers don’t just buy products; they become loyal fans who recommend the brand to friends and family.

What Makes a Brand Culturally Relevant

Cultural relevance happens when a brand successfully connects with the values, interests, and conversations that matter most to its target audience. It can be the difference between a brand that people notice and one they ignore.

Four key elements create cultural relevance. First, authentic storytelling matters more than flashy advertising. People can tell when brands are genuine versus when they’re just trying to sell something. Brands that share real stories about their mission, their customers, or their impact tend to build stronger connections. Most brand marketers know this, yet they still struggle to meaningfully connect with audiences through storytelling.

Second, timing is everything. Culturally relevant brands know when to speak up and when to listen. They join important conversations at the right moments and in the right ways. They also know their audience’s interests beyond just their products, whether that’s sports, music, social causes, or lifestyle trends.

Third, community building creates lasting relevance. The best brands don’t just talk to their customers; they help customers connect with each other. This outreach might happen through social media, events, or shared experiences around the brand.

Finally, staying flexible and responsive keeps brands relevant over time. Culture changes quickly, especially with social media speeding everything up. Brands that can adapt their messaging and approach while staying true to their core values tend to maintain their cultural connection longer.

Under Armour’s Path Back to Relevance

Under Armour’s loss of cultural relevance offers lessons for any brand. The company defined its brand positioning by connecting with serious athletes and building a reputation for high-performance gear. However, somewhere along the way, they seemed to lose touch with what made them special to customers. In a recent meeting with financial analysts, Kevin Plank laid out strategic priorities for returning Under Armour to greater cultural relevance.

One major issue was trying to be everything to everyone. Under Armour moved away from its “gym-first approach” and lost focus on its roots in team sports. When brands spread themselves too thin, they often end up meaning less to everyone rather than meaning a lot to their core audience.

Under Armour also relied too heavily on professional athlete partnerships while missing out on connecting with everyday athletes and sports fans. While having famous athletes wear your gear is great for brand visibility, it doesn’t always translate to cultural relevance if regular people can’t see themselves in your brand story.

Now, Plank is outlining a clear path back to relevance. The company is shifting from a “primarily professional athlete-only model to an influencer-led network. The faces associated with Under Armour will include high school and college athletes as well as content creators.

The brand is also focusing on fewer products but making them better and more distinctive. This strategy of doing fewer things better can help rebuild the brand’s identity and give customers clear reasons to choose Under Armour.

Additionally, Under Armour is investing in direct relationships with customers through digital channels and improved storytelling. Building these connections helps brands stay relevant by understanding what their audience really wants and needs. It is an other-focused approach rather than traditional “look at us” brand marketing.

The Cultural Relevance Imperative

Cultural relevance isn’t a nice-to-have for modern brands. It’s essential for survival and growth. In a world where customers have endless choices, the brands that succeed are those that become part of their customers’ lives and identities.

Under Armour’s struggles and turnaround efforts show both how quickly brands can lose relevance and how intentional they must be about regaining it. The key lessons are clear: stay true to your roots, focus on your core audience, build authentic connections, and always keep listening to what your customers really care about.

For any brand looking to build or maintain cultural relevance, the formula isn’t complicated, but it requires commitment. Tell authentic stories, engage with your community meaningfully, stay flexible as culture evolves, and never forget why your customers fell in love with your brand in the first place. Get this right, and you’ll build more than a customer base; you’ll build a community that helps your brand thrive for years to come.

Be Grateful for Your Brand

You already have a personal brand, even if you’ve never given it a second thought.

It’s shaped by how you show up, what you do, and how you treat others. It exists whether you manage it or not. But here’s the good news: you get to shape it into something meaningful and lasting.

That’s a gift, not a burden.

Too many people ignore their personal brand because they think it’s all about “grunt work” like content creation and networking.

No, your brand is more than that—it’s your values, your actions, and your impact. It’s your reputation and the legacy you are building along the way. Have gratitude that you have the freedom to shape your brand into something you’re proud of.

That freedom is a privilege. Don’t waste it.

Take time today to be thankful for your personal brand, and take steps to grow it with purpose.

Digital Billboards: Value Added or Villain?

Digital billboards quickly came under attack after showing up on the landscape. A primary criticism of digital billboards is that they are unsafe in that they will distract drivers and cause traffic accidents. That assertion is based on… well, what is it based on? I suppose it is considered another distraction and potential accident source just like eating, applying make-up, or talking on a cell phone (my personal favorite was told to me recently by a friend – he saw someone playing a trumpet while driving). If digital billboards are banned before they gain widespread adoption, there will be one less problem on the roads.

You may want to put the brakes on that assumption. According to a study by Tantala Associates commissioned by the Outdoor Advertising Association of America, a study of the relationship between digital billboards and traffic accidents in the Cleveland, Ohio area found no indication that the signs led to more accidents. The study marked the third such effort, with previous studies in Rochester, New York and Cleveland yielding similar results.

Digital billboards offer many advantages over their poster predecessors. Messages can be rotated frequently, changes or additions to messages can be made easily, and they can even prompt immediate action. My wife noticed a digital billboard in Nashville for a country music station. The message included information about the song on the air at that time. Sure enough, a quick check of the radio dial confirmed that the song was playing.

If digital billboards possess advantages over poster billboards, why is there opposition to them? It is likely that it is more of an aesthetics issue than a safety issue. Most opponents may simply not want these big, bright displays being a part of the local landscape. Citing safety concerns may be the cover for the negative image that billboards have long suffered. But, if digital billboards are more attractive (they will not peel or show effects of harsh weather) and potentially more beneficial for advertisers and the community (having the ability to post info on a missing person, for example), let’s hope that persons involved making decisions about billboard placement will recognize the value they can add.

Digital Outsider – “Study: DO Billboards Are Safe, Really”