What Brands Get Wrong About the New America, Navigating Cultural Nuance [PODCAST]

People make assumptions. While that may seem like a common character flaw, it can have serious implications on brand perception. When marketers rely on outdated stereotypes and beliefs about the American public, they are ignoring the complex reality in which consumers live. Today’s consumer is far more nuanced than the binary labels imposed upon them, e.g., Democrat vs. Republican. Clinging to binary frameworks in a rapidly shifting cultural and political landscape leaves brands vulnerable to costly missteps.

To avoid pitfalls, brands must do the work upfront. Trust in traditional institutions may be eroding, but people still want something to believe in. This creates opportunities for marketers to partner with market researchers to do a deep dive into the cultural drivers that activate and define the audiences being engaged.

But navigating today’s sensitivities requires more than curiosity. It demands intentionality. Brands must know who they are, know who they’re speaking to, and test their messaging, values, and assumptions across lines of identity. Many Americans share core values like freedom and fairness, but how those values are interpreted depends on who you ask. That’s why words matter.

There’s often a gap between what brands think their words mean, what they intend them to mean, and what people actually hear. Closing that gap is critical. But brands that attempt to please everyone risk saying nothing at all. Instead, marketers are encouraged to double down on their core identity and speak directly to their audience, even if it means not appealing to everyone.

In this episode of The New Mainstream podcast, Julia Glidden, Group President, U.S. Public Affairs and Ruth Moss, SVP, Senior Client Officer at Ipsos North America unpack the findings from the newly released “Know the New America” report that explores how political, cultural, and economic shifts are transforming the consumer and business landscape.

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