Every marketer tracks market share. Every boardroom celebrates it. Every quarterly review revolves around it.
Yet, some of the world’s most influential brands have taught us a different lesson: market share is an outcome; brand memory is the cause.
Think about it. Most people can instantly recall Nike’s ‘Just Do It’, Amul’s topical ads, Fevicol’s legendary storytelling, or Apple’s product launches. Yet many of them may not have purchased these brands recently. The memory exists independent of the transaction.
And that memory is often a stronger predictor of future growth than today’s market share.
The Battle Isn’t for Shelf Space. It’s for Mind Space.
Consumers don’t make decisions from a spreadsheet of available options. They choose from the handful of brands that come to mind at the moment of need.
When someone thinks of a luxury hotel, an aerated drink, a sports shoe, or an investment platform, a mental shortlist forms instantly. The brands on that shortlist enjoy a disproportionate advantage.
Market share can be bought through distribution, discounts, and promotions. Brand memory has to be earned.
The Fevicol Lesson
For decades, Fevicol has advertised a product that most consumers rarely purchase themselves. Yet its campaigns have become part of popular culture. People remember the bus overloaded with passengers, the mark that won’t wipe off, and countless other stories long after they have forgotten the product specifications.
The late Shri Piyush Pandey often reminded the industry that great advertising does not interrupt culture; it becomes a part of it. Fevicol’s success is perhaps one of the finest examples of that philosophy. Its campaigns were rarely about adhesive strength alone. They were rooted in human insight, humour and everyday Indian life, creating memories that outlived media plans and generations of consumers.
The result? Fevicol is not just a brand. It is the default answer to a category question.
That is the power of memory. When a brand becomes synonymous with the problem it solves, market share follows naturally.
Why Performance Marketing Alone Isn’t Enough
Many modern brands are obsessed with conversion metrics. Click-through rates, cost per acquisition, lead generation, and short-term sales dominate discussions.
These metrics matter. But they often measure the harvest while ignoring the cultivation. A customer may click today because of an offer. They return tomorrow because they remember you.
Research by marketing scientist Byron Sharp has repeatedly highlighted the importance of mental availability, the likelihood of a brand being noticed or thought of in buying situations. In simple terms, brands grow when they become easier to remember.
What We Learned from Government Communication
One of the most fascinating examples of memory-building in recent years comes not from consumer brands, but from public campaigns.
During large-scale national campaigns, the most effective communication was rarely the one with the most information. It was the one with the simplest, most repeatable idea.
Whether it was a slogan, a visual identity, or a recurring narrative, repetition created recall. Recall created familiarity. Familiarity created trust.
The lesson applies equally to brands. People remember stories, symbols, and emotions far more than product features.
Three Questions Every Brand Manager Should Ask
Instead of asking only ‘What is our market share?’, consider asking:
1. What is the first thing people remember about us?
If consumers remember only your offers and not your brand, you are building transactions, not equity.
2. Are we creating distinctive memory assets?
Characters, colours, taglines, sounds, packaging cues, and recurring narratives help brands stay mentally available.
3. Would consumers miss us if we disappeared tomorrow?
Strong brands occupy a unique place in people’s minds. Weak brands are easily replaced.
The Agency’s Responsibility
Agencies often face pressure to deliver immediate results, and rightly so. But great agencies also protect the long-term interests of a brand.
Not every campaign should chase virality. Not every communication should be promotional.
Sometimes the most valuable thing an agency can do is create a memory that lasts longer than the media budget.
The Real Scorecard
Market share tells you how many customers you have. And brand memory tells you how many customers are likely to choose you next.
In an age where consumers are bombarded with thousands of messages every day, the brands that win won’t necessarily be the ones shouting the loudest. They will be the ones remembered the longest.
Because in the end, consumers don’t buy the brands they see. They buy the brands they remember.
(Views are personal)
















