Love’s Weird: Why Imperfect Brands Win Deeper Affection

Love’s Weird: Why Imperfect Brands Win Deeper Affection

In a culture hooked on scroll-stopping tricks, the real competitive edge for brands isn’t understanding and playing into the algorithm, it’s about being brave enough to lean into a niche, be a bit weird, and show up unmistakably themselves.


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There’s a persistent rumor that Gen Z have the attention spans of overstimulated goldfish: eight seconds, allegedly. The counter argument is that rather than attention spans shrinking, young people are just sifting through more content than any generation before them. They’ve simply raised their standards. If it doesn’t cut through, they don’t stick around.

Whichever way you read it, we live inside an attention economy. Human attention, once ambient and abundant, is treated as a scarce resource to be chased, hacked, and monetized. Platforms optimize for it. Creators contort themselves for it. Brands spend millions trying to rent it.

Brandmakers with Louise Foley, Director of Marketing, Europe at Pinterest

Brandmakers with Louise Foley, Director of Marketing, Europe at Pinterest

Listen on Spotify Listen on Apple Music Watch on YouTube Welcome back, it's week three of the Brandmakers podcast, and Hannah is joined this week by Louise Foley, who is director of marketing, Europe at Pinterest. Louise and Hannah got stuck into the subject of trends and signals, and what marketers need to do to stay on the right side of cultural relevance. She also detailed her own marketing strategy and her push into fun and meaningful experiential events. Disclaimer: we recorded thi


Hannah Bowler

Hannah Bowler