The Myth of Precision: Why Branding Needs a Wider Net

Sridevi Sarkar

Citation: Sridevi Sarkar, "The Myth of Precision: Why Branding Needs a Wider Net", Universal Library of Business and Economics, Volume 02, Issue 03.

Copyright: This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Abstract

The paper discusses conceptual and practical disjunctions that emerge when the logic of hyper-precision targeting, initially designed for performance marketing, is subsequently imposed unreflectively in the area of brand building. This discussion is inspired by the growing prevalence of algorithmic segmentation and personalization in current marketing systems. While creating enormous short-term transactional benefits, these very techniques have inherent structural limitations and, in some cases, have even proved counterproductive when applied to the task of building long-term brand equity. The study’s contribution lies in its articulation of two paradigms of communication that are fundamentally incommensurable. The first is an instrumental paradigm, optimized for rapid behavioral conversion; the second is a symbolic paradigm, oriented toward the incremental accumulation of trust, affective capital, and cultural resonance across extended time horizons. The central aim of the article is to delineate the methodological and strategic limits of precision in branding, while advancing the argument that brand vitality rests less on surgical targeting than on the broad circulation of coherent symbolic narratives. Through an integrative analysis of theoretical frameworks, illustrative case studies (including Budweiser’s “Best Buds” campaign and Lincoln’s collaboration with Matthew McConaughey), and a corpus of empirical as well as conceptual scholarship, the article shows that excessive segmentation and personalization can undermine message coherence, weaken emotional resonance, and ultimately obstruct the development of long-term mental availability. The principal findings underscore that brand building requires a widened aperture—emphasizing reach, mnemonic reiteration, emotionally saturated storytelling, and symbolic consistency—while recognizing that performance communications, however efficient, cannot substitute for the slow sedimentation of brand meaning within collective memory. The article will be of particular value to marketing scholars, strategic consultants, and practitioners of advertising communications seeking to reconcile the imperatives of short-term efficiency with the exigencies of long-term brand endurance.


Keywords: Branding, Performance Marketing, Hyper-Precision Targeting, Brand Equity, Affective Engagement, Cognitive Availability.

Download doi https://doi.org/10.70315/uloap.ulbec.2025.0203017