
Chris Danton on Building & Mattering
Chris Danton is Co-Founder and Chief of Ideas at IN GOOD CO, a B-Corp-certified, women-led brand strategy firm whose clients include Nike, Starbucks, Pinterest, Herman Miller, Uniqlo, Zappos, and Psycho Bunny. She is the writer behind GOOD THINKING, a weekly newsletter on culture, trends, and marketing read by more than 17,000 brand executives, and co-host of the GOOD THINKING podcast. She lives in Italy.So I’m not sure if you know this or not, but I start all of these conversations with the same question, which I borrow from a friend of mine who’s a neighbor and she helps people tell their story. And once I heard this question, I just decided that it was the only way to really begin any conversation that’s coming out of nowhere. And it’s a big, beautiful question, which is why I over explain it the way that I’m doing right now.So before I ask it, I want you to know that you’re in total control. You can answer or not answer any way that you want to. And the question is, where do you come from?Well, you did warn me and I did listen to some episodes. So I’ve thought a lot about it. It’s a really good question. So I admire you for the consistency. I love a good ritual.And I thought about it. And I think that the truth is, is I come from nowhere. And that’s maybe the whole story.I am a third culture kid. I’ve moved around my whole life. Probably every three years, I’ve had a major move of some variety, whether that’s different country, different continent, different state, and at least moving between states or even Long Beach to LA, I would say is a pretty significant cultural move, even if it’s within the same state.So I’ve moved a lot. And I think that the moving is really the foundation of where I come from, to the bigger meaning of your question. I feel like what drives who you are? And how you approach things.And I think that not having a place - people will be like, where’s home? And I’m like, I don’t know. I think it allows for the expansive thinking and the curiosity that drives a lot of what I do and what I write about and what I think about.And yeah, so in the end, I don’t really have a place, but I have consistency. I have my family, I have my very small family, as my child likes to say, she’s like, what’s our immediate family? And she means our dog and her two parents. But then there’s my family lives all over the world.And I’m anchored by that. But I’m anchored by my work and the people that I work with. But it’s, yeah, I don’t really have a place.I don’t have a place to come from. But I think that’s the genesis of me.Yeah. You use that phrase, third culture kid. And that’s, what does that mean to you? I’ve heard that before. And I know what it means. But it’s a funny phrase. When you say that you’re a third culture kid, what do you mean?Well, and I do this a lot, I hear things, I see things, and then I’m like, oh, appropriate that, that’s mine. I’ll use it how I wish. But the way I use it is to say, a lot of the people that I grew up with, I would identify them as third culture kids and people I’ve met throughout my life.But they’re people who have moved around so much, that they’ve never really been part of the cultures that they are visiting, are from. I’m from England, I’ve lived in a grand total of three years of my life, all at the very beginning phase of my life. But I’ve also, that’s the place that I went back to every year, Christmas, summer, for my whole life. So in some ways, it’s more constant for me than any other aspect of culture.But I am not English. And I don’t identify with English culture. And I can visit it.And I can cosplay in it sometimes. But it’s not mine. And I grew up in France for a while.I’m not French. But I identify in many ways as being somewhat French. But again, a visitor, a guest.I lived in Singapore. When I go back to Asia, I feel so at home in Asia. I can’t describe it to people.It’s very, I lived there when I was very young. And I think it’s very formative for me. But I’m obviously not Asian.And then I’ve lived in America. And everybody says, oh, you sound American. But then Americans say I don’t sound American.I’m not an East Coaster. I’m not a West Coaster. I’ve lived in Cincinnati.I lived in Zurich for a long time. And now I live in Italy. And I’m not Italian either.But I visit into all of these cultures. And I take pieces of them. And everybody will ask me, where do you like the best?And I always say, you should just like the place that you are, because it’s just not a helpful exercise to revisit something that you’re not in. And they always stay with you. And you revisit them, even when you’re not there.Yeah, those types of things.When you spoke about Singapore and Asia, it changed quite a bit. Can you say more about the feelings you have about that place?Yeah, I mean, I’ve gone back to Asia many times. I’ve spent an enormous amount of time trying to revisit that part of my life. But I moved to Asia when I was four years old, at a time when a little blonde girl in Asia, especially in Singapore, was weird at the time, or different anyway.And people would come over and try to touch my head, because I was lucky. It was very, it was a different time to what Singapore is like now, which is so vastly different. But yeah, that’s the four to six years old, four to seven years old was very formative time for me.And I lived barefoot running around with almost green hair, because I was in the pool so often. It was a fun place to grow up. And then I’ve gone back many, many times trying to find my essence, so to speak.Yeah. And do you have a recollection of what you wanted to be when you grew up as a girl? Like, what were you, or where were you at?As a people pleaser in recovery, I thought that I wanted to be a dentist for a really long time. Mainly because I had a lot of dental issues when I was little. None of my teeth fell out naturally, so I had to have them all removed.It was very strange. There’s probably some psychoanalysis of that. But I was like, oh, dentists are terrible.I would like to be a really nice dentist. And then I realized that none of the things about me, but everyone was like, yes, yes, be a dentist. That’s a great job.And then I realized nothing about my identity at all would align with dentistry as a practice. I’m not super into detail. I really like difference and change.I can’t handle anything that’s monotonous. And not to say that that’s what dentistry is, but that’s my impression. And then I quickly changed to architecture.And I stuck on that road, and I went to RISD for, well, ultimately I did interior architecture and then architecture, and I got my master’s in architecture. But along that way, I realized that I also don’t have the capability of being an architect. Speed is something that I, change, things happening at a pace is something that I really enjoy.And yeah, architecture doesn’t, that’s not really a part of that work. But it is a very good place to learn how to become what I became now, which is somebody who spends an enormous amount of time thinking about how people think, how people move, what people like, how they behave, what they’re attracted to. Because essentially architecture school is sales school.You just, you think about that. I always describe it as the law degree of the arts. You never build a building, ever, right?So you’re just selling your idea of the building, right? The whole time that you’re there, that’s all you’re doing. Telling your, and at RISD it’s very big thinking, right?So it’s like, this is the kind of person I’m building a building for. This is the kind of community I’m building a building for. This is what they believe in.This is what they have values in. This is what they need. I’ve identified what they need by thinking about all of these different things in their lives.And now I’m going to create this space or whatever it is that you’re doing, house, gigantic infrastructure, who knows, that is going to service these people, right? And help them somehow or provide something for them. And you just sell that.And you do that for years. And people come and critique your sales pitch and somewhat critique your building. But for the most part, they critique what you put forth, which is your idea, right?Of how the world is working and what you can do for it. And I essentially use those skills every single day. So. For me, there’s a parallel.So catch us up. Tell me, tell us, where are you now and what is the work that you do?Yeah, I mean, maybe it’s a little bit like the question at the beginning. It’s like, I don’t really know what I do. No.So I do two things. I run an agency called In Good Co. day to day.And we, for the most part, our bread and butter is repositioning brands. So or positioning brands. Sometimes they’re from scratch brands, but often they’re legacy brands who’ve lost their way in culture.And we’re trying to help them return to a place of success and growth. And then my other accidental day job is that I started writing a substack called Good Thinking, which has turned into having a small media company. We now have a podcast, we do events, we do lots of different things.And I write that about 10 different categories every week. And it’s really about the intersection of lots of different parts of culture and how I see them working together. Which, yeah, it’s been fun.Yeah. How long has it been, the substack?Two and a half years, about. Yeah. Yeah. It’s been crazy. Yeah.I mean, that’s how I discovered you. It’s amazing stuff. When you say it’s a small media company, what’s it been like growing it? Or yeah, what’s the experience been like? What inspired you to do it to begin with? To what degree are you surprised by what it’s become?Well, I’m 100% surprised all the time. I’m like, what? But I started it because I was reading a lot. I was reading an enormous number of substacks.And I joke that I had a consumption problem. I was just reading all the time. It’s what I like to do.And I do it for personal interests, but also when I’m thinking about client work. But it was getting out of control. The reading. I was obsessed with reading.And I talked to my therapist and I was like, I need to make this functional somehow. I need to, or I need to stop. And she was like, what do you want to do?I said, I should write the letter I want. She said, why don’t you do it? I said, I don’t know.Maybe I’m afraid of failing something probably to that degree. And then she said, nobody cares about you. And then the next day the letter was born.And it just went for a while. I just was writing. I wasn’t hearing too much.We started the podcast, which was again, Kirsten, my co-host and my business partner was very into the idea of doing that. And for me, that was a pretty big shift because I’m quite introverted generally. But then that started and got used to doing that.And then things just snowballed. I don’t really, there was no, I met somebody recently who has a very nice newsletter called Four Starters, which is all for entrepreneurs and small businesses and he definitely, Daniel set out with a path to this media company that he’s creating, right? Or this business that he’s creating.I fell in a hole. I’m like, wow, where am I? It was not a thought through business plan, but generally speaking, the life philosophy of the newsletter and the media side is if we’re having fun, we keep doing it.And if we’re not having fun, we don’t do it anymore. And that’s been the business plan.That’s beautiful. Can you tell a story about the kind of work that you do positioning or repositioning, to give people a sense of what you do? How are you there?Yeah. Let’s think, I mean, there’s a few different, so we work with a lot of different brands, different kinds of brands.We gather them into a group we call challenger brands, because for the most part, I think the commonality, much like the newsletter, we never niche down into a category. And I think that’s actually been an advantage. But one of the things that we talk a lot about is a lot of times when people are trying to reposition, they’re trying to return to a place of being a challenger, right?Want to stand out within the category again. And for the most part, we work with people who are not interested in just like, oh, we’re a gum brand. And what are the other gum brands doing?Let’s do what they’re doing, but we know we can’t be like the other gum brands, but we don’t know what we should be doing. So we’ve worked with brands like retail brands, Psycho Bunny, or sometimes we’re working on new brands. I don’t know if you know, the kids app brand ParkPark, various different kinds of levels of brands.ParkPark is a super well-funded, it’s the number one kids app on the App Store. But they realized that they had so they, we weren’t really repositioning them, but we were refocusing them. They were growing from we’re an app to we’re a platform and how do we do that?And how do we stay true to the things that they loved, but not pigeonhole them into we’re an app, which is essentially where they were living. With Psycho Bunny, they were a very beloved brand, but not very elevated brand. And we came in and worked on, we like to talk about repositioning as something that’s super active.So instead of saying, Hey, we’re going to work on repositioning for two years and then we’ll stew inside and we’ll bake this thing and then we’ll release it. We tend to work on projects where it’s like, Hey, okay, we’re going to start repositioning you project by project. So that ultimately in two years, you’ve been fully repositioned, but it’s not necessarily you’ve been baking inside for a long time.We’re working with big brands like MyFitnessPal. And then we also work a lot with other agencies. So other agencies hiring us to work on their things.So whether that’s for Google or Sacred or a lot of other brands that you might’ve heard of.Yeah. What do you love about the work? Where’s the joy in it for you?Oh, that’s a great question. I mean, I love, this is probably why the letter became the letter is that I have an ability to get interested in just about anything. So you could tell me we’re going to work on a trucking company and I would be like, Oh, let me get obsessed with that.But usually where that comes in is I develop that obsession. And then I start to see how it connects to all other parts of culture. Right.And it’s Oh, this is the untapped opportunity within this particular thing. And I think that’s what I love the most is once I come in and I sort of immerse myself in your world, then your world starts to connect with all the other worlds that I have living in me. And then I can start to identify where the potential is, that is much more interesting than where things have been.Yeah. When did you first discover that this was something you could do for a living?I think my career has been super non-linear, everything that I’ve done. So when I came out of grad school, I worked for a while as a trends forecaster for a group called LPK out in Cincinnati who are amazing.And I think that began for me a realization that there’s just a lot more going on in the creative world that’s on the periphery of creative. So I did some trends forecasting. It was super fun, but very traditional trends forecasting, I would say.But with incredible people. And then I went back into experiential and marketing. And I trained in that more maybe the least traditional space for marketing at the time.Experiential was in its first wave. And again, I think one of the things that was very interesting for me is that the job that I had there was I was just pitching new clients. That’s all I did all day.My job was to come up with the thing that would be the idea. We would win the account and then I would barely ever get to touch it. It would just go to the creative group.So maybe then it’s an interesting, my career just evolved. And so I think I got a taste of all these different things. But the good thing was that again, for me, they’ve always laddered up to what I’m doing on a day to day basis now.And for a long time, I didn’t really know how to explain to people. And clearly I still don’t based on this conversation, but how they all connect. But they do, and I think that one of the things I’ve realized from writing the newsletter is that obviously I have a perspective that people really are intrigued by and find interesting and share.But it’s not something that much the newsletter, it was never something that I was like, oh, I’m going to package it up this way. It’s just this is how I think. Here you go.Here it is on a platter. What do you and apparently it works.Yeah, well, I’m struck by the degree to which you were echoing the architecture as the was instead of sales as a sales thing. I feel you were just that in some way, I guess it made me think that when you’re pitching brands or trends in that moment, you think about brands in an architectural way.Oh, not until this moment. But then, yeah, I mean, I think brand building, world building, whatever you want to call it, does have a lot of that. And I think one of the again, one of the things to think about architecture is that it’s never just the building, right?It’s this is what you feel when you walk in this room. This is the takeaway you want to have from this experience. This is what it makes you feel.This is what it makes you do. And that is all part and parcel of brand. I’ve actually met tons of architects who work in the brand space.And I think that perhaps the systems thinking not, you’re not just doing you’re never just dealing with one thing. But when you go to school for graphic design, maybe you always approach it from the perspective of the graphic quality of the or you if you’re a copywriter, then you might always approach from the first place of language, voice messaging, whereas I’m not trained in any of those things. But I do a lot of I apparently am a writer now.I do a lot of copywriting at work. But it’s not something that I’m formally I didn’t go to school for that. And I think that’s actually been hugely beneficial for me.I also work with amazing copywriters. So yeah, you never have to be an expert, you can just work with experts.So I want to maybe shift into a piece you wrote, which is really amazing, The Age of Authorship. And just about the patients about, the world that we live in now as being different from the world we lived in just before. And you described that you had this great line, you were playing with Claude Code, you had maybe a bit of an awakening, but you said, staring the devil in the eye.You described this moment, you had where you recognize that things were different. Now we were in a different world, and you call it the age of authorship. Can you tell a little bit more about that? Just that staring the devil in the eye? And what do you mean by it? About announcing this new world?Yeah. I definitely had an existential crisis about this. So I’ll try to take you through this experience without all the dread that happened for a few weeks. But ultimately, I came out on this.Include the dread. We’re here for the dread. Include the dread. Okay. So yeah, I mean, I think one of the things that was happening was obviously I write a lot about culture, write a lot about change, right?And obviously, everyone was talking about Claude Code, and you’re hearing it. And I was writing about it, but more from a theoretical standpoint, right? I could see where things are going.But I wasn’t really using it. And then I decided that I couldn’t continue to do that without having used it. So I decided to build an app.Kirsten, my business partner, takes peptides, as does everyone in California. And she’s always complaining to me about tracking her peptides. So I decided that I would just use this use case as nothing related to my work, nothing that would be too cerebral and that I would get in my own way.It’s this is very neat and tidy. Can I build her this tool? I built this tool in two days.And with no skills. A fully functioning app. I was impressed with myself, but I was okay, this is pretty crazy.But then I decided to build a website. I built a website in two days. Then I started building tools for myself.And at this point, I realized I was addicted. I was this is, I could spend all my time doing this. I kept coming back into my office, because this was before you could use it on your phone.Coming back into my office and tinkering and then leaving. And then my husband was what are you doing? And I’m just and he’s a, he’s a mathematician.And he was the one who got me into cloud code, and taught me, gave me the lay of the land. So he was oh my god, what have I created? And then it was around day five or six, where I’d made six or seven things that I could never have made before at a speed that was impossible to understand.At a quality that was pretty, these are functioning things. They’re not theoretically functioning, many of the things that we make sometimes as designers. These were functioning things. And I just, my brain started to implode.It was and so there was the first week of wow, it was whoa, this is amazing. And then the next two weeks were oh my god, what does this mean? What does this mean for the world that I’m working in, living in for my career, but for just the world.And the realization that I had, and talking to many clients and seeing how they’re working, and I was working with one particular client, big tech client. And I got into a conversation with them about something about positioning. And I was but we need to be doing this with the product.And they were you’re not a product person. You’re the marketing person. Leave the product to the product.And I was but why? Why? I can make this.I should be able to make this. And I made it. I went and asked Claude to make it, right?Some version of, was it perfect? No, but it was functioning. And it just blew everything apart for me, because at the end of the day, I think now every single person is a builder, in this future, anybody who wants to build anything, there’s no barrier to, and people are economics of the internet and yes, but the barrier to entry has never been lower.Never ever. It’s I equated in the essay to this is not the age of the internet coming on. This is electricity becoming available.Yes, right now, electricity, maybe we’re at 80% of people, 70% of people have access to it. But in a few years, every 100% of people will have very affordable electricity, right? It’s, and so it changes the game.That’s the the shortcut was I was oh, my gosh, anybody can build anything. So if you build anything, and you can keep building and building and building and building, and I can throw out ideas, I can build a company, I can compete with the big guys, I can do anything I want. How do you build things that matter?Does anything matter? So that was that was the crisis of does it can we ever build anything that matters again? It was really it was a tough phase.But ultimately, I came out on the other side of, of talking about it as realizing that there’s so many ways to build things that matter that, belonging, anything. But you, that is the new challenge. The challenge is not creating anything.The challenge is not building anything. It’s not having the idea. It’s creating something that matters to people.That is the challenge.Can you say more? I mean, it’s just how I roll a little bit. Can we just focus in on the dread?Yes, please. Let’s talk about dread.I’ve had similar. So I had a similar experience where I feel like I really encountered two things at once, this realization that things that I thought only I could do, all of a sudden were being done by this new intelligence, I’ve been calling it our strange companion. And I like that.And that really forced me. The two things happened at once. One was, Oh my God, if all of this stuff, which I thought was just unique to me is no longer unique to me, what is in fact unique to me? It led to the staring at a parallel question of where’s the real value, a real invitation to define something of real substance and real, unique, distinctive value. Is that similar to what you’re saying about mattering?We’re really forced to encounter the fact that you could produce a ton of slop. But now the challenge is making something that’s -I don’t even know if it’s slop. I think it’s so interesting. There’s a lot of slop, right? And so I’m not condoning slop.But one of the things that’s super interesting to me is the problem is not going to be the slop. The problem is not the slop. The slop is — we’re in a phase of slop. And there’s always been slop, a variety of things. Hello magazine has always existed in comparison to the New York Times. We’ve always had this.But it’s the quantity of it, right. But it’s also, we’re gonna make a lot of amazing things. And I can make amazing things very quickly.It’s not even the sloppy things that are the problem. I can make something very, very, very good, that people want very quickly and compete with some very big players. It’s almost easier for me to compete with them, because I have none of the tech debt that people claim to have, I have none of the business systems that are not made for this, I have none of the people concerns. When I’m just making, I can do away with all of these problems.So yeah, I think ultimately, we’re gonna be inundated with people creating things, building things for themselves, building — I think you could literally just go down a list of what top 100 companies, if I were in business school, or new graduate who was 16 years old, or coming out of high school, I would just go down a business list and put a dot next to something and build against it. Because it is easy to do that now.But how you defend against that, or how you make sure that you can do that, and the person behind you is going to be coming to do that, right? So it’s not even that you go do it. There’s going to be a whole army of people coming behind you. Is that you need to make something that people connect with, and that matters to people. And you need to have vision for where we’re going, you need to have an idea of where the world is going, right?And what is going to be important in the future. But you also need to be thinking much more than ever before, because it’s not about optimizing. The future is completely optimized. Everything is optimized, everybody — that’s no longer remote, optimization is not your friend. It is a given, it is water, you just need it.But it’s not going to differentiate you anymore. And I think we got away with that for 20 years of the internet, essentially. You were just optimizing better products. But the next age is about when anyone can build, what makes somebody stay with you?What makes somebody care about your business? And I think I look at Bobbie, right? I use them all the time as an example, because people understand that brand.But they made a formula brand, but they’re not a formula brand. They’re a brand that stands for motherhood, and how difficult motherhood is. And they matter to people. People recommend Bobbie who’ve never even used the product, who just what they stand for, and who they believe and stand up for.And I think it will be those types of businesses in all categories, categories that we have now and categories that, again, speaking to vision, categories that we don’t even have yet, right? The world is going to change. What we need today is not — three years from now is not going to be what we need now. And I think those will be the brands that are successful.Those will be how that’s how you defend.You call it the age of authorship. And I went down a rabbit hole myself on that language. There’s all these words that are popping up in this moment right now, as we’re searching for ways to describe all these behaviors, which are really new, and one of them is sovereignty. And then the other one is authorship. And I’m borrowing, of course, from Dave and Helen Edwards at the Artificial Attitude, the way they talk of things. So how did you come to use the word authorship?I think part of it, to be honest, I was thinking a lot about when I’m thinking a lot about how businesses work right now. So because when I am in a business right now, helping them to reposition, a lot of these businesses are operating how businesses have operated for the last 20 years, right? You have your marketing division, there’s finance team, there’s the — within marketing, you might have, this is the — depends on how big you are.But these big companies, everything is siloed, and everybody is told to stay in their lane. And my job lately, entirely, is to point out that that culture will be the death of you. That is, if you’re doing anything today as a business owner, you need to be addressing that cultural issue, because the culture that you’re about to have is that everybody’s about to be an author, everybody’s about to be a builder, everybody wants to have, and should be essentially moving up and down and across within your business. Everybody will be coding, if you’re any kind of — everybody will be building something. Even in traditional businesses, where you don’t think you need to be building something, when you actually peel back the layers, and you look at it, there’s a lot of things to be building.And the expectations of having to do that are there. And I think a lot of businesses haven’t really realized that their employees are essentially there. They’re — most people that I meet on an individual level, granted, I’m working for high agency groups of people.But they’re experimenting, they’re doing this, they’re seeing what they have the capabilities of doing. And then you have entire teams, and then they’re just, yeah, no, you guys, no, you’re not allowed to touch this, or you’re not — I don’t need to know anything about finance, I can have a business degree in an afternoon. If I need to learn about it, I can upskill very quickly, or I can have an HBS trained agent doing it for me.It’s a very different world of thinking. And I use that word, because I think when I describe it to people as everyone wants to be writing, authoring, creating, they get it. It’s, oh, okay. And that’s a really big, that’s the culture shift.That’s the major thing that people haven’t really understood is that nobody, you can’t put people back in a box anymore. The lid is off. And the faster that companies and brands — it’s so much bigger than brands — the faster that we realize that that’s how we’re going to have to reorganize, I think the less painful this is going to be.Have you — what’s your experience been within your own company and your own partnership? Are there changes that you’ve been making? And again, I’m identifying myself, I’m doing a lot of tinkering and playing around, I wouldn’t call any of it disciplined. But I do recognize the degree that there is a need for a shift. What kinds of changes are you making within your own organization to respond? Are you operating differently or structuring yourself differently?That’s a great question. I think that, well, for example, I don’t think that we would have this media business that we have right now without the tools at my disposal to do it. There’s just no — the speed at which I can — I don’t use any of it for writing.I think it’s still completely useless at the act of writing. It’s still shocking to me how bad it is. But it’s incredibly good at being given a transcript from your podcast and finding the sections that you want and hyperlinking them and doing all of that. And the operations side of this business that, A, I don’t have an interest in, right?There’s not part of me that wants to be doing that. But I also can just be, hey, go off and do it. And now it’s trained to do it.And I’m training it now to do it proactively so that it doesn’t even need me to do it. So that then I’m just there to approve it. But that allows me more time.I could never write the — everyone’s, how do you have all this time? And I’m, I don’t have any more time than I had before. I just using my time differently.I use my time for reading, I use my time for writing, and I use my time for client work. And then, but I’m able to do so much more because of all the other things that I have, the tools that I have. And, but just today, I’ve been working on something that I was, I want to — when I go to these events, I need, there’s a need that I have to meet up with people, but I don’t know how to do it.So I’m asking Claude to help me figure out if there’s a way to make this better, right? And whether that’s a new app, or a piece of software, or service that I can put into my WhatsApp — I haven’t figured it out, but I’m doing that all the time. That’s how I solve problems now.When I needed to do something for the newsletter after Salone, I had 650 photos, it was absolutely overwhelming, such a small problem. And I turned to my husband, and I was, Oh my God, I don’t know how to deal with this. And he was, Have you asked Claude?And I was, okay, I asked Claude, it created me something in 30 minutes. And it literally went from this thing that I was, I don’t know how to deal with this to it’s done. It was already done and organized and made me this little tool that I could organize.It’s very small. But I think that this is the kind of thing that for small businesses, those big changes make me so much more efficient. But on a bigger scale, I think when marketing is looking at how things are rolling out, and they’re, Hey, there should be a product doing this.We think that there’s a consumer need for this. Why are you not letting them build it?Right.And test it and see.I can see and hear you talking about how unleashing the office within the organization — that sound a little too pat and I intended it to sound — but that one of the implications is that just that everybody can build. So let everybody build in ways that they can to serve the customer. But I’m wondering what, how would — what’s the impact on the relationship between the brand? What does it mean for brands, the brands themselves? Or that? How does it change the relationship or the way that we think about what that relationship is?I feel it.Yeah. I mean, it’s a really, I think it’s the issue of our time. I think it’s so interesting. Because I was listening to an episode that you had with Matt Klein, and he talked about the power of brand and how he believes that brands are really powerful and can have big cultural impact.And I believe the same thing. I’ve always felt that you have these enormous entities that can make huge difference in your life. And they change the way that we behave. These brands are, I think a lot of people pooh pooh brands, but they’re incredibly powerful. So it’s interesting, I think that we’re going to go through this phase where our expectations of brands are going to change.I use the example that when I go on to Zara, now when I’m, I don’t shop on Zara very often, but it’s an incredibly unpleasant and overwhelming experience for me. It’s not tailored to me, it doesn’t work for me. It should know what I like, it can have the capabilities to know what I like, I should be able to describe it, and it should basically be able to change itself for me. So what stays?What is the brand when I am asking it to change all the aspects of how, but it’s that’s not really your brand, or is it? And I think sometimes it might be no, we want, we’re not a brand like Zara, we’re a very bespoke brand, right? And we want to create the way that you engage with it.But if for a brand like Zara, it would make sense to allow me to see the depths of whatever thousands of pieces of clothing that they’re making more easily. I think it’s just going to change our expectations of brands, and our authorship over those brands, our expectations are going to change. So I think it comes down to what are you holding on to?What is what matters about you? What’s sacred? What can’t change?Why can’t it change? What are you really offering people at the end of the day? There’s a brand called Gani that’s not doing very well right now.And I was saying the other day, I think it broke its contract with people because the brand is experimental. But then over time, it’s just felt like an iteration of itself, right? It was completely iterative, and all of their stores are the same.And it just fell apart. They forgot what mattered. And I think, again, it’s just gonna, maybe being able to play with their website and be more experimental with what I do there would have enhanced that experience and made it better.And so I think for different brands, it’s going to mean lots of different things. But I think we’re going to see that everybody’s not going to create the same cookie cutter Shopify website they’ve created. And first of all, your website won’t matter anyway.So that’s not a good use of an example. But why would you even go to a website when you’re looking for things on AI search, so everything is changing. And you’re just going to have to really, brands are going to have to do some real internal soul searching about what they stand for.Beautiful. That’s a great opportunity to close. We’ve run out of time. I want to thank you so much for number one, just accepting the invitation and for thinking in public.I hope I made a fractional amount of sense. And thanks for having me on. Get full access to THAT BUSINESS OF MEANING at thatbusinessofmeaning.substack.com/subscribe













