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MarketingVideosThis Is Why Colors, Mascots, and Patterns Actually Drive Growth
Marketing

This Is Why Colors, Mascots, and Patterns Actually Drive Growth

•February 27, 2026
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Brian Dean (Backlinko)
Brian Dean (Backlinko)•Feb 27, 2026

Why It Matters

Consistent, distinctive visual branding lets companies punch above their budget, driving recall and growth in competitive markets.

Key Takeaways

  • •Distinctive visual assets boost brand awareness without huge budgets
  • •Gong chose bold pinks, purple, and a bulldog mascot
  • •Employees display brand colors online like team jerseys
  • •Perplexity’s teal palette and vintage posters create magazine feel
  • •Consistency and repetition turn simple cues into growth drivers

Summary

The video argues that distinctive brand assets—colors, mascots, patterns, and audio cues—can carry the bulk of brand awareness work, even for companies with modest marketing budgets. It highlights how Gong deliberately broke away from the industry’s muted "Series A blues" by adopting bold pinks and purples, launching a bulldog mascot named Bruno, and encouraging every employee to showcase the signature gradient on LinkedIn, turning staff into walking brand billboards.

Key insights include Gong’s systematic competitor audit, the decision to use eye‑catching hues and a playful mascot, and Perplexity’s choice of a teal palette, an asterisk logo, and vintage‑inspired poster art to make an AI search engine feel like a design magazine. The Perplexity team even instructed their agency to evoke a Scandinavian subway system, borrowing visual language from 80s‑90s Apple ads. Both cases illustrate how a single, well‑executed visual cue can differentiate a brand in crowded markets.

Notable examples reinforce the point: "Employees were wearing brand colors online like fans wearing team jerseys," and the mantra to "pick something, commit to it, and don't" underscores the power of repetition. These anecdotes show that once a visual element is consistently applied, it becomes a recognisable shorthand for the brand.

The implication for businesses is clear: by selecting a distinctive visual element and applying it relentlessly across touchpoints, companies can achieve high brand recall and growth without needing massive ad spends. Consistency turns simple cues into powerful growth drivers, especially for startups seeking rapid market traction.

Original Description

Distinctive brand assets work because they reduce cognitive load.
Buyers don’t have to analyze — they recognize.
A color.
A mascot.
A visual shortcut.
A familiar tone.
Over time, repetition turns these cues into memory structures.
And memory is what determines who gets considered before comparison shopping begins.
Brand awareness isn’t built through one viral moment.
It’s built by picking something — and showing up with it relentlessly.
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