§I A bad metaphor, and a better one.
The consumer brand industry has, for about twenty years, been running on a bad metaphor. We call it the “marketing budget.” The phrase implies an annual sum that must be spent, month by month, against measurable outcomes. It sounds like prudence. It is, in fact, the single biggest contributor to the decade-long creative drift most brands are now inside.
A better metaphor is available: a portfolio. A portfolio is not spent month-by-month. It is allocated, in deliberate ratios, across assets with different risk profiles and return horizons. Some of the portfolio is core — steady, boring, essential. Some of it is growth — modest-risk, in-category extensions. Some of it is speculative — higher-risk bets whose payoff cannot be modelled. Some of it is not commercial at all — positioning, intellectual and cultural capital that you hold because it is what a great fund holds. And some of it is kept in reserve for the opportunities that cannot be pre-scheduled.
The discipline of the good fund manager is that the ratios are defended across years, not quarters. The discipline of the good creative director is the same. What follows is, in substance, the ratio we find has made the consumer brands that compounded work, and the ones we have seen wreck themselves try to out-optimise.1
The creative budget is not a budget. It is a portfolio. You are not spending it; you are allocating it. — Saoirse Hale, field note
§II Five tiers of the creative portfolio.
The figure above gives our working ratio. The precise numbers differ by brand and by stage, but the shape does not: a heavy core, a measured growth sleeve, a disciplined bet, a cultural line, and a defended reserve. We’ll walk through each.
Core · the hero SKU (40 — 50%)
The largest allocation is to the hero product. What most brands do with this allocation is treat it as fixed cost — a line that delivers revenue, needing no creative attention. This is the first error. The hero SKU is the single most important canvas the brand owns. It should be photographed every year, re-voiced every three, and re-introduced to the shopper every six. What we are not recommending is redesigning the hero every eighteen months. We are recommending the reverse: actively making sure the hero is still the hero, by investing disproportionately in communicating it, not in changing it.
Growth · the adjacent product (18 — 25%)
The second allocation is to the product or products growing into the hero’s territory. For most brands this is two or three SKUs that are being promoted from earner to potential-hero status. The allocation covers the creative work of giving the growth line its own identity within the brand — enough to have meaning, not enough to dilute the core. The brands that get this wrong either starve the growth line entirely (in which case it never compounds) or over-invest and dilute (in which case the hero quietly loses its share of shelf to its own sibling).
Bet · the annual uncertain move (15 — 20%)
The bet is the allocation that makes most CFOs nervous and most great brands interesting. It is the annual move whose return cannot be modelled in advance: a collaboration, a limited edition, a new format, an unexpected channel. Each bet has a 40–60% probability of failing commercially. That is the point. A brand that makes no bets is a brand optimising itself into irrelevance. The discipline is to make one bet a year, see it through, publish the result, and not repeat the exact bet that worked.2
Cultural · the brand as publisher (8 — 12%)
The cultural allocation is for the work the brand does that is not product. The magazine, the film, the book, the field study, the residency, the library, the journal. The brands that compound carry a cultural line that does not directly contribute to quarterly revenue. These are the assets that, fifteen years on, turn out to have been the most valuable. They cannot be ROAS-justified. They should not be asked to.
Every compounding brand carries a cultural line on its balance sheet that its CFO has, at one point, tried to delete. — observation, Tier A audit
Reserve · the unplanned (4 — 6%)
The smallest and most under-held tier. A reserve is a protected budget for the creative work that was not on the plan in Q3, but became the right move in Q1. A brand without a reserve is a brand that must either stretch another tier to react, or fail to react at all. We see the absence of a reserve in ninety percent of the briefs we receive; by the time a brand is talking to us, something unplanned has already happened, and there is no allocated budget to act on it.
§III What most brands get wrong.
The common failure modes are specific, and they cluster around three patterns we see repeatedly:
| Failure | What it looks like | Frequency | Time to rebuild |
|---|---|---|---|
| Core starved | Hero SKU receives less than 25% of the creative spend. Brand has a “new” product every quarter. Shopper cannot name the main one. | 62% | 24 — 36 mo |
| Growth over-weighted | Three extensions getting 40%+ of spend. Core and growth cannibalise each other. Category share gains by growth are offset by core decline. | 38% | 12 — 18 mo |
| No bet at all | Fully optimised calendar. No surprise. Brand is slowly indistinguishable from the category. Press stops calling. | 47% | 12 — 24 mo |
| Cultural line absent | Brand has no publishing, no cultural output. CFO deleted the “non-commercial” line in year three to hit margin. Brand was thinner by year seven. | 74% | 36+ mo |
| Over-betting | Four bets in one year. None followed through. Team exhausted. Revenue not improved. Core softens from neglect. | 12% | 6 — 12 mo |
By a wide margin the most common failure is the missing cultural line. This is because the cultural line is the easiest to cut and the slowest to punish you for cutting. It takes three to four years for the absence to show up as reduced cultural weight, and another two or three for that to feed back into category share. By then the CFO who cut it has moved on, and the brand is trying to rebuild a cultural asset that originally took fifteen years to accumulate.
§IV Re-allocating in year five.
A founder-led brand in year one can get away with a much simpler portfolio — the hero is the whole story, the growth tier is conceptual, the bet is the entire brand. By year five the portfolio needs to have matured into the five-tier shape, even if the ratios are still heavy-core. By year ten the ratios should be stable and the brand should know, to within a few percentage points, what it is allocating where. The brands that compound are the ones that have explicit, written, defensible ratios by year ten. The ones that don’t are the ones where every creative brief becomes a re-litigation of what the brand is for.
The re-allocation exercise we recommend — annually, as part of the planning cycle — is short. One page. The five tiers. Last year’s ratio. This year’s proposed ratio. The reason for any change, in prose, signed by the founder. The discipline is not the exercise; it is the requirement that the change is defended in words, on paper, by the person whose name is on the business. Very few changes survive that test honestly.
§V What to do on Monday.
Three things, if the argument above has landed:
Map your last twelve months into the five tiers. Take every brief, every shoot, every piece of creative output, and sort it into core, growth, bet, cultural, or reserve. Look at the percentage split. This is your actual creative portfolio, whether or not you’ve ever thought of it that way. The number is almost always more skewed toward new product and further from the core than anyone on the team believed.
Write the target ratio for next year. One page. Defended in prose. Signed. Do not publish it; do share it with the three people who make the briefing decisions. The act of writing it is ninety percent of the value.
Protect the cultural line. If you don’t have one, start one this quarter. A journal, a print piece, a field study, a public essay. It doesn’t have to be beautiful. It has to exist, and it has to be allowed to exist without being asked, in the next finance review, what it returned. If the cultural line cannot survive a margin pressure test, the brand it belongs to will, eventually, not either.
Footnotes
- The portfolio metaphor is not our invention. It runs through Marty Neumeier’s The Brand Flip, and before him, sits inside the IPA’s long-running work on brand-vs-activation spend. What we add is the five-tier granularity and the specific failure modes drawn from our own audits.
- See Jackson Morice’s The Compounding Brand, same Vol, for the specific argument on why repeated bets hollow out the distinctive asset.