/* Make CMS links green */ .article-body a { color: #00C46B; text-decoration: underline; } .article-body a:hover { opacity: 0.8; } /* Style blockquotes */ .article-body blockquote { border-left: 4px solid #00C46B; padding-left: 1rem; color: #ccc; font-style: italic; }
<div class="gn-article"><div class="gn-hero gn-reveal"> <div class="gn-hero__image"><img src="https://cdn.prod.website-files.com/687a235da6861294eec73166/69fa7073d27e30c4ffb97029_andy-murray-brand-distinctiveness-mark-cullen-madebrave-01-68d56b9fb1244247765247-68db0e20b6ce6481883478.jpeg" alt=""></div> <div class="gn-hero__head"> <span class="gn-kicker"><span class="dot"></span>Network</span> <h1 class="gn-title">Member Blog: Brand Distinctiveness – Andy Murray Gets It. Do You?</h1> <div class="gn-meta"> <strong>The GO Network</strong> <span class="pip"></span> <span>2 September 2025</span> <span class="pip"></span> <span>2 min read</span> </div> </div> </div> <div class="gn-body"> <p class="gn-lede gn-reveal">It's easy to overcomplicate branding. A lot of marketers do; getting lost in purpose, personas, and PowerPoint frameworks. If you ask them to name the one thing that actually builds long-term commercial value, you might get a blank stare.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">Meanwhile, Andy Murray, without ever stepping into a strategy workshop, has absolutely nailed it.</p> <div class="gn-divider gn-reveal" aria-hidden="true"></div> <h2 class="gn-reveal">Post-retirement, still a brand powerhouse.</h2> <p class="gn-reveal">Andy Murray is not a marketer. But, consciously or unconsciously, he seems to understand something many in our profession still miss.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">Distinctiveness is everything.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">Post-retirement, Murray's brand hasn't faded. It's exploded. Just in the last few weeks he's partnered with brands like Walkers Shortbread and Albert Bartlett. He's investing, launching, expanding. And no, it's not just because he won Wimbledon.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">It's because he stands out. Instantly. Clearly. Consistently.</p> <div class="gn-divider gn-reveal" aria-hidden="true"></div> <h2 class="gn-reveal">Dour. Honest. Scottish. Distinctive.</h2> <p class="gn-reveal">In a sea of media-trained, personality-free athletes, Murray always cut differently. Dour. Honest. Self-deprecating. Proudly Scottish. He didn't chase likeability. He stayed himself, even to a fault. And in time, that made him distinctive. Which made him valuable.</p> <aside class="gn-quote gn-reveal"><q>It's not about being liked. It's about being remembered. Understood. It almost doesn't matter what you're known for, as long as you're known for something.</q></aside> <p class="gn-reveal">For brands seeking partnerships, they don't just want a famous face. They want one that's clearly known for something that also benefits them.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">Walkers get a younger, prouder Scottishness with a dry twist. Albert Bartlett get health cues, Britishness, and credibility, with a touch of luxury on top. That combination isn't generic. It's distinctively Murray.</p> <div class="gn-divider gn-reveal" aria-hidden="true"></div> <h2 class="gn-reveal">The strategic bit too many miss.</h2> <p class="gn-reveal">And here's the bit marketers often overlook: distinctiveness comes from consistency.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">Too many brands try to be everything to everyone. They shift tone, switch look and feel, and chase every new trend. The result? No memory structure. No recognition. No lasting value.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">Being famous isn't hard. Being distinctively famous? That's where the power lies.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">So yes, Andy Murray is a case study. But not in sports marketing. In brand strategy.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">Be known for something. Be consistent. Be you, even to a fault.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">That's distinctiveness.</p> <p class="gn-reveal">And the challenge for marketers now is simple: stop chasing everything. Start building something. Do it well enough, and people will know exactly who you are, even when you're no longer in the spotlight.</p> </div></div>
Related Content
All
Network

Member Blog: The Power of Reviews: Why Social Proof Drives Tech Purchases

The way people buy technology has completely changed. If in 2026 you're not including this one thing in your marketing strategy, you're already behind.Social proof comes in many different forms and we've seen it throughout the years. Word of mouth,…

November 10, 2025

All
Network

Member Blog: Brand Distinctiveness – Andy Murray Gets It. Do You?

He may not be a strategist or a marketer, but Andy Murray might just be one of the most distinctive brands in the UK.No workshops. No frameworks. Just a clear, consistent identity and a brand that’s still growing post-retirement.Our Head of Strategy…

September 2, 2025

All
Network

Member Blog: Changing the game together: brands, fans, and women’s sport

For years, women’s sport was sidelined, treated like an afterthought or even a joke. As a girl who grew up playing sports, I rarely saw women like me represented on the big stage. The coverage was scarce, the brand investment invisible. But fast for…

November 1, 2025

Thanks for your enquiry

A member of our team will be in touch to confirm the call. ​

We look forward to exploring potential partnerships with you.