10 Questions. 10 Minutes. What’s helping, or hurting, your brand?
Insights on Brand Strategy
3 Keys to Building An Admired Brand

Andy Brenits

Principal, Brenits Creative

Why are some brands admired while others struggle to stand out? The strongest brands consistently enable, entice, and enrich their customers, creating deeper trust, stronger emotional connections, and long-term loyalty. Learn how the 3 Es can help you evaluate and strengthen your own brand.
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Why do some brands earn trust, loyalty, and respect while others struggle to stand out?

The difference often comes down to three things: how well a brand enables, entices, and enriches its customers.

Brands that consistently deliver all three create stronger emotional connections, build deeper loyalty, and enjoy greater long-term growth. Brands that fall short in one or more areas may still succeed for a time, but they’re less likely to earn lasting admiration.

Apple is one of the best examples of an admired brand because it excels in all three areas.

1. Enable Customers

Admired brands make life easier.

Apple transformed complex technology into products that felt intuitive and approachable. From its user-friendly interface to the seamless integration between devices, Apple reduced friction and gave customers confidence.

When brands help customers solve problems, save time, or reduce effort, they build trust.

2. Entice Customers

Admired brands engage the senses and capture attention.

Apple’s product design, retail experience, and visual identity have always been as important as its technology. The clean design, thoughtful details, and consistent experience create an emotional connection that goes beyond product features.

When brands create experiences that are enjoyable, engaging, and memorable, customers begin to love them.

3. Enrich Customers

Admired brands help people express who they are.

Apple’s famous “Think Different” campaign connected the brand to creativity, innovation, and individuality. For many customers, owning Apple products became a reflection of their identity and aspirations.

When brands align with customers’ beliefs, values, or ambitions, they earn respect.

What Happens When Brands Fall Short?

Not every brand is admired.

Some are seen as boring. Others feel confusing, outdated, faddish, or interchangeable. Some are actively disliked.

The common thread is that they fail to consistently deliver one or more of the benefits that create admiration: enablement, enticement, or enrichment.

A brand can survive for a while on operational efficiency, price, or convenience alone. But long-term growth and brand equity are built when customers trust, love, and respect what a brand stands for.

Key Takeaways

Enablement Builds Trust

Brands earn trust when they help customers solve problems, save time, reduce risk, or simplify complexity.

Customers feel confident when they know a brand will consistently deliver on its promises.

Enticement Builds Affection

Brands earn affection when they create experiences that engage the senses, stimulate curiosity, or make customers feel good.

Customers gravitate toward brands that are enjoyable to interact with.

Enrichment Builds Respect

Brands earn respect when they align with customers’ values, aspirations, and sense of identity.

Customers admire brands that help them express who they are and connect with others who share similar beliefs.

What About Your Brand?

Consider these questions:

Is your brand enabling customers?

How effectively does your business solve problems, simplify decisions, or create convenience?

Is your brand enticing customers?

What makes your experience memorable, engaging, or emotionally appealing?

Is your brand enriching customers?

Does your brand connect with customers on a deeper level by reflecting their values, aspirations, or identity?

The strongest brands don’t rely on just one of these areas.

They build trust through enablement, affection through enticement, and respect through enrichment.

That’s how brands become admired.

I’m Andy Brenits, a brand and business growth strategy advisor. I work with business owners and leaders who want clearer thinking around brand, marketing, and growth—before time, money, or momentum are wasted.

My perspective is shaped by nearly 30 years across brand strategy, creative leadership, teaching, and in-house roles inside complex organizations. I write about how strategy actually works in the real world, with a focus on clarity, judgment, and better decision-making over tactics or trends.

These insights are for people responsible for meaningful decisions and long-term outcomes, building thoughtful brands and sustainable businesses one clear move at a time.

If that sounds useful, you’re welcome to subscribe to The Creative Brief.

Looking for focused clarity? An IdeaStorm is a strategic session designed to help you get unstuck and see your next move clearly.

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