The Lunchtime Series

Brands At the Crossroads: From Burnout to Authentic Growth

32 min · 23. Apr. 2026
Episode Brands At the Crossroads: From Burnout to Authentic Growth Cover

Beschreibung

LTS – Kevin and Craig | At the Crossroads: From Burnout to Authentic Growth This episode of the Lunchtime Series (LTS) with Kevin Britz and Craig Page-Lee explores the tension between operational burnout and strategic growth, offering a grounded and commercially relevant perspective on modern marketing and leadership. The conversation opens with a candid reflection on the strain caused by an ongoing client project that has demanded extensive time and energy with little financial return. Long hours, ongoing disagreements around scope, and a lack of accountability from stakeholders have created a sense of frustration that is both personal and professional. This operational pressure highlights a broader business challenge: when teams are consumed by delivery, they lose the capacity to focus on innovation, new business, and long-term growth. The scheduled in-person meeting at FNB’s 5 Merchant Place represents a critical step toward resolving these tensions and regaining control over priorities. It signals a shift from reactive work toward more intentional, value-driven efforts that can support sustainable progress. Building on this foundation, the conversation transitions into the core theme of authentic inclusion in marketing. Craig reframes inclusive marketing as more than representation in advertising. Instead, it is defined as a holistic business approach where products, messaging, culture, and leadership reflect and serve the full diversity of the market. This perspective moves inclusion away from a compliance mindset and positions it as a strategic growth driver. A key distinction is made between authentic and performative inclusion. Performative inclusion is described as surface-level and often inconsistent, such as campaigns that showcase diversity without internal alignment or long-term commitment. Authentic inclusion, by contrast, is embedded within the organisation. It influences product design, decision-making, and organisational structure, ensuring that inclusion is not a moment but a consistent practice. The discussion emphasises that consumers are increasingly aware of this difference. Audiences are actively assessing whether brands live their stated values, often looking beyond campaigns to examine leadership, internal culture, and sustained actions. Brands that fail to align internally risk losing credibility, while those that commit to authenticity build stronger, more trusted relationships. Importantly, the episode frames inclusion as a commercial opportunity. Underserved markets represent significant economic potential, and brands that genuinely engage these audiences can unlock new growth. This requires a shift in thinking — from viewing inclusion as an obligation to recognising it as a competitive advantage. To support this, a practical four-step framework is outlined. First, brands must audit their internal reality to ensure alignment between messaging and practice. Second, they must identify clear commercial opportunities within inclusion. Third, they need to lead with conviction, avoiding ambiguity in their values. Finally, inclusion must be measured as a business metric, with clear targets and accountability. The conversation also highlights the importance of representation behind the scenes. Authentic inclusion extends beyond visible campaigns to include who is making decisions and shaping the brand. As scrutiny increases, this internal alignment becomes essential for credibility. Ultimately, this episode positions businesses at a crossroads. One path leads to performative actions that may create short-term visibility but weaken trust. The other leads to authentic inclusion, which requires commitment but delivers long-term growth, loyalty, and relevance.

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6. Mai 202633 min
Episode Brands At the Crossroads: From Burnout to Authentic Growth Cover

Brands At the Crossroads: From Burnout to Authentic Growth

LTS – Kevin and Craig | At the Crossroads: From Burnout to Authentic Growth This episode of the Lunchtime Series (LTS) with Kevin Britz and Craig Page-Lee explores the tension between operational burnout and strategic growth, offering a grounded and commercially relevant perspective on modern marketing and leadership. The conversation opens with a candid reflection on the strain caused by an ongoing client project that has demanded extensive time and energy with little financial return. Long hours, ongoing disagreements around scope, and a lack of accountability from stakeholders have created a sense of frustration that is both personal and professional. This operational pressure highlights a broader business challenge: when teams are consumed by delivery, they lose the capacity to focus on innovation, new business, and long-term growth. The scheduled in-person meeting at FNB’s 5 Merchant Place represents a critical step toward resolving these tensions and regaining control over priorities. It signals a shift from reactive work toward more intentional, value-driven efforts that can support sustainable progress. Building on this foundation, the conversation transitions into the core theme of authentic inclusion in marketing. Craig reframes inclusive marketing as more than representation in advertising. Instead, it is defined as a holistic business approach where products, messaging, culture, and leadership reflect and serve the full diversity of the market. This perspective moves inclusion away from a compliance mindset and positions it as a strategic growth driver. A key distinction is made between authentic and performative inclusion. Performative inclusion is described as surface-level and often inconsistent, such as campaigns that showcase diversity without internal alignment or long-term commitment. Authentic inclusion, by contrast, is embedded within the organisation. It influences product design, decision-making, and organisational structure, ensuring that inclusion is not a moment but a consistent practice. The discussion emphasises that consumers are increasingly aware of this difference. Audiences are actively assessing whether brands live their stated values, often looking beyond campaigns to examine leadership, internal culture, and sustained actions. Brands that fail to align internally risk losing credibility, while those that commit to authenticity build stronger, more trusted relationships. Importantly, the episode frames inclusion as a commercial opportunity. Underserved markets represent significant economic potential, and brands that genuinely engage these audiences can unlock new growth. This requires a shift in thinking — from viewing inclusion as an obligation to recognising it as a competitive advantage. To support this, a practical four-step framework is outlined. First, brands must audit their internal reality to ensure alignment between messaging and practice. Second, they must identify clear commercial opportunities within inclusion. Third, they need to lead with conviction, avoiding ambiguity in their values. Finally, inclusion must be measured as a business metric, with clear targets and accountability. The conversation also highlights the importance of representation behind the scenes. Authentic inclusion extends beyond visible campaigns to include who is making decisions and shaping the brand. As scrutiny increases, this internal alignment becomes essential for credibility. Ultimately, this episode positions businesses at a crossroads. One path leads to performative actions that may create short-term visibility but weaken trust. The other leads to authentic inclusion, which requires commitment but delivers long-term growth, loyalty, and relevance.

23. Apr. 202632 min
Episode Evidence Supporting Inclusive Marketing Cover

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The Lunchtime Series, hosted by Kevin Britz and Craig Page-Lee continues to evolve as a sharp, real-time lens on the intersection of marketing, business pressure, and commercial growth. In this 245th episode, the conversation moves beyond theory into the tension most founders and operators feel daily: balancing overwhelming operational workload with the urgent need to build sustainable revenue streams. Against a backdrop of eighteen-hour workdays and high-pressure campaign delivery, the discussion grounds itself in a critical question — what actually drives growth when time, energy, and focus are stretched to their limits? A key thread running through the episode is the cost of operational overload. Campaign demands have consumed capacity to the point where new business development, innovation, and strategic thinking have been sidelined. Both Kevin and Craig acknowledge a shared frustration: the work they enjoy — building, creating, and shaping meaningful projects like the upcoming TV concept — is being crowded out by execution-heavy demands. This creates not just fatigue, but strategic risk. Without carving out space to focus on new revenue and scalable ideas, the business becomes trapped in a cycle of delivery without growth. From this very real operational pressure, the conversation pivots into a much broader commercial theme: **inclusive marketing as a growth engine**, not a moral checkbox. Drawing on insights from Kantar’s Marketing Trends 2026 report, the discussion reframes inclusive marketing as **“expansive marketing”** — a deliberate strategy to reach underserved, high-growth audiences. This is a critical distinction. Inclusion is not positioned as compliance or virtue signaling, but as a direct pathway to revenue, brand strength, and long-term relevance. The data is unambiguous. Global consumer demand for brands that actively promote diversity continues to rise, with 65% of consumers valuing inclusive companies. More importantly, the economic power of underrepresented groups is vast — from trillions in spending across LGBTQ+, disabled, and multicultural communities. The implication is clear: brands that fail to engage these audiences meaningfully are not just missing a cultural moment; they are leaving significant revenue on the table. The episode reinforces this with powerful case studies. Mattel’s transformation of Barbie demonstrates how embedding inclusion into product and brand strategy can unlock sustained growth, long before cultural moments like the 2023 film amplify it. Dove’s Real Beauty campaign stands as one of the most commercially successful long-term examples, doubling revenue while reshaping brand perception globally. Meanwhile, Microsoft’s Xbox Adaptive Controller shows how inclusive design at a product level can drive both innovation and purchase intent across all audiences — not just those directly represented. However, the conversation does not ignore the current backlash against Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI). Several major corporations have scaled back initiatives under political and legal pressure, but the commercial consequences have been severe. The example of Target is particularly stark: retreating from inclusion efforts resulted in immediate consumer backlash, reduced foot traffic, and billions lost in market value. The lesson is blunt — abandoning values does not win back critics, but it does erode trust among loyal customers. This leads to one of the most important strategic insights from the episode: brands cannot afford to be inconsistent in their values. In a polarized environment, attempting to please everyone often results in losing everyone. The brands that succeed are those that remain clear, consistent, and committed — even when external pressure mounts.

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