The Danger Of Becoming A Brand Junk Drawer

Duolingo may be one of the best consumer brands built in the last decade.

Not because it teaches German (I’m nearing my 1,000 day strek!). Not because it can help you conjugate verbs while standing in line for airport coffee. Not even because its owl became the tiny green debt collector of human improvement.

Duolingo worked because it made one promise extremely well:

Learn a language. Keep going. Don’t break the streak.

That is clean positioning. Almost suspiciously clean. Like finding a single French fry (…a German fry?) at the bottom of the bag that somehow still has dignity.

The product, mascot, notifications, leagues, streaks, and emotional machinery all pointed at the same behavioral mountain: language learning is hard, so we’ll make it feel like a game you’re slightly afraid to quit.

That is not an accident. That is brand architecture doing squats.

But now Duolingo has expanded into Math, Music, ABC, and Chess. The official company language still says language remains core, while its app store presence and investor materials increasingly point to a broader learning platform across subjects. That is the wobble. Not growth itself. Growth is good. Growth is the point. But growth without positioning discipline is how a cathedral becomes a mall kiosk.

The danger is not that Duolingo is bad at teaching math or chess or piano. The danger is that the brand’s mental real estate was built around one category entry point: “I want to learn a language.” The more categories it stacks under the same owl, the more the owl has to explain itself.

And brands should not need to explain themselves too much.

That is the marketer’s version of a smoke alarm.

Research on brand extensions has been saying this for decades: customers evaluate extensions more favorably when the new product feels like it fits the parent brand. Fit matters. Congruity matters. When the fit is fuzzy, even strong brands risk diluting the associations that made them strong in the first place.

Duolingo’s issue is not a product issue.

It is a story issue.

A language app becoming the best language app in the world is a kingdom.

A language app becoming a math, music, chess, reading, and maybe tomorrow origami, soup taxonomy, and emotional forklift certification app is a junk drawer with push notifications.

Still useful. Less ownable.

The smarter move is not to stop expanding….rather it’s to split the story.

Let Duolingo stay the language app. Sharper. Prouder. More committed. The undisputed green goblin king of “bonjour, but make it addictive.”

Then spin the other learning verticals into a sibling brand. Call it Stack. Call it Ladder. Call it something with its own oxygen supply.

Same company. Same engagement engine. Same behavioral science.

Different promise.

Duolingo: The world’s best way to learn a language. Still.

New brand: Five minutes a day on the things you always wished you knew.

Now the company has two clean doors instead of one revolving door wearing a backpack.

This is the real marketing takeaway: expansion should create more memory, not more confusion. A strong brand is not a suitcase you keep stuffing until the zipper begs for mercy. It is a shortcut in the customer’s mind.

When someone thinks, “I should learn Spanish,” Duolingo should appear instantly.

When someone thinks, “I wish I understood chess openings, piano notes, fractions, or whatever other small useful dragon I’ve avoided my whole life,” that can be a different brand with a different emotional contract.

The win is not more products under one mascot.

The win is more clarity across the company.

Stay Positive & You Can Have Two Drawers (Neither Filled With Junk)

The First Draft Is The Handshake

Telling a story is already an act of connection.

Even a clumsy story says, “Come here for a second. Stand where I stood. Look at this strange little firefly I found in the weeds.”

That matters.

We tend to think resonance belongs only to the perfect story. The polished one. The clean one. The one with the velvet jacket, good lighting, and a tight five minute ending that lands like a piano dropped from heaven.

But connection starts earlier than that.

It starts when someone bothers to shape experience into meaning.

Stand up comedians know this better than anyone. The Netflix special is not the story. It is the fossil. The shiny final bone pulled from years of awkward rooms, flat jokes, weird pauses, sweaty clubs, and strangers who became sometimes paid, sometimes unpaid emotional scientists.

Every audience before the special was part of the experiment.

The story changed because the room changed it.

That is the point.

You do not become resonant by waiting until the story is perfect. You become resonant by telling it, watching what happens, adjusting, listening, sharpening, and telling it again.

The first version creates contact.

The practiced version creates impact.

Tell the story before it is ready. Let it wobble around the room in its little clown shoes. Then teach it to dance.

Stay Positive & This Is Also Why “Positioning” Is A Job, Not A Fossil

Maybe Expertise Is The Wrong Mountain

There was a time when becoming an expert meant finding the hidden library, bribing the gatekeeper, swallowing the textbook, and emerging months later smelling faintly of dust, coffee, and superiority.

That time has been eaten by the internet.

There is no shortage of knowledge now. The shelves are endless. The podcasts multiply like rabbits in a motivational seminar. The newsletters arrive in your inbox wearing tiny business casual shoes. Everyone can read the same report. Everyone can ask the same AI tool. Everyone can skim the same trend deck and call it “strategic.”

So the advantage is no longer access.

The advantage is metabolism.

What do you do with the thing once it enters your brain? Do you let it sit there like a decorative gourd? Or do you chew it, question it, stretch it, remix it, drag it into daylight, and see if it can dance?

That is the new framework for excelling in a topic or industry. Maybe you do not need to become the capital E Expert. Maybe you need to become the person who absorbs differently.

Read one thing.

Listen to one thing.

Make one thing.

Share one thing.

Sell one thing.

Interview one person who knows the thing better than you.

That is not a content plan. That is a sensory diet for ambition.

Reading gives you the skeleton. Listening gives you the breath. Making gives you the bruises. Sharing gives you the mirror. Selling gives you the stakes. Interviewing gives you the humility to realize the map you drew in your head was mostly a raccoon wearing a compass.

The magic is not in any one activity. The magic is in the loop.

The person who only reads becomes heavy with other people’s furniture. The person who only makes may build a beautiful staircase to the wrong attic. The person who only sells starts sounding like a carnival barker trapped in a LinkedIn profile. But the person who cycles through all six starts to develop something rarer than expertise.

Taste.

They begin to notice what others miss. The weird customer quote. The contradiction in the category. The emotional texture underneath the spreadsheet. The reason one idea lands like a warm brick through a window while another flutters politely into the corporate recycling bin.

That is where originality comes from. Not from waiting for divine lightning to strike your standing desk. From creating enough contact points with a subject that it starts speaking back.

So pick the thing. Then surround it.

Read around it. Listen beneath it. Make from it. Share through it. Sell into it. Ask someone who has lived inside it.

Do that weekly and you may not become the official expert.

Better.

You may become the person with something worth saying.

Stay Positive & Something Remarkable, Even

AI Might Be The Opposite Of Social Media

For a while, we treated AI like a very fast intern.

Write this.
Summarize that.
Make this shorter.
Make this sound less like it was written during a hostage situation in a beige conference room.

Useful? Sure.

But execution is the shallow end of the pool. The rubber duckies live there. The real swim starts when AI moves from doing the thing to helping us think about the thing before we do it.

That is where it gets interesting.

AI can become the feedback provider, the challenger, the pusher, the mildly annoying but secretly necessary coach we all claim to want in real life.

The problem is, when that person is human, things get sticky.

Feedback comes with eyebrows.
Challenge comes with history.
A push from someone we care about can feel like a shove, even when it is really a hand on our back.

We only have so much willpower for not taking things personally. Eventually, the ego puts on a little paper crown and starts demanding diplomatic immunity.

AI changes that.

When AI pushes back, it does not bruise the same way. It has no childhood memory of you. (I mean, I guess unless you’ve told it…) No tone from last Tuesday. No hidden disappointment. No awkward kitchen silence after saying, “I think this idea needs work.”

It can ask:
What are you avoiding?
What assumption are you protecting?
What would make this sharper?
What would a customer actually care about?
Are you executing, or are you hiding inside execution because strategy feels foggy?

And you know what. I’ve found that it doesn’t just ask. It speculates based on your interactions and goals. It doesn’t just ask you to look in the mirror. It holds it up for you.

That is not just productivity. That is better thinking.

In a strange way, AI may become the opposite of social media.

Social media gave people a screen and some distance, and too often they used it to become smaller, meaner, louder little goblins with WiFi.

AI gives us distance too, but in reverse.

It creates enough distance for us to hear the hard thing without flinching. Enough distance to be challenged without feeling attacked. Enough distance to improve the work before the world gets its greasy little mitts on it.

The future of AI is not just faster execution.

It is stronger strategy.
Cleaner thinking.
Better questions.
A braver first draft.
A smarter second one.

Not because AI replaces our brain… Because, used well, it finally stops letting our brain get away with so much nonsense.

Stay Positive & Makes Sense That AI Is Used To Make Sense

Crowned Garbage

The great con of modern marketing is that the garbage arrives wearing a crown.

A headline barges into your morning like a raccoon in a tiny tuxedo. A video winks. A thread screams. A chart arrives with the confidence of a televangelist selling miracle socks. Every piece of it is designed to move. Not to nourish. Not to clarify. Not to make you wiser. Just to spread, like glitter in a preschool classroom or lies at a golf course bar.

And now, here we are.

The old obligation was to find information. That was the quest. The lantern. The dusty library card. The heroic little search bar.

The new obligation is to edit.

Not edit like a grumpy English teacher with a red pen and a cardigan full of disappointment. Edit like a gardener. Pull the weeds. Save the beans. Ask why the tomato plant is wearing sunglasses. Notice what is growing because it feeds you and what is growing because it wants to take over the fence.

AI, algorithms, feeds, dashboards, search engines, group chats, inboxes, podcasts, comments, summaries. These are not brain replacements. They are brain amplifiers. Which means if we bring lazy thinking to them, we get lazy thinking with a jetpack. If we bring curiosity, skepticism, memory, and care, we get something better.

A sharper mind.

A more deliberate life.

A tiny mental revolution wearing work boots.

The point of all these tools is not to think less. That is the trapdoor with confetti around it. The point is to think better. To ask better questions. To compare the shiny claim against the quiet fact. To pause before forwarding the emotional grenade. To separate the useful signal from the circus peanut.

Some ideas are built to improve our lives.

Others are built to hijack our attention, sell us panic, and leave our nervous system face down in the punch bowl.

This is the new literacy.

Not reading.

Not searching.

Not consuming.

Discernment.

Our next evolution will not come from having more answers.

It will come from having a better filter.

Stay Positive & We Need Your Discernment More Than Ever

Where Your Company Keeps Its Nerve

A services platform is a useful animal.

It carries things. It files things. It helps a team move the invoice, approve the contract, schedule the event, process the request, calm the angry little goblin named Workflow before it eats someone’s Tuesday.

That has value.

But a data warehouse platform is a different beast entirely.

It does not just help the company do the work. It remembers the work. It notices the work. It turns the crumbs, bruises, delays, exceptions, approvals, costs, patterns, and suspicious little spreadsheet hauntings into something the business can actually learn from.

That is the shift.

From service delivery to organizational intelligence.

From “we help your team complete tasks” to “we help your company understand itself.”

And understanding, my friend, is where the money starts wearing a better suit…or a black belt.

The old platform world was built around transactions. A thing happened. The system captured it. Everybody clapped politely, like accountants at a jazz funeral.

But modern companies do not need another place where data goes to nap. They need a living nerve center. They need their operational history turned into usable truth. They need to see which customers are quietly becoming expensive, which processes are leaking time, which teams are inventing the same workaround in four different departments, and which decisions are being made by instinct because the facts are trapped in a basement with a bad WiFi signal.

A data warehouse platform changes the promise.

It says, “Your work is not just work. It is evidence.”

Every ticket, renewal, purchase order, booking, request, customer interaction, and approval path is a seed. Left alone, it becomes digital lint. Structured correctly, it becomes a garden. A weird, glowing, slightly bossy garden that tells leadership where the soil is tired and where the fruit is coming next.

That is the story buyers are ready for.

Not more software. Not more dashboards wearing mascara. Not another platform claiming to “streamline efficiency” with the enthusiasm of a toaster manual.

The light is on now. The basement has been opened. The spreadsheet ghosts have names.

Stay Positive & Are You Leaning In?

Where The Marketing Is Made

Marketing does not begin when someone in loafers says, “Let’s make a campaign.”

That is not marketing. That is a flare gun fired from a canoe already taking on water.

Marketing begins in the basement of the thing itself. In the guts. In the strange little workshop where somebody asks, “Is this worth making, or are we just adding another beige spoon to the corporate silverware drawer?”

Stay Positive & The Market Doesn’t Need A Firework; It Needs A Lighthouse