“If the character is wrong, changing the font size won’t fix it” — Herman Zapf
Today, we are looking ‘CHARACTER.
The character of great brands. This is something most people overlook in marketing or business strategies. But character is the hidden force behind every brand that lasts.
When I began writing children’s books, I noticed something immediately. Children don’t just like stories. They fall in love with the characters. A book could have the most exciting story, but if the characters are flat, it won’t connect. The moment a character comes alive, everything changes. Children remember them. They talk about them. They anticipate the next story because they connect with the character’s personality, values, and even flaws.
This is true beyond books. Think about hit movies or best-selling series. Spider-Man is more than a superhero. He is a character with traits people admire, relate to, or aspire to. Kweku Ananse in African folklore transcends all the stories; he represents wit, lessons, and values that resonate across generations. Even in movies, from Simba in The Lion King to characters in Nollywood, we always fall in love with the central character. That character becomes the heart of the story.
Brands work in the same way. Every successful brand has a character. Coca-Cola, for instance, is more than a drink. It carries an image, a feeling, a personality. Apple is not just technology. It carries creativity, design, and simplicity that people connect with emotionally. These traits are the character of the brand.
Character draws people in. It creates loyalty. It makes the audience say, “I understand this brand. I feel this brand. I want to be part of it.” And just like characters in stories, brands that have character become memorable. People talk about them. They advocate for them. They build a relationship with them.
Understanding this is the first step to building a brand that lasts. Character is the essence of your brand. It is what people remember when they think of you, when they see your product, or when they interact with your business.
Now let’s unpack what character means for your brand, how it attracts people, how it builds loyalty, and how it turns customers into a community.
Character as a Magnet of Emotion
You see, character is the magnet of emotion. In every story we love, there is always a key character at the center. That character has values, flaws, or a mix of both. And it is that mix that pulls us in. It makes us feel. It makes us care.
Think about Simba in The Lion King. He is brave, but he also makes mistakes. That combination makes him relatable. Or Spider-Man. He is heroic, yet he struggles with ordinary life challenges. People connect with that. We see a part of ourselves in the character, or we aspire to be like them. That emotional connection is the glue that keeps us engaged.
This isn’t limited to movies or books. It happens in folklore too. Kweku Ananse has lessons embedded in his character. His cleverness, his mistakes, and his personality make people remember him across generations. The same principle applies to brands. A brand without character is forgettable. It might sell once, but it will not inspire loyalty.
Every brand must ask itself: what is my character? Aside the brand identities or the product, what does my brand make people feel? What traits define it? Coca-Cola evokes joy, togetherness, and nostalgia. Apple evokes creativity, simplicity, and sophistication. These traits are the brand’s character. People are drawn to them. They become emotionally invested.
I see this all the time with children and animations. Kids connect with characters they recognize. It pulls people in, creates curiosity, and builds emotional bonds.
In simple terms, your brand must have a character people can relate to. Something they can connect with emotionally. It is that character that transforms a product from ordinary into something memorable. Something people will choose not just once, but repeatedly. The character becomes the heart of the brand, the point that people remember and care about.
Emotional connection is everything. When people feel something for your brand, they don’t just buy your product. They invest in the story, the experience, and the identity it represents. Character is the invisible thread that binds them to your brand.
People Follow Characters, Not Logos
The second thing is this: people follow characters, not logos.
Think about it. When a well-known personality moves from one company or platform to another, many followers move with them. They are not loyal to the organization or its logo. They are loyal to the character—the person behind it. Followers connect with personality, authenticity, and values. That is what drives engagement and loyalty.
I’ve seen this personally. People attend programs, shows, or events simply because of who is involved. They want to experience the character. I remember driving with my kids when they spotted characters on a billboard. At first, I didn’t see what they were talking about. Weeks later, we passed the same billboard again. This time, I looked closely. They were animated characters, not real people. Yet my kids were drawn to them. They recognized these characters from the animations they loved. They felt a connection.
That is how character works. People respond to personality. Companies and brands understand this, which is why they create personas around their products. Think about theme parks, merchandising, or even marketing campaigns. Behind every product is a character that people can relate to or admire.
For personal brands, this is even more important. What is the personality your audience can connect with? What traits make people care about you beyond the product or service you offer? If you can define this character clearly, people will follow you anywhere. They will engage with your ideas, share your message, and even advocate for your brand without being asked.
Influencers demonstrate this clearly. A celebrity endorsement works because people love the character behind the endorsement. Take someone like Nana Ama McBrown in Ghana. Her followers connect with her personality. When she endorses a product, people trust it because they already admire her character. The brand’s credibility grows through her character.
The is the point: people follow humans, characters, and personalities. They don’t follow logos or slogans. Your brand must have a character people can relate to, admire, and emotionally invest in. When they connect with that character, everything else—the products, the services, the campaigns—becomes easier to engage with.
The question for every brand is simple: what is your character? What personality, values, or traits make people want to follow you? That character is the key to building long-term loyalty and turning customers into advocates.
Products Built Around Characters
The third thing is this: products are built around characters.
Look at major industries, especially entertainment. From children’s books to movies, characters drive products. Think Harry Potter. Beyond the books and films, there are toys, souvenirs, and theme parks. The character becomes more than a story—it becomes a product that people want to own, experience, and engage with repeatedly.
This works intentionally. When children fall in love with a character, they want to interact with it. They want books, toys, games, and experiences. The emotional connection makes merchandising and product sales effortless. The character becomes the bridge between emotion and commerce.
Brands outside entertainment can use this principle too. What character can your brand create? How can that character be part of your product experience, marketing, or extensions? The key is to make the character relatable, memorable, and emotionally engaging.
For brands, this means your product should not just sell utility—it should carry the essence of your character. Your brand’s traits, values, and personality should shine through the product or service. When people connect emotionally with your character, they are more likely to engage, buy, and advocate.
Products built around character also create opportunity for extensions. A simple service can become a series of experiences, merchandise, or campaigns. Fans who love the character become repeat customers. They share your brand story and attract more people.
The point is this: your character can transform a product from ordinary to something people care about. Your product becomes a vehicle for your brand’s personality, values, and story. That is how you turn attention into loyalty and connection into business growth.
Character as Reputation: Your Invisible Currency
The fourth thing to understand is this: character is your reputation.
It is the invisible currency that sells your brand. Beyond logos, slogans, or advertisements, character reflects the truth of your brand. It shows the quality, honesty, empathy, and consistency of everything you do. It builds a reputation that money cannot buy.
Marketing can attract attention. It can drive people to try your product once. But your character is what keeps them coming back. People stay because they trust the personality and values behind your brand. That trust creates loyalty, and loyalty sustains growth over time.
Think about major brands or personalities you admire. The reason people keep coming back is not just the product, it is the character behind it. Kids trust the consistency of a beloved animated character. Adults trust the reliability and honesty of a brand they connect with. That trust comes from character.
Your reputation is your most valuable asset. It is your real advertising budget. A strong character can scale your brand. A weak character can limit growth, no matter how much marketing you do. That is why consistency matters. Your audience notices the small things: the quality of service, the tone of communication, the way problems are handled. Every interaction builds or erodes your character.
Character also builds emotional security. People feel safe engaging with brands they trust. They know what to expect, and that predictability strengthens their connection. For personal brands, this means demonstrating values openly and consistently. For businesses, it means showing integrity in products, services, and communications.
Your character is the foundation of trust and loyalty. It is the invisible currency that influences decisions and builds lasting relationships. Without it, your brand is just a product. With it, your brand becomes a movement, a story people want to be part of, and an experience they will follow, share, and remember.
Character Creates Culture and Community
The fifth thing is this: character creates culture and community.
Think about the fans of a football player or children who love Frozen, or Spider-Man. They form groups. They share experiences. They feel they belong. Character builds that sense of identity, pride, and connection. It brings people together around shared values and passions.
Great brands do the same. Apple inspires a culture of creativity and innovation. Nike builds a culture of achievement and determination. Bollywood stars cultivate communities of fans who share a love for their work and the values they represent. Character is the center of these communities.
Your brand can do this too. Ask yourself: what community does my brand create? Who belongs here? How can people plug in, feel recognized, and identify with my brand? When people connect with a character, they become part of something bigger. They join a movement, a culture, a story.
Characters don’t stand alone. They create networks and systems of connection. Fans become advocates. Customers become loyal supporters. Followers become active participants. This is the power of character. It turns ordinary engagement into a committed community.
For personal brands, this is especially important. Your personality and values set the tone. People are attracted to those traits, and they gather around them. They share stories, recommend products, and participate in discussions. Your character becomes the glue that holds a community together.
Even in business, this principle works. Think about brands like Lego, Marvel, or Disney. They don’t just sell products. They sell experiences, belonging, and participation. They cultivate a sense of shared identity among their audience. The characters, their values, and their storylines create that culture.
Your brand’s character defines the culture it builds. It creates a sense of belonging, identity, and purpose for your audience. This culture transforms ordinary customers into loyal communities. It turns casual followers into passionate advocates.
When you build your brand, think beyond the product. Think about the character. Think about the culture it will create. Think about the community that will gather around it. That is how character multiplies value, impact, and loyalty.
In closing, remember that building on character is the foundation of lasting brand success. Think about it. What is the character of your brand? What will make people fall in love with it? What community will it create? What legacy will it leave?
Build on character. Make it your brand’s heartbeat.
The best is yours.
Remember, I’m your brand and publishing consultant.
Bernard Kelvin Clive is a leading authority on personal branding and digital book publishing in Africa. With over a decade of experience in digital publishing, he has been a trusted consultant for entrepreneurs, pastors, and individuals looking to build their brands and write their books. An Amazon best-selling author with over 70 published, and his expertise has earned him recognition as a sought-after speaker and corporate trainer.
Bernard’s approach to presenting complex ideas is unmatched, as he simplifies them and presents them in clear, actionable steps for his audiences.
His branding books ‘The Art of Personal Branding’ and ‘Rebrand: The Ultimate Guide to Personal and Corporate Branding and Rebranding” have been list among the best personal branding books of all time by BookAuthority.org

Bernard is also the host of the highly-ranked Career & Business Podcast, where he shares his insights on branding and life. As a brand strategist at BKC Consulting, he runs the monthly Branding & Publishing Masterclass, helping individuals take their personal and professional brands to new heights. To learn more about Bernard and his work, visit www.BKC.name
The post Personal branding with Bernard Kelvin CLIVE: Brand built on character appeared first on The Business & Financial Times.
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