Brand Architecture
When to Activate
- A company is launching a new product and needs to decide how it relates to the parent brand
- An acquisition has added brands to the portfolio and integration decisions are needed
- The current brand structure has become confusing to customers or internal teams
- Expanding into a new market where the parent brand may help or hinder
- Customers are confused about the relationship between products or brands
- Consolidating or rationalizing a sprawling brand portfolio
First Questions
- How many distinct products, services, or brands do you have today?
- Do your customers buy across multiple products, or are they siloed?
- Does the parent brand add credibility to new offerings, or is it neutral/negative?
- How different are the audiences for each product or brand?
- What is the long-term portfolio strategy? (More products? Fewer? Acquisitions?)
- Do you sell through channels or partners who need to understand the brand structure?
- What is the marketing budget reality? (More brands = more cost to build awareness.)
Brand Architecture Models
1. Branded House
One master brand. All products live under it.
Structure: Parent Brand → Parent Product A, Parent Product B, Parent Product C
Examples:
- Google → Google Maps, Google Drive, Google Photos
- FedEx → FedEx Express, FedEx Ground, FedEx Freight
- Virgin → Virgin Atlantic, Virgin Mobile, Virgin Active
When to use:
- The parent brand is strong and has positive associations across all product categories
- Products share the same audience or benefit from cross-selling
- Marketing efficiency is a priority (one brand to build, not many)
- Products share a common value proposition or experience standard
Advantages:
- Marketing efficiency — every product builds the master brand
- Cross-selling is natural — customers trust new offerings
- Simpler brand management and lower creative costs
Risks:
- A failure in one product damages the entire brand
- Products with different audiences or price points can create confusion
- Innovation can feel constrained by the master brand's identity
2. House of Brands
The parent company is invisible or secondary. Each brand stands alone.
Structure: [Hidden Parent] → Brand A, Brand B, Brand C
Examples:
- Procter & Gamble → Tide, Gillette, Pampers, Old Spice
- LVMH → Louis Vuitton, Moet, Hennessy, Sephora
- Alphabet → Google, Waymo, Verily, DeepMind
When to use:
- Products serve fundamentally different audiences
- Acquisitions bring strong existing brands that would lose value under a new name
- Risk isolation is important (a product failure should not damage siblings)
- Products compete in different price tiers or categories
Advantages:
- Each brand can be precisely positioned for its audience
- Risk is isolated — one brand's crisis does not spread
- Enables competing in the same category at different price points
Risks:
- Expensive — each brand needs its own awareness and equity investment
- No cross-selling leverage between brands
- Complex portfolio management
3. Endorsed Brands
Sub-brands have their own identity but are visibly connected to the parent.
Structure: Sub-Brand by Parent, Sub-Brand (a Parent Company), Sub-Brand | Parent
Examples:
- Courtyard by Marriott, Residence Inn by Marriott
- PlayStation by Sony
- Polo by Ralph Lauren
When to use:
- New products benefit from parent credibility but need their own positioning
- The parent brand adds trust but should not limit the sub-brand's identity
- You want some risk isolation but also some halo effect
- Products serve adjacent but distinct segments
Advantages:
- Sub-brands get a credibility boost from the parent
- Each sub-brand can have its own personality and positioning
- Moderate risk isolation
Risks:
- The endorsement relationship must be clear and consistent
- Too many endorsed brands can dilute the parent
- Requires careful visual design to show relationship without confusion
4. Hybrid Architecture
A mix of the above, applied strategically across the portfolio.
Structure: Some products are branded house, some are endorsed, some are independent.
Examples:
- Microsoft: Microsoft Office (branded house), Xbox (independent feel), LinkedIn (acquired, kept separate), GitHub (acquired, kept separate)
- Amazon: Amazon Prime, Amazon Web Services (branded house), Whole Foods, Twitch, Ring (house of brands)
When to use:
- Large, diverse portfolios where one model does not fit all
- Organic growth plus acquisitions create different brand equity situations
- Some products benefit from the parent brand while others are better off independent
Advantages:
- Flexibility to optimize for each product's situation
- Can evolve over time as brands mature
Risks:
- Complexity in management and governance
- Requires clear rules for when to use which model
- Can appear inconsistent without strong guidelines
Brand Hierarchy
Define the levels of your brand hierarchy:
Level 1: Corporate Brand (the company)
Level 2: Business Unit or Division Brands
Level 3: Product or Service Brands
Level 4: Feature or Edition Brands (Pro, Enterprise, Lite)
Level 5: Campaign or Program Brands (usually temporary)
For each level, define:
- Naming convention
- Visual relationship to the parent
- How much independent identity it gets
- Marketing autonomy and budget ownership
Naming Strategies
Descriptive Names
Describe what the product does. Easy to understand, hard to trademark.
- Microsoft Teams, Google Maps, Adobe Photoshop
Invented Names
Made-up words. Highly trademarkable, require more marketing investment.
Evocative Names
Real words used suggestively. Balance of meaning and distinctiveness.
- Slack (implying ease), Asana (yoga pose, implying flow), Stripe (implying a line/path)
Acronymic Names
Letters that may or may not stand for something. Efficient but can be forgettable.
Founder/People Names
Named after a person. Works for luxury and professional services.
- Ralph Lauren, McKinsey, Bloomberg
Naming Principles
- Easy to say, spell, and search for
- Available as a domain and on key social platforms
- Trademarkable in relevant jurisdictions
- Does not have negative connotations in target markets or languages
- Works at the intended hierarchy level (a product name should not sound bigger than the parent)
Visual Relationship Between Brands
Define how brands relate visually:
| Relationship | Logo Treatment | Color | Typography |
|---|
| Branded house | Product name in master brand style | Shared palette | Same typeface family |
| Endorsed | Product logo + "by [Parent]" lockup | Own palette with parent accent | Own typeface, parent in lockup |
| Sub-brand | Combined mark or co-branded logo | Shared primary, unique secondary | Shared heading font, own body |
| Independent | Completely separate logo | Own palette | Own typeface |
Portfolio Management
Brand Portfolio Audit
Periodically assess each brand in the portfolio:
- Brand strength. Awareness, preference, loyalty metrics
- Financial contribution. Revenue, margin, growth trajectory
- Strategic role. Cash cow, growth driver, prestige play, entry point
- Audience overlap. Does this brand cannibalize or complement siblings?
- Operational cost. What does it cost to maintain this brand (marketing, legal, creative)?
Portfolio Decisions
- Grow. Invest more in high-performing, strategically important brands
- Maintain. Keep steady investment in stable, profitable brands
- Migrate. Move customers from a retiring brand to a growing one
- Merge. Combine overlapping brands (complex but reduces portfolio cost)
- Retire. Sunset brands that are not earning their keep
Brand Extension Guidelines
When extending a brand into new territory:
- Permission check. Does the brand have "permission" to play in this space? (Amazon had permission to go from books to everything. A dental brand does not have permission to make food.)
- Fit assessment. Does the new offering share the brand's core values and quality expectations?
- Cannibalization risk. Will the extension steal from existing products?
- Dilution risk. Will the extension weaken the brand's core meaning?
- Capability match. Can the organization deliver at brand standard in the new category?
Quality Gate
Before finalizing brand architecture decisions: