Brand Strategy Centers of Gravity (CoG): A Strategic Narrative
In the complex world of brand strategy, companies often struggle to focus on what truly drives their strength in the market. Borrowing from military doctrine—particularly the theories of Carl von Clausewitz—we find a powerful model to bring clarity and precision to brand planning: the Center of Gravity (CoG).
Table of Contents
Defined
In military terms, a Center of Gravity is “the source of power that provides moral or physical strength, freedom of action, or will to act.” It is the focal point of force and influence—an entity’s essential source of strength. For military planners, identifying the enemy’s CoG is crucial to either defending against or dismantling their power.
This concept translates with remarkable precision into the domain of brand strategy. In branding, a Center of Gravity is the core strategic asset or capability from which a brand derives its market strength, relevance, influence, or momentum. It is the gravitational pull that holds everything together—and the source that, if fortified, ensures lasting success.
Depending on the brand, this strategic core might be a:
- Compelling narrative that gives purpose and direction
- Loyal, self-reinforcing community that advocates and defends the brand
- Proprietary technology that’s hard to replicate
- Founder story that gives the brand personality and trust
- Dominant market position built through consistency and performance
- Emotional attachment customers form with the product or service
Aligning Terms
Military Concept
Center of Gravity
Critical Capability
Critical Requirement
Critical Vulnerability
Brand Strategy Equivalent
Brand’s Strategic Core Strength
Unique brand advantage or function
Resources and conditions the brand must sustain
Weak points that, if attacked, erode brand power
Applying the Center of Gravity in Brand Strategy
1. Identify Your Brand’s Center of Gravity
Begin by asking: What gives our brand its strategic strength in the market?
Examples:
- Tesla: Elon Musk’s personal brand combined with an integrated EV ecosystem.
- SpaceX: Technological superiority and exclusive government partnerships.
- Patagonia: Credible, consistent environmental activism built into the company’s DNA.
- Apple: A seamless product ecosystem married to high-end aesthetics and brand loyalty.
2. Assess Critical Capabilities and Requirements
Once the CoG is defined, identify what enables it to function. These are your critical capabilities. Then, determine what conditions must be preserved for those capabilities to persist—your critical requirements.
Example – Apple
- CoG: Product ecosystem and user experience
- Critical Capabilities: Industrial design expertise, proprietary iOS ecosystem, brand consistency
- Critical Requirements: Retaining top creative talent, preserving secrecy in R&D, maintaining brand trust in the premium segment
3. Identify Critical Vulnerabilities
Every CoG has vulnerabilities—cracks that, if exploited by external forces or neglected internally, can cause the entire brand structure to weaken or collapse.
Example – Peloton (Fitness)
- CoG: Loyal, community-driven brand tied to connected fitness tech
- Vulnerability: Product safety failures and delivery delays during the COVID-19 pandemic
- Impact: Crashing stock value, loss of community trust, brand erosion
4. Defensive Brand Strategy: Protecting Your CoG
To defend your brand’s Center of Gravity, reinforce what makes it strong:
- Protect your emotional resonance, brand story, and credibility.
- Deepen community engagement.
- Monitor and preempt risks that could expose vulnerabilities.
Example – Nike
- CoG: Cultural influence powered by elite athlete endorsements
- Defensive Actions: Proactively aligning with social justice movements (e.g., Colin Kaepernick), maintaining brand exclusivity, and securing long-term athlete relationships
5. Offensive Brand Strategy: Targeting Competitors’ CoG
In competitive positioning, a brand can grow by subtly undermining the Centers of Gravity of its rivals. This doesn’t require negative attacks—it means identifying dependency and breaking it through better offers, clearer stories, or more relevance.
Example – T-Mobile vs. Verizon
- Verizon’s CoG: Dominance in network infrastructure and reliability
- T-Mobile’s Strategy:
- Launched the “Uncarrier” campaign to reposition the brand as anti-incumbent
- Undermined Verizon’s network narrative through competitive pricing and service innovation
- Invested early in 5G to redefine the category before Verizon could fully pivot
Strategic Takeaways
The Center of Gravity model brings focus, discipline, and clarity to brand strategy. It encourages leaders to:
- Concentrate on what truly fuels their brand’s power—not superficial tactics.
- Balance defensive efforts (preservation) with offensive actions (competitive growth).
- Make informed, courageous decisions about what to protect, amplify, or rethink.
In volatile markets—especially emerging sectors like space, tech, and climate—this model equips brand strategists to act with precision and purpose. It’s not just a planning tool; it’s a strategic mindset.
About the Author
Michael Daily, APR, has been providing strategic communications and branding strategy expertise and support to organizations since 1996. He is the owner of NewSpace Brand Builders, a firm specializing in strategic communications and brand design, strategy, and management within the Space and Defense Industry. You can reach Mike at mike.daily@newspacebb.com

