
Most brands think they're being polarizing. They're being lazy. There's a difference between a take that splits opinion on something your audience cares about — and a take that crosses their values entirely. One pulls your highest value buyer closer. The other pushes them out of the room quietly, and you won't see it in your data until six months later when a launch underperforms and no one on your team can explain why. In this episode of Running With Wolves, Savannah uses the Wall Street Journal's Emma Grede headline as a real time case study to break down exactly where that line is — and how to install a values filter into your marketing review so your team never crosses it by accident again. Here's what this episode covers: • Why polarizing and alienating look identical in your analytics — and how to tell the difference • The three structural problems causing brands to lose trust without knowing it • Why brand damage shows up six months later in a launch that underperforms — not in your next monthly report • The rule Savannah installs in every brand she works with: polarize the substance, protect the values Apply to work with Savannah HERE: http://bit.ly/applywlfpodcast or DM her on Instagram @itssavannahjordan ( / itssavannahjordan ) with your takeaway. polarizing vs alienating, brand trust, values marketing, marketing strategy 2026, brand building, female founder, marketing mistakes, audience values
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