Unlock the Power of Britishness: How Top Brands Drive Marketing Success with Cultural Codes
Marketing Week9 hours ago
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Unlock the Power of Britishness: How Top Brands Drive Marketing Success with Cultural Codes

Marketing Strategy
britishness
brandmarketing
culturalcodes
marketingeffectiveness
humor
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Summary:

  • Britishness can increase brand closeness by up to 43% when used effectively in marketing.

  • Key characteristics include humor, heritage, and wit, which build trust and memorability.

  • Brands like Specsavers, Heinz, and McVitie's use cultural codes to connect without being exclusive.

  • Risks include exclusion and stereotypes, requiring careful handling and adaptation.

  • Modern Britishness reflects diversity and evolution, not just nostalgia, for long-term success.

How Brands Are Using Britishness to Drive Effectiveness

Britishness isn't an easy thing to define, but when tapped into correctly, it can be a powerful brand marketing tool. Specsavers, Heinz, and McVitie's explain how.

McVitie's

What is Britishness? Ask one hundred people, and you'll get one hundred different answers. Whether it's a cup of tea with a biscuit, beans on toast after school, or a self-deprecating joke about the weather, it's a powerful emotional tool when used correctly.

For brands embedded in these moments, Britishness isn't just a label on a pack; it's a set of cultural codes that shape tone, build trust, and create enduring affection.

In today's divided climate, this is a delicate game. National identity can unite but also exclude, and marketers must be aware of the risks of leaning too far into patriotism or nostalgia. Yet, when handled with subtlety, Britishness can deliver real results.

New research from Ipsos and Effie UK called 'Banter like a Brit' finds that brands successfully channeling a British identity can increase their brand closeness metric by up to 43%—a cornerstone of long-term brand health that has risen in importance over the past 15 years in driving brand desire.

The survey of 3,000 adults also finds that the defining characteristics of British identity are 'traditional', 'enduring', and 'witty'. Patterns that hold true regardless of generation.

Three household names—Specsavers, Heinz, and McVitie's—tell Marketing Week how they use Britishness with wit, warmth, and authenticity. Each has its own approach, but the common lesson is clear: success comes not from flag-waving, but from understanding how people live, laugh, and share their daily rituals.

Humor as a Cultural Code

Specsavers is the obvious case study for British humor, but that doesn't mean the brand wants to lean too far into being overtly British. "We don't ever want to wrap ourselves in the flag," says head of media Ian Maybank. "For us, it's about cultural codes—humor, understatement, empathy—not about asserting superiority."

The brand's long-running 'Should've gone to Specsavers' line has become a form of shorthand for self-deprecation, instantly recognizable as British in its dryness and understatement, something the brand very much intended. "Humor creates mass accessibility," Maybank adds. "It's a way of speaking to everyone in a way that feels non-exclusive and authentic."

That framing resonates with Heinz, which despite its American origins is often seen as a cultural touchstone thanks to its beans, sauces, and soups. "British humor is a huge part of our personality," says brand, innovation, and portfolio director Caio Fontenelle. "Whether it's a cheeky twist in copy or a knowing wink in creative, that wit feels very British. It's part of how we connect."

Kraft Heinz chief growth officer Karen Owen agrees, noting that humor doesn't just entertain; it reassures. "Consumers in the UK often think Heinz is British because of how much our products are woven into daily life here. Beans on toast, ketchup with chips—those are national rituals. Humor is the tone that makes it feel like we belong."

Humor also builds memorability. Ipsos' analysis finds that campaigns tapping into humor score higher on distinctiveness and long-term brand equity.

As Maybank puts it: "If people smile, they connect. That's the Britishness we want to capture."

Heritage Without Nostalgia

If humor is one code, heritage is another. No brand embodies that more than McVitie's. "We've got 180 years of heritage in the UK," marketing director Benazir Barlet-Batada tells Marketing Week. "McVitie's is a national institution, woven into the fabric of everyday life. From ration boxes in the war to royal wedding cakes, we've always been there."

But she is quick to stress that heritage alone isn't enough. "Britishness is powerful, but if you lean too heavily on the past, you risk being old-fashioned," she says. "The balance is key: staying true to fundamentals while evolving with culture."

That philosophy underpinned McVitie's 'True Originals' campaign in 2023, which leaned into heritage while feeling witty and fresh—and even featured a cameo from Sir Trevor McDonald. The impact was striking. Purchase intent rose by 27%, and retail sales value by 15.8% year-on-year.

In 2025, the centenary of the chocolate digestive offered another opportunity. McVitie's launched a pop-up under Piccadilly Lights, with a timeline of its history alongside competitions, recipe tastings, and influencer tie-ins. "People loved the nostalgia," says Barlet-Batada, "but they also loved the modern elements that connected with younger generations."

Heinz, too, uses heritage selectively. From unearthing Ringo Starr's stint working in a Heinz factory to celebrating the Lionesses' victory, its strategy has been to connect with moments that feel nationally significant but culturally current.

"It's about rooting ourselves in moments that matter now, not just retelling the past," Owen explains.

Guardrails and Risks

With opportunity comes risk. National identity can tip into exclusion or stereotype if not handled carefully. Specsavers is clear about what it avoids. "In an age of political division, overt patriotism can turn people off," Maybank says. "Our job is to connect with everyone, not wave a flag for one group."

Heinz has built-in checks. Its AI tool, Tastemaker, analyzes ideas against brand values and potential pitfalls, while expert panels provide additional cultural guardrails. "It's about avoiding missteps while still being bold," Fontenelle explains.

McVitie's faces the challenge of adapting its innate Britishness abroad. "What feels cheeky here might not translate in Saudi Arabia," Barlet-Batada says. "In France, our packaging even calls them 'English biscuits', and that works locally. It's about flexing, not forcing."

Humor, in particular, doesn't always travel. "What feels clever in the UK can land very differently elsewhere," she adds. "That's why we collaborate, test, and adapt."

A Modern Take on Britishness

All three brands emphasize that Britishness must evolve. It's not about nostalgia for a lost past but about reflecting modern Britain: diverse, witty, community-oriented.

"Britishness gives us a foundation, but it's not our main thing," says Barlet-Batada. "It's part of who we are, not all of who we are."

For Owen, the key is empathy. "It's about showing we understand the culture and rituals of this market—that's what builds trust," she says.

Maybank puts it more simply: "Britishness works when it reflects how people actually live and laugh, not when it tries to dictate identity."

Ipsos makes the same point in its analysis. The most effective brands need to be "culture-first, but shape it rather than ape it". That requires subtlety and leaning into cultural codes without reducing them to stereotypes or resorting to the lowest common denominator.

Handled with wit and empathy, Britishness remains one of the most enduring assets in the marketer's toolkit. It's not about flag-waving, but about reflecting the everyday quirks and comforts that continue to define how people in Britain connect with brands.

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