By: Ethan Rogers
From Love Brand to Grateful Brand.
From admired to awakened — evolving branding from love to gratitude.
Love Isn’t the Final Destination for Brands Anymore
In the world of branding, becoming a “Love Brand” has long been considered a significant achievement — a brand so admired, trusted, and emotionally connected that customers become loyal advocates. However, for Oscar Di Montigny, love may no longer be the ultimate goal. It appears to be evolving into something deeper: gratitude.
“A Love Brand is respected and admired,” Di Montigny explains. “But a Grateful Brand extends further. It recognizes its impact, its responsibilities, and its role in the world. It understands that to be loved is a privilege, and with it comes the responsibility to reciprocate.” That responsibility isn’t just about customer loyalty. It’s about creating a legacy. A Grateful Brand aspires to something more than emotional resonance; it seeks spiritual coherence. While the Love Brand invites admiration, the Grateful Brand aims for trust, reverence, and a shared sense of purpose.
For Di Montigny, this shift isn’t simply idealistic. It’s becoming increasingly relevant. In a world that has become more productive but less fulfilled, where systems are straining under the weight of spiritual emptiness, gratitude could serve as a new organizing principle. It offers a language of the soul in a world that has become oversaturated with soundbites.
From Preference to Presence: The New Hierarchy of Brand Maturity
Traditionally, brand evolution has followed a linear path: from being recognized to being considered, becoming preferred, and eventually indispensable. The Love Brand represented the pinnacle of that hierarchy — a brand that didn’t just sell products but shaped identities.
Di Montigny, author of A New One – Journey to the Last Secret Place, reframes this progression with a more spiritually conscious maturity scale:
Just a Brand → Considered Brand → Preferred Brand → Must-Have Brand → Live Brand → Grateful Brand
The Grateful Brand represents a significant departure from this model. It’s no longer focused solely on being needed. Instead, it seeks to give. It doesn’t primarily seek validation; it seeks to validate others through its presence, its service, and its ethical grounding. It becomes a genuine presence in people’s lives, not just a provider of goods. This shift mirrors Di Montigny’s philosophical framework, the Spherical Economy®, which advocates for a regenerative, circular approach to business — one that re-centers the human being and spiritual intention at the heart of economic systems.
Where traditional branding asks, “How can we make people love us?”, the Grateful Brand asks, “How can we honor those who support us?” This shift prompts deeper reflection: How are we showing up for our employees? How do we speak to our customers’ souls, not just their wallets? What do we offer our communities beyond transactions?
Gratitude, then, becomes a reflection of the brand’s role in the world. It transforms the concept of branding from lifestyle to legacy.
Gratitude as Strategy, Soul, and Structure
Oscar Di Montigny doesn’t view gratitude as sentimental. Instead, he sees it as a powerful strategic approach. A Grateful Brand isn’t just morally compelling; it is also operationally transformative. Gratitude serves as the compass by which decisions are made, messages are crafted, and cultures are nurtured. It helps to create a new internal structure within the company, where profit and purpose are not opposing forces, but rather forces that can align.
In this framework, hiring evolves into something more than filling a position; it becomes a spiritual calling. Marketing becomes a form of intentional storytelling. Product development becomes an act of contribution rather than mere consumption. A Grateful Brand doesn’t introduce solutions that create new problems. It filters every innovation through the lens of integrity and long-term resonance.
Di Montigny, the architect of Spherism and the Spherical Economy, has taken this philosophy beyond theoretical concepts. His work with the Grateful Foundation promotes awareness and responsibility in future generations, equipping youth, educators, and institutions with models that are soul-centered. His intellectual ecosystem, which includes Spherism®, the Spherical Economy®, and his literary work, provides not only inspiration but also actionable frameworks. These ideas have been integrated into academic models, shared on global stages, and transformed into practical strategies that leaders across industries can apply to culture-building, leadership development, and ESG alignment.
In this context, gratitude isn’t reactive. It’s visionary. It enables a brand to see not just the next market opportunity but also the next opportunity to heal, serve, and inspire. It is, as Di Montigny suggests, among the most refined forms of intelligence.
A Brand That Gives Thanks, Gives Life
As Oscar often reflects, the brands that will shape the future are likely not those trying to win the most attention or affection. Instead, they are the ones most deeply aligned with their soul. Gratitude transforms branding into something sacred. It shifts the focus from positioning to presence, from persuasion to purpose. In this new paradigm, companies are no longer defined by what they sell, but by what they stand for and how deeply they understand their role in something far greater than themselves.
The Grateful Brand becomes a cultural force, not just a commercial one. It doesn’t just respond to demand. It seeks to uplift humanity. It doesn’t just build awareness; it builds alignment. Gratitude isn’t simply the final reward for brand success, but rather the opening note of a new kind of leadership.
As Oscar says, “Gratitude is not a conclusion. It’s a beginning. The beginning of a new way to serve, to lead, and to be.” In a time when the world is aching for meaning, the Grateful Brand offers more than a message. It offers a mirror and a movement.