Why Legacy Brands Like Omega Don’t Chase Trends
Why Legacy Brands Like Omega Don’t Chase Trends
The smartest brand move isn’t always new. It’s aligned.
BY CHRISTOPHER CASON, JOURNALIST & CREATIVE STRATEGIST COVERING SPORTS, BUSINESS, AND LEADERSHIP
Omega CEO Raynald Aeschlimann. Illustration: Inc.; Photos: Getty Images; Courtesy Omega
Legacy brands don’t usually move early.
Their value is already established. Their place in culture is already defined. Most of the time, the smartest move is staying exactly where they are.
So, when a brand like Omega — a company that’s spent decades tied to the Olympics and the biggest stages in golf — decides to align with something new like Tomorrow’s Golf League (TGL), it makes you pause.
Not because it’s surprising, but because it’s intentional. For Omega President and CEO Raynald Aeschlimann, the decision wasn’t about chasing something new. It was about recognizing something familiar — just in a different form.
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“If we do something else, we’re just a sponsor,” he said.
That line is powerful. Simple. And it’s where most brands lose the plot.
Not all growth means going somewhere new.
There’s this instinct, especially right now, to always look for the next thing. New league, new audience, new format.
