We recently hosted a webinar with Don Jeter, Chief Marketing Officer at Torq, which is one of the most recognisable brands in security right now. In this webinar, we looked at how brands can stand out using visual identity, messaging, and experience in cyber.
Here are the key insights from the discussion.
The Sameness Epidemic
One of the biggest themes was what Don described as the “sameness problem.”
Many companies end up adopting similar visuals, similar messaging structures, and similar positioning. Over time, that makes differentiation harder, and brands become interchangeable.
Instead of following the norm, Torq intentionally chose a bold approach to branding -creating something that feels distinct and hard to ignore.
Don made it clear that visual identity is not about design for design’s sake.
It’s about expression.
Torq lean into strong imagery - monster trucks, chainsaws, skeletons - not as random creative choices, but as deliberate signals about their positioning.
Their unique visuals show they challenge old security methods. No long explanations are needed!
When identity and narrative align, branding becomes much more powerful.
A key point in the conversation was that bold branding only works when it connects to real problems.
Torq’s positioning emerged from understanding customer frustration with traditional security orchestration tools. The skeleton theme symbolises the decline of outdated systems and the shift towards a new approach.
Interestingly, what started as a campaign built around product positioning eventually evolved into a core brand identity.
Sometimes branding grows organically from solving customer pain, not from a top-down marketing plan.
Over time, consistent use of strong visual themes helped reinforce brand recognition.
When people repeatedly see the same visual language tied to the same narrative, it becomes memorable.
In crowded markets, memorability matters.
We asked Don about a secret sauce. He stressed that there’s no one-size-fits-all formula for differentiation. But, knowing your audience, being clear about your stance, and staying consistent are key.
Another major topic was brand presence at events.
Instead of treating conferences like standard networking opportunities, Torq focuses on creating experiences.
Examples included unique activities designed to surprise attendees and generate conversation.
The goal isn’t just visibility, it’s creating moments people actually remember.
Large industry events build awareness, while smaller gatherings create deeper connections. Both play different but important roles in a brand strategy.
Consistency is Key
We also discussed the importance of consistency across segments.
While different industries have unique needs, brands should avoid creating entirely separate stories for each audience.
A strong brand is anchored around one core belief. Supporting content can address specific segments, but everything should connect back to the same foundation.
For growing companies especially, clarity beats complexity.
A crucial key takeaway from the webinar was this: brand drives demand.
It’s easy to focus directly on demand generation tactics - paid campaigns, outbound, performance marketing.
But without a clear narrative, those efforts struggle to gain momentum.
Brand establishes context. Demand builds on top of it.
Marketing teams play a critical role in translating product capabilities into a compelling story that resonates externally.
The measurement topic came up as well.
Tracking performance and ROI matters, but not all brand-building activities can be measured right away.
Partnerships, event activations, and creative campaigns often build lasting value. However, this value may not appear right away in attribution dashboards.
The key is alignment.
Good communication between marketing and leadership sets clear goals and expectations. It also allows for some experimentation.
Third-Party Validation
We also discussed how external validation has become increasingly important.
Today, discovery often happens through third-party sources - media coverage, analyst recognition, and customer reviews.
Strong storytelling combined with proactive outreach increases the chance of earning that validation.
Customer reviews on platforms like industry peer communities significantly influence buying decisions.
External credibility amplifies brand positioning.
The overall message from the webinar was simple:
Differentiation should not live in just one place.
It should show up in your visuals, your events, your messaging, your content and every customer interaction.
When narrative, identity, and experience align, brands create something far stronger than marketing alone.
And in competitive markets, that alignment is what builds lasting recognition.