
Brand DNA & Strategy
Brand.. The Totem of the Modern Age
Can a brand be considered a modern religious system?
A Historical–Psychological Analytical Reading
More Than a Sign
In our time, some brands are transforming from consumable products into systems of belonging—
resembling what humans once knew as the totem.
For more context, refer to a previous post on the origin of the word “brand.”
As a modern tool, the brand may adopt these mechanisms—consciously or unconsciously.
The Totem as a Social System
Sigmund Freud defined the totem in his book Totem and Taboo as a “sacred” social structure
that organizes the relationship between the individual and the group.
The totem may take the form of an animal, plant, or another symbol, and is built upon:
Belonging – Taboos – Rituals
So how Does the Totem Work?
Freud suggests that the totem:
Creates a collective identity or culture
Imposes certain behaviors
Generates emotional loyalty
Is tied to identity rather than choice
Changing the Symbol, Preserving the Meaning
As primitive symbols declined, only their form changed.
Today, we no longer experience totemism through animals or plants,
but through brands we feel psychologically affiliated with.
So we say:
“This brand feels like me.”
“That one doesn’t represent me.”
“This is an extension of my identity.”
“That is merely an option.”
Structural Similarity
Totem = Strong Brand
Symbol
Community
Loyalty
Usage rituals
Emotional defense of the symbol
The difference lies in form, not in mechanism.
Real-World Examples
When a brand transforms from product into belief:

Harley-Davidson
Not just a motorcycle, but a community—with riding rituals, clothing, language, and lifestyle,
and an emotional defense that can sometimes reach fanaticism.
Apple
From product usage to marketing style—even its tone toward competitors.
Watching some Apple ads reveals a clear sense of “us” versus “them.”
Does the Brand Approach the Logic of Religion?
Not as a doctrine, but as a symbolic system carrying implicit cultural codes
that shape identity and create a sense of belonging around the values and ideas of that symbol.
Here lies its power—
and why it calls for conscious understanding.
The Psychological Dimension (Serotonin)
Muzaffar Al-Sarmi discusses in his research on “serotonin signals”
the behavioral effects associated with feelings of value, belonging, and social recognition.
He explains how preference for a particular brand may relate to a sense of internal stability
and a psychological state connected to serotonin.
Serotonin here is used as an indicator of psychological balance and reassurance.
Conclusion
A strong brand is neither sanctified nor reduced to a product.
It can be understood as a “psychological–social–cultural system”
whose impact only emerges when it is consciously built before it is consumed.
This leads us to a critical reflection:
Are brands simply products of consumption, or do they evolve into systems of belief?