Brand communities and tribal consumption: What football fans teach us about loyalty

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Football is one of the clearest proofs that loyalty is not always rational. A fan can support a club for twenty years without receiving a salary, dividend or formal reward from that club. The team may disappoint them, break their heart, lose important matches and still command their attention the following week. In ordinary business language, this looks unreasonable. But in branding language, it is powerful. Football fans show us that the strongest brands are not merely bought; they are belonged to. They do not only sell products; they create identity, community and emotional ownership. A football fan base is a living brand community. It has symbols, colours, rituals, language, heroes, villains, memories and unwritten rules. The jersey is not just fabric. It is an identity worn on the body. The stadium is not just a venue. It is a temple of collective emotion. The chants are not just noise. They share a language. Even defeat becomes part of the story because loyal fans do not only consume victory; they consume meaning. This is what many companies fail to understand. They are busy looking for customers when they should be building believers. The idea of tribal consumption explains why people attach themselves so deeply to brands that represent something larger than utility. A fan does not support a team only because of performance. Performance may attract attention, but identity sustains loyalty. This is why some football clubs remain powerful global brands even when trophies are reduced. Their supporters are not merely following results; they are following history, belonging and inherited emotion. In many homes, football loyalty is passed from father to child like a family name. That is the highest form of brand transfer: when affection becomes culture. This has serious lessons for businesses. Many brands think loyalty comes from discounts, promotions and advertisements. Those things may attract buyers, but they rarely create commitment. Real loyalty comes when people see themselves inside the brand. Apple users, Harley-Davidson riders, Nike loyalists, football club supporters and even some university alumni behave in similar ways because the brand gives them a language of identity. It says something about who they are, what they value and the group they belong to. In that sense, a strong brand is not just a market offering; it is a social address. Football also teaches that repetition builds emotional memory. Fans return to matches, songs, debates, jerseys, transfer rumours and match-day rituals because repetition strengthens attachment. In business, repeat engagement works the same way. A customer who interacts with a brand regularly is more likely to develop familiarity, trust and preference. This is why digital communities, loyalty programmes, user groups, brand events and social media conversations matter. Deloitte Digital reported in 2025 that 76 percent of media and entertainment brands consider social media very or extremely important to their digital marketing strategy. This confirms what football has always known: communities are sustained by constant interaction, not occasional visibility. However, brand communities must be handled with care. The same passion that builds loyalty can also create anger when people feel betrayed. Football fans can defend a club fiercely, but they can also protest against poor management, expensive tickets, weak performance or loss of tradition. Customers behave the same way when brands violate trust. A strong community is not a passive crowd. It is an emotionally invested public. The more people care, the more they expect consistency, respect and authenticity. That is why brands must not exploit loyalty without nurturing it. The deeper lesson is that loyalty is spiritual before it is transactional. People stay where they feel seen, heard and emotionally recognised. Football fans teach us that the human being is not only a consumer looking for value; the human being is also a social creature looking for belonging. Any brand that understands this will stop shouting at the market and start gathering a community. It will stop asking only, “How do we sell more?” and begin asking, “What do people become when they associate with us?” In the end, football reminds us that the future of branding belongs to those who can build tribes without manipulating them, create emotional attachment without abusing trust and turn customers into communities without reducing people to numbers. The strongest brands of the future will not be the ones with the loudest adverts. They will be the ones whose customers can say, with pride and emotion, “This brand is part of who we are.” BY: Dr. Juliana Akushika AndohSenior Lecturer, UPSA/ BrandWithDrAndoh