London : Los Angeles (LO:LA) has published "The Joy Deficit" guide, urging brands to rebuild emotional connection with their customers as a driver of meaningful growth.

-- Creative agency London : Los Angeles (LO:LA) has released a new guide examining what it calls “The Joy Deficit” — a widening gap between brand communication and emotional connection. The report argues that, despite a decade of data-driven optimization, brands have lost the very quality that once made them memorable: the ability to make people feel something.
Further details are available at https://www.thelolaagency.com/post/the-joy-deficit-why-brands-feel-cold-and-how-to-fix-it
Drawing on cultural and psychological insights, The Joy Deficit: Why Brands Feel Cold — and How to Fix It explores how marketing has become increasingly efficient yet emotionally hollow. In an age where consumers scroll past an estimated 6,000 brand messages daily, most interactions fail to resonate beyond basic awareness. The report suggests that as automation and algorithms have grown more precise, creativity and humanity have faded from the marketing equation.
The guide identifies several forces driving this erosion of emotional connection, including over-reliance on data analytics, content saturation, and a growing fear of creative risk. According to LO:LA, these forces have collectively reduced modern marketing to what it calls an “emotional flatline.” As the guide notes, “everything looks right and feels wrong.”
The business consequences of this disconnect are significant. Research from the Harvard Business Review found that emotionally connected customers are 52% more valuable on average than those who are merely satisfied. In that context, the “Joy Deficit” is not just a creative concern but a commercial one.
The report goes beyond critique, offering a roadmap for brands to reintroduce emotion, humanity, and joy into their storytelling. It encourages marketers to “feel first and measure second,” reclaim surprise as a creative tool, and design experiences that engage all the senses. LO:LA emphasizes that joy should not be treated as a trend but as a design principle; one that can transform how audiences perceive, remember, and advocate for a brand.
“Joy has become the most undervalued form of brand energy,” said a LO:LA spokesperson. “It’s what turns a message into meaning. The future belongs to brands that feel; those that dare to create work with humanity and heart.”
As the marketing industry continues to embrace automation and AI, LO:LA’s Joy Deficit guide calls for a return to emotional authenticity. The agency frames this not as nostalgia, but as necessity: in a marketplace overflowing with content, joy is the one quality that still cuts through the noise.
To access the full guide, or for more information on brand marketing, visit https://www.thelolaagency.com/post/the-joy-deficit-why-brands-feel-cold-and-how-to-fix-it
Contact Info:
Name: Nick Platt
Email: Send Email
Organization: London : Los Angeles (LO:LA)
Address: 840 Apollo Street Suite 100, El Segundo, CA 90245, United States
Website: https://www.thelolaagency.com
Source: PressCable
Release ID: 89176001
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