Logos Lie. Names Distract. Ideas Matter.

I read a new book recently that sent me spiralling.

It made me realize just how primitive… and primal we truly are.
Not just in abstract terms, but in the small, everyday ways we move through business.
Ways I’ve caught myself acting that, when I’m honest, don’t make a lot of sense.
When we’re unsure, we defer to the person with the biggest platform.
When we’re rushed, we grab the book with the blurbs from famous authors.
When we’re overwhelmed, we default to the logo… which could just be the brand that paid the most to be top of mind.
It’s embarrassing to admit, but I’ve trusted someone because of their status more than the logic they produce (on countless occasions).

It’s old wiring in a new world.

Status is the shortcut our brains love when the signal is noisy.
If someone has the mic and the followers, we lend them our attention.
We start doubting our own judgment if their perspective doesn’t match ours.
We treat proximity to stature as proof of substance.

And I do it too.

I’ve nodded along to half-baked ideas… not because the ideas were sharp, but because others (who I respect) were doing it.
I’ve second-guessed myself when someone with more “shine” pushed back.
I’ve relaxed into a strategy deck because it opened with a name that I trust.

Borrowed shine can blind you.

A product isn’t better because a famous founder is behind it.
A leader isn’t wiser because a conference puts them on the main stage.
A wealthy entrepreneur isn’t necessarily the one building the best products or services.
A “successful person” isn’t always that much smarter than you are.

But we believe it… we defer to it… and that’s the wrestle.

Because often the “who” lands more credibly than the “what.”
The person overshadows the product.
The sheen overshadows the evidence.

And here’s the part that I’ve been thinking more deeply about:

Does status equal greatness?
If you build, create, lead… this matters.
Because the temptation to chase those with status is everywhere.
And status looks different for all of us.

I’ve been trying to install a new reflex.

When a name makes me nod, I ask: Would I still nod if I didn’t know the name?
When a logo makes me want to buy, I ask: Would this product stand naked, without the brand behind it?
When the crowd claps, I ask: Am I hearing the idea… or the delivery?

For my own work, I try to flip the script:

Show the work… evidence beats aura.
Keep the receipts… process beats posture.
Play the long game… consistency beats accolades.

None of this is easy.

Because our brains love shortcuts.
But every shortcut has a toll… and too often, it’s paid in missed opportunities and mediocre picks that just had someone we know, like and trust behind it.

Oh, the book is Anointed: The Extraordinary Effects of Social Status in a Winner-Take-Most World by Toby Stuart (and I loved it/can’t stop thinking about it).

Toby was my guest on this week’s Thinking With Mitch Joel Podcast
We dug into how status gets conferred (not declared), why “who” so often crowds out “what” and how we can build in a world that still acts in this very primal, tribal way.

So, the next time you’re nodding along, ask yourself: is it the work that’s moving me… or just the status of the person presenting it?

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Published on September 16, 2025 10:11
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Six Pixels of Separation

Mitch Joel
Insights on brands, consumers and technology. A focus on business books and non-fiction authors.
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