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Personal branding with Bernard Kelvin CLIVE: Brand imitation: Lessons, risks, and the way forward

By Francis

Copyright thebftonline

Personal branding with Bernard Kelvin CLIVE: Brand imitation: Lessons, risks, and the way forward

By Bernard Kelvin CLIVE

Not long ago, I was on a long drive. My phone battery was running dangerously low, and I had forgotten my car charger. The previous night, I hadn’t charged the phone fully either, so I was running out of power fast.

Along the way, I spotted a shop that looked promising, a bright, well-arranged phone accessories store. From outside, you could see neat displays of chargers, cables, headphones, and other gadgets. I pulled over, walked in, and asked for a charger.

The shopkeeper confidently presented a range of options. He assured me that all were “good quality,” and encouraged me to test one. As I looked around the shop more carefully, something caught my eye.

Almost everything in that store was an imitation. Ninety-nine percent of the products carried names that looked familiar but were not quite right. A “NOKRI” instead of Nokia. “Samsong” instead of Samsung. A tiny tweak in spelling, logo, or packaging, but the clear intention was to imitate trusted brands.

The young man selling them believed in what he was offering. He insisted these were reliable and affordable alternatives. But to me, the reality was different. These were products built on deception, meant to confuse customers who weren’t paying close attention.

That visit left me reflecting. Why do some businesses rely so heavily on imitation? What makes a brand so attractive that others feel the need to copy it? And more importantly, how can original brands guard against this without losing focus on their core mission?

Every strong brand, at some point, faces imitation. It’s almost inevitable. The better your product, the more likely someone, somewhere, will try to replicate or counterfeit it. Books get pirated. Music gets duplicated. Software gets hacked. Shoes, phones, detergents, clothing, you name them. Once people see that a product is valuable, they will attempt to ride on its name.

But imitation carries two sides: it can be a compliment, and at the same time, a threat. I would like to explore both. I’ll share real-life stories, lessons from the market, and practical ways brands can protect themselves while still growing boldly and authentically.

Why Great Brands Get Imitated

One of the first truths to settle in your mind as a brand builder is this: imitation is often the tax you pay for excellence. People rarely copy what isn’t working. If your product or service is being imitated, it usually means you are doing something right.

Think about it, nobody bothers pirating a book that nobody is reading. No one wastes energy duplicating software that has no users. Nobody forges a brand that consumers don’t respect. Imitation is often the strongest signal that your brand has crossed a certain threshold of relevance.

When I stood in that phone accessories shop, staring at the “NOKRI” cables and “Samsong” chargers, it struck me: these big names had become so dominant that their identity was a magnet. Even a poor imitation of their names carried some weight in the marketplace.

To the casual customer, seeing a name that looked familiar was enough to assume quality. That is the hidden advantage strong brands enjoy—the mere recognition of their names influences purchase decisions.

The same is true in publishing. For years, I have seen authors complain about piracy. But think about it: a pirated book is hardly ever a poorly selling one. It’s the bestsellers that get copied. If a book has no impact, no one takes the trouble to scan, print, or circulate it illegally. So, strangely, piracy is proof of value—though it’s still a threat that must be dealt with wisely.

We see this across industries:

Fashion: Designers in Milan or Paris showcase a new design, and within weeks, fast-fashion brands churn out look-alike versions.Technology: Apple launches a new iPhone, and within months, cheap replicas hit markets from Accra to Bangkok.Music & Film: Big hits are the ones duplicated on flash drives and streaming platforms.

The principle is simple: only the visible, valuable, and desirable get imitated.

Now, should brands take pride in being imitated? In a sense, yes, it’s a sign that your work carries weight. But that’s only one side of the coin. The other side is dangerous, because imitation can also dilute trust, confuse customers, and undercut genuine innovation. And that’s where the challenge lies.

The Dangers of Imitation

While imitation can signal that a brand has achieved recognition, it comes with a heavy cost. Imitation is never neutral; it creates ripples that affect three groups—the consumer, the original brand, and the imitator.

The Consumer’s Loss

The first victim of imitation is usually the unsuspecting customer. Picture someone walking into that same shop I did. They see a familiar name on a charger and assume it’s original. They buy it, only to discover after a few weeks that the charger burns out or damages their phone. Trust is broken, and the customer pays the price for what they thought was a smart purchase.

Poor-quality imitations often fail in performance and durability. They may even pose health and safety risks. Fake medicines, for example, have endangered lives across Africa and Asia. Counterfeit electrical appliances have caused fires in homes. When consumers can’t trust what they’re buying, the whole marketplace suffers.

The Original Brand’s Struggle

For genuine brands, imitation chips away at credibility. Imagine working tirelessly to build a name, only for someone else to ride on it cheaply. Customers who get burned by fakes may wrongly blame the original brand. Over time, this erodes loyalty. A consumer who buys a counterfeit, thinking it’s real, may walk away saying, “This brand has fallen in quality,” when in truth, they never owned the authentic product.

Imitation also drains resources. Original companies are forced to spend heavily on legal battles, tracking counterfeiters, and educating customers about how to spot genuine products. Instead of focusing purely on innovation and service, brands are distracted by fighting shadows in the market.

The Imitator’s Trap

At first glance, imitation looks like an easy way to profit. Why spend years building when you can tweak someone else’s logo and ride their popularity? But in the long run, imitation is a dead end.

First, imitators rarely gain long-term trust. The market may tolerate them for a while, but eventually, consumers catch on. Second, they lock themselves out of innovation. By depending on others’ ideas, imitators never truly discover their own creativity or identity. They survive only as long as someone else is leading the way.

And let’s not forget the legal risk. Brands that are serious about protection will pursue lawsuits, seize goods, and blacklist companies involved in counterfeiting. Many have been shut down overnight.

So, while imitation might look like a shortcut to profit, it’s actually a trap. It undermines consumers, damages originals, and cripples imitators.

Protecting Your Brand

Knowing that imitation is inevitable, the wise brand doesn’t fold its arms. Protection is not optional; it is a responsibility. If you believe in the quality of what you are building, then you must guard it like a treasure.

Intellectual Property (IP) Matters

The first step is legal. Every serious brand needs to secure its intellectual property—copyrights, trademarks, and patents. These are not just fancy certificates; they are shields. They give you the right to challenge anyone who attempts to duplicate your work.

If you have a unique name, register it as a trademark. If you’ve written a book, secure the copyright. If you’ve designed an invention, patent it. Many small businesses in Africa overlook this, thinking it’s for big corporations. But the truth is, the earlier you secure your rights, the stronger your position when disputes arise.

Stay Visible and Educate Your Market

Another layer of protection is visibility. Brands must constantly educate their customers on how to recognize authentic products. From holograms on medicine packs to serial numbers on electronics, small actions can make a big difference. When consumers know how to identify the original, fakes lose their power.

In fact, some global brands use imitation as a teaching moment. They create campaigns that say, “If it doesn’t look like this, it isn’t ours.” This keeps customers alert and loyal.

Quality is the Strongest Shield

At the end of the day, paperwork and campaigns are important, but the strongest protection is uncompromising quality. A fake will always fall short sooner or later. If you consistently deliver excellence, your real customers will stick with you, even when imitations flood the market.

I recall a detergent brand that entered the Ghanaian market years ago. At first, people assumed it was just another knock-off. But over time, the brand won customers by being consistently good. Even though cheaper imitations surfaced, they couldn’t match the performance. Today, that detergent competes shoulder-to-shoulder with global giants.

Choose Your Battles

Don’t sweat the small stuff. Not every imitation deserves a lawsuit. Some fakes are too insignificant to waste resources on. The key is discernment. Guard against those that pose real threats, but don’t be distracted by every shadow. Sometimes, letting the market expose poor imitations naturally is wiser than chasing them endlessly.

Protecting your brand is both legal and practical. It is about shielding what you’ve built, but also about keeping your promise to customers intact.

Building a Competing Brand Instead of Copying

When I stood in that accessories shop, another question struck me: If these imitation products are really “as good as the original,” why don’t their makers simply build their own brand? Why not give it a distinct name, a clear identity, and let it compete in the market?

Imitation feels like an easy road, but the truth is, there is room for everyone in the marketplace. You don’t have to pretend to be someone else to find customers.

A Lesson from the Detergent Aisle

Let me give you an example. Some years ago, a new detergent entered the Ghanaian market. At first, people were sceptical. They assumed it was just another copy of the major global names. But the company behind it did something bold: they positioned the product under its own brand identity. They focused on quality and consistency.

As time passed, customers discovered that this detergent was not only cheaper but also just as good as the big names. It didn’t need to hide behind an imitation logo or a misspelled name. It stood on its own merit. Today, that detergent is not merely surviving—it has carved out a substantial market share.

Why Copy When You Can Compete?

Here’s the point: if your product truly has quality, you don’t need imitation. You can step out boldly with your own colors, your own logo, your own tagline. Will it be easy? No. But the market rewards courage.

The global marketplace is huge, and every segment has room. Not everyone can afford premium brands. Not everyone wants the cheapest option either. That leaves a vast middle ground where authentic, well-built alternatives can thrive. Instead of confusing the market with look-alikes, why not fill that gap honestly?

Find Your Niche

The secret is to find your niche and serve it well. Maybe the big brands produce a product at a premium price. You could offer something with nearly the same quality but more affordable for everyday users. Or perhaps you can add a feature they’ve overlooked, something that matters to your local market.

When you serve a niche authentically, your customers will become your marketers. Word-of-mouth spreads quickly when people find a brand that truly meets their needs. That’s how movements start—not by imitation, but by originality and consistency.

The point is, if you believe in your product or service, my advice is simple: stop imitating, start competing.

Learning the Right Way from Big Brands

Now, let’s be clear: not all imitation is harmful. There is such a thing as good imitation—the kind that learns from best practices without copying blindly.

Big brands have lessons every small business can borrow:

Customer service: How do they treat their clients? What systems do they put in place to keep loyalty strong?Consistency: Notice how their packaging, quality, and messaging remain steady over time. That consistency builds trust.Innovation: Study how they respond to change. Most global brands didn’t become leaders by staying the same; they evolved.

The difference is this: don’t steal their name, their logo, or their colors. Instead, imitate their discipline, their culture, their attention to detail. Then add your own creativity on top. That’s how small brands grow into strong ones—by learning the principles, not stealing the labels.

Now. It’s your turn. What do you need to do about your current brand?

Remember, I’m your brand and publishing consultant.

Bernard is a leading authority on personal branding and digital book publishing in Africa. With over a decade of experience in digital publishing, he has been a trusted consultant for entrepreneurs, pastors, and individuals looking to build their brands and write their books.

To learn more about Bernard and his work, visit www.BKC.name.