S3 E63: How 150 Brands Achieved Disproportionate Growth, Making Bluetooth a Household Name, and The Category Fallacy
Tue Jan 27 2026
In this episode, Brand Strategist Jack Ferguson hosts Strategic Growth Architect Mats Georgson, former Global Brand Director at Sony Ericsson, to discuss how brands achieve large, sustained growth and how most category-based thinking caps it.
Mats was the first marketer to work on Bluetooth, giving him deep, practical insight into rapid global adoption, and years later completed a research project analysing how 150 brands achieved disproportionate growth. Together, Jack and Mats explore why some brands defy gravity, while others struggle to break free of their category constraints.
Jack and Mats discuss:
- How brands grow via Demand Point Constellations
- How the iPhone leveraged demand points to grow
- Launching Bluetooth and the story behind its overwhelming success
- How Mats saw a client quickly jump 20% in revenue without advertising
- Uber’s Demand Point Constellation
- How to escape the gravitational pull of a category
- Why innovation is hard for marketers and what can be done about it
- Why few brands grow primarily through gaining market share
- The problem with comms and advertising being asked to do things they can’t do
- Why marketers need to think like detectives
Helpful Links:
Mats’ Demand Point Constellation Thesis
Links to Jack:
Jack's LinkedIn Profile
Jack's Website
Links to Mats:
Mats’ LinkedIn Profile
Mats’ Website
Links to The Push:
The Push LinkedIn Page
The Push on TikTok
The Push on Instagram
The Push on YouTube Music
The Push Website
Referenced in Episode:
Blue Ocean Strategy
Ehrenberg Bass Institute
Apple losing its App Store trademark case
Category Entry Point
Jobs to be Done Framework
More
In this episode, Brand Strategist Jack Ferguson hosts Strategic Growth Architect Mats Georgson, former Global Brand Director at Sony Ericsson, to discuss how brands achieve large, sustained growth and how most category-based thinking caps it. Mats was the first marketer to work on Bluetooth, giving him deep, practical insight into rapid global adoption, and years later completed a research project analysing how 150 brands achieved disproportionate growth. Together, Jack and Mats explore why some brands defy gravity, while others struggle to break free of their category constraints. Jack and Mats discuss: - How brands grow via Demand Point Constellations - How the iPhone leveraged demand points to grow - Launching Bluetooth and the story behind its overwhelming success - How Mats saw a client quickly jump 20% in revenue without advertising - Uber’s Demand Point Constellation - How to escape the gravitational pull of a category - Why innovation is hard for marketers and what can be done about it - Why few brands grow primarily through gaining market share - The problem with comms and advertising being asked to do things they can’t do - Why marketers need to think like detectives Helpful Links: Mats’ Demand Point Constellation Thesis Links to Jack: Jack's LinkedIn Profile Jack's Website Links to Mats: Mats’ LinkedIn Profile Mats’ Website Links to The Push: The Push LinkedIn Page The Push on TikTok The Push on Instagram The Push on YouTube Music The Push Website Referenced in Episode: Blue Ocean Strategy Ehrenberg Bass Institute Apple losing its App Store trademark case Category Entry Point Jobs to be Done Framework