ComStrat - The bridge between brand strategy and media strategyCommunication strategy is the living instruction manual that translates a brand’s positioning (who you are and why you matter) into the practical, timed, channel-by-channel plan that makes people notice, understand and act. Think of it as the glue between brand strategy (purpose, tone, value proposition, positioning) and media strategy (audience targeting, channel mix, placements, measurement). When it works, messaging, creative, timing and delivery all reinforce each other. When it’s missing, creative sings and media delivers, but the message never lands in the way the brand intended. ![]() Historically, marketing functions were siloed. Brand thinking lived with creative or advertising agencies and client marketing teams. Media planning and buying sat with media agencies. PR handled earned coverage. The late 20th century gave us IMC (Integrated Marketing Communications), a philosophy meant to bridge these gaps. However, even then, communication strategy was often placed wherever the dominant budget or agency relationship lived. That legacy still lingers with fragmented ownership, inconsistent briefs, and a tendency to combine tactical execution with strategic intent. Today’s communications landscape is an ecosystem of constant motion. Channels multiply; from social and search to streaming TV, influencer platforms, programmatic, and experiential activations, each with its own creative demands and audience behaviour. Delivery is dynamic; real-time optimisation and programmatic buying mean campaigns evolve mid-flight. Content is relentless; brands need endless variations of copy, imagery, video and formats. Measurement pressure is immense; media is performance-driven while brands fight to protect long-term equity measures like salience and preference. Amid this fragmentation, communication strategy has never been more critical, or more endangered. Which brings us to that the million-rand question, who is responsible? In practice, creative agencies typically own the message, tone and core visual assets. Some have expanded into media planning; others stay firmly in storytelling. Media agencies own audience, channels, buying and analytics, and increasingly drive campaign strategy due to their access to data and spend. Comms/PR agencies manage earned influence, reputation and advocacy. Client-side marketing teams should own the integrated outcome, however, often don’t have the in-house communication strategy expertise to operationalise it across all partners. So, who should own it? Ideally, the brand, through the CMO or Head of Marketing, should be accountable for the overarching communication strategy. But the operational delivery should sit with a cross-disciplinary communication strategy team that includes strategists from creative, media, data and digital. This hybrid model ensures that the “why” (brand intent) and the “how” (channel execution) stay perfectly aligned. Across the industry, four models dominate:
The biggest failure mode? A missing middle. No one explicitly owns the translation layer, the connective tissue that turns brand stories into media-ready narratives. That’s what communication strategy is supposed to be. To add to the many layers, AI enters the equation, disruption or the great enabler. Artificial Intelligence is redefining how we plan, produce and distribute communication. It’s not a future conversation, it’s here now. AI is reshaping communication strategy in three fundamental ways:
In short, AI doesn’t replace communication strategy, it magnifies its importance. Without clear communication strategy parameters, AI can just as easily amplify inconsistency as it can efficiency. To make communication strategy tangible in modern marketing teams, it helps to formalise the practical framework process:
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Contributed by Nicole Kock on behalf of the AMF Board.About the AMFThe Advertising Media Forum (AMF) is a collective of media agencies and individuals including media strategists, planners, buyers and consultants through whom 95% of all media expenditure in South Africa is bought. The AMF advises and represents relevant organisations and aims to create open channels of communication and encourage and support transparent policies, strategies and transactions within the industry. For more information on the AMF, visit www.amf.org.za For comment on the industry issue covered in this editorial, please contact: Or
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