There is a moment in many employee-owned companies when the story sounds complete.
“We are employee-owned.”
It is a powerful statement. It signals commitment. It suggests accountability. It tells customers, partners, and prospective employees that the people inside the business have something personal at stake.
But here is the hard truth: employee ownership is not a culture strategy.
It is a structure.
A powerful structure, yes. A meaningful structure, absolutely. But still a structure. And, like any structure, it creates value only when people know how to use it.
Think of employee ownership as giving everyone a key to the building. Brand culture teaches people what kind of business they are building inside it.
That distinction matters now because many mid-market B2B companies are facing a market that does not reward vague pride. It rewards speed, trust, consistency, expertise, and customer confidence. It rewards companies whose people know how to make the brand stronger in the moments that matter.
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The Ownership Gap
Employee ownership answers one important question:
Who has a stake?
Brand culture answers a different question:
What must we do every day to make the brand promise real?
The gap between those two questions is where many companies lose value.
An employee-owner may understand that better company performance can improve personal financial outcomes. But that does not mean they understand what improves brand value.
They may know the company wants growth. But that does not mean they know which behaviors create customer trust.
They may care deeply about the business. But care without clarity can become scattered energy.
This is why employee ownership should not be treated as the culture. It should be treated as an asset that culture can activate.
The National Center for Employee Ownership reports that employee ownership tends to improve corporate performance and employee financial well-being. That is a strong foundation. But it is still a foundation. It does not automatically define how people should sell, serve, solve, or lead.
The Four P’s Of Ownership Culture
To make employee ownership useful, leaders need to translate it into a working brand culture. A simple way to do that is through four P’s:
1. Purpose: What are we here to make possible for customers, employees, and partners?
2. Promise: What can customers count on us to deliver, no matter where or how they experience us?
3. Practices: What behaviors make that promise real every day?
4. Proof: Where can customers, employees, and leaders see that ownership is creating value?
Without these four P’s, ownership remains abstract. It becomes something people are proud of, but not something they know how to use.
With them, ownership becomes practical. It becomes a set of decisions, habits, and standards that customers can feel.
Pride Is Not Enough
Pride matters. In employee-owned companies, it can be one of the most powerful emotional forces in the business.
But pride alone does not create a differentiated customer experience.
Border States, one of the largest 100% employee-owned electrical distributors in the United States, makes that point. The company serves construction, industrial, and utility customers through a large branch network, where culture has to travel through thousands of daily decisions. When Jason Seger became President and CEO, he spoke about serving the company’s employee-owners and connected leadership directly to listening to customers and delivering consistently high levels of service.
That connection is important.
The strongest employee-owned companies do not stop at “our people care.” They ask a more demanding question: How does that care show up for the customer?
Does it show up in a faster response?
Better problem-solving?
Smarter recommendations?
More reliable follow-through?
Greater accountability when something goes wrong?
A stronger sense that the customer is dealing with people who own the outcome, not just the transaction?
That is where brand culture earns its keep. It transforms pride into behavior.
Culture Is What Customers Experience
Leaders often talk about culture as if it lives inside the company.
It does not.
Culture leaves the building every day.
It rides with the delivery. It speaks through the salesperson. It appears in how a problem gets handled. It becomes visible when a customer is frustrated, a shipment is late, or a team has to decide whether to do what is easy or what is right.
Van Meter, a 100% employee-owned electrical and automation distributor, has expressed this idea well. CEO Lura McBride has described culture as the outcome of what employee-owners feel, think, say, and do, tying ownership to alignment, education, empowerment, and the creation of lasting value. That is the right frame. Culture proves its value when a company has to turn a promise into shared behavior across a larger, more complex system.
At The Blake Project, we saw this clearly in our work with UCX, the unified company created from Belknap White, JJ Haines, and Swiff-Train. The business did not need a name change alone. It needed a culture capable of delivering the promise behind the name. “Ultimate Customer Experience” could not live as a corporate claim. It had to become a shared standard for how people served customers, made decisions, handled handoffs, and worked across legacy company lines.
That is where brand culture becomes real. It takes the idea of customer experience out of marketing language and puts it into the operating behavior of the business. For UCX, the opportunity was to help people see the new brand not as something imposed on them, but as a clearer expression of what the combined company had to become. The work was about alignment, belief, and behavior. Without that, a new brand is just a sign on the building.
Culture is not a poster. It is a pattern.
And customers read patterns quickly.
They know when a company is aligned.
They know when people care.
They know when employees have authority.
They know when a promise is real.
They also know when ownership is only a line in the “About Us” section.
The Blake Project turns brand clarity into culture, trust, and growth.
Growth Makes Culture Harder
When a company is small, culture moves through proximity. People internalize expectations by observing how decisions are made, how customers are treated, how problems are solved, and how leaders respond when the business is under pressure. The founder’s judgment, the company’s origin story, and the unwritten rules of “how we do things here” are close enough for people to feel them.
Growth changes that. As a company expands across markets, locations, systems, and acquired businesses, culture has to travel farther than relationships can carry it. What once felt natural becomes uneven. What once moved through daily contact begins to depend on interpretation. A larger company can still have a strong culture, but only if leaders stop relying on osmosis and start giving people a clearer language for what the brand requires.
This is where brand culture becomes strategic. It gives growth a standard. It helps leaders decide what should remain local and what must become shared. It protects the trust built close to the customer while giving the larger enterprise a more coherent identity. The goal is not to erase the pride, history, or customer intimacy that made each local business valuable. The goal is to connect those strengths to a larger promise that employees can understand, and customers can recognize.
McNaughton-McKay is a useful example of this kind of opportunity. As a 100% employee-owned company operating across multiple businesses, it faces a growth challenge that is not just operational. It is cultural and commercial. The company has to protect the local trust that each business has earned while creating a clearer enterprise identity to support growth. That work is not cosmetic. It determines whether employee ownership becomes a shared brand advantage or remains a collection of proud local cultures operating under a broader corporate name.
The Brand Culture Flywheel
Here is the practical model.
Employee-owned companies grow stronger when they create a Brand Culture Flywheel:
- Clarity creates confidence.
People understand what the company stands for and why customers choose it. - Confidence creates better decisions.
Employees know how to act without waiting for permission. - Better decisions create customer trust.
Customers experience consistency, competence, and care. - Customer trust creates preference.
The company becomes easier to choose and harder to replace. - Preference creates growth.
Growth strengthens the value of the employee-owners’ collective ownership.
Then the flywheel turns again.
This is the simple but often-missed point: employee-owners do not build value because they own shares. They build value because their decisions make the brand more trusted, more distinctive, and more useful to customers.
What Leaders Must Teach
If leaders want employee ownership to drive brand growth, they have to teach more than financial participation. They have to teach the business in a way that people can use. Employees need to understand what makes the company valuable beyond its products and services. They need to understand why customers choose the company when the decision is not obvious, when competitors look similar, and when price becomes the easiest point of comparison.
They also need a practical understanding of the brand promise. Not as language on a website, but as a standard for judgment. A promise becomes real only when people know how to apply it under pressure. That requires examples, repetition, and permission to act in ways that protect the customer relationship and strengthen the brand.
This is where leadership often falls short. Leaders announce values, celebrate ownership, and assume people will connect the dots. But most employees need the dots connected. They need to see how their daily work affects customer confidence, how customer confidence affects preference, and how preference affects enterprise value. Without that education, ownership remains an idea people support but may not know how to practice. With it, ownership becomes a clear standard for how people think, decide, and act.
Brand is not the marketing department’s job. It is the accumulated effect of decisions made across the business. Marketing may express the promise, but employees prove it or disprove it every day.
Ownership says, “This Is Ours.” Brand Culture Says “This Is How We Make It Worth More.”
This is the point leaders cannot afford to miss. Employee ownership gives people a stake in the company, but it does not automatically give them a standard for building its value. It can create pride, loyalty, and commitment, but pride without direction does not guarantee customer trust or growth.
Brand culture closes that gap. It turns ownership into a way of working that customers can feel. It helps people understand how the brand promise becomes real in moments of pressure, ambiguity, and inconvenience, especially when protecting trust costs more than taking the easier path.
The next advantage for employee-owned and growth-oriented companies may come from teaching people how to build brand value through the decisions they already make every day.
For many companies, that answer will define the next chapter of growth.
Dr. Derrick Daye is the Managing Partner of The Blake Project and Publisher of Branding Strategy Insider.
At The Blake Project, we help leaders turn brand into a disciplined driver of financial performance — strengthening pricing power, competitive position, and enterprise value. Email us to start a conversation about enduring profitable growth. For The EBITDA.
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