Storyboard18 - Have you got game?: The message in Wordle's sensational rise
How Wordle can teach brands to hurdle over the competition


Tap. Swipe. Click. Share. Our lives today are a collection of imagined sounds. None of them is as sweet as the one sound we’re all accustomed to enjoying even without hearing it.
The sound of the ‘penny dropping’. Arriving at the right answer after wrestling with options. Exulting within at the deciphering of clues.
The digital world’s latest viral sensation, Wordle, is another descendant in a long lineage of games that have boosted some egos every day while befuddling others.
Its ancestors like Scrabble, Pokemon Go and Sudoku have captured the popular imagination at various times. Each carving a notch on the popular psyche. Each becoming a brand in its own right. Makes you wonder what brands can learn from these phenomena that give their consumers daily frissons of delight.
For one, they can do what every brand should aspire to but often falls short of achieving. Look past the tirelessly repeated but often misinterpreted term ‘gamification’ and you realise that observant brand builders can come away with a few simple truths worth pursuing.
Put it all together and what you have is what choice architects and decision scientists call a "habit loop."
The ‘cue’ occurs at a predictable frequency. The ‘routine’ creates a physical or mental response. And the ‘reward’—a payoff that tells your brain that this is something worth repeating in the future.
It’s no surprise that the New York Times has paid an undisclosed seven-figure sum to acquire the game from its creator. Think of all the brands that have built outsize value in the last few decades—Nike, Google, Apple—and you will see that they have tried to incorporate these principles, in one way or the other, into their product architecture and brand programmes.
Now check their market capitalisations. It doesn’t take deft puzzle-solving skills to understand why the ‘penny drop’ they enable amongst ardent users invariably finds its way to their bottom lines too.
Adrian Terron is Vice President, Corporate Brand and Marketing at the Tata Group. Views expressed are personal.
First Published: Feb 02, 2022, 19:26
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