Most brands approach media strategy backwards. They decide where to show up first and then figure out what to say. The result is a presence that feels scattered, a message that shifts depending on the platform, and an audience that cannot quite articulate what the brand actually stands for.
Adam Gronski, who leads corporate marketing and sponsorship for PBS NewsHour and WETA in Washington, D.C., has spent more than two decades helping brands tell their stories across multiple media channels through the trusted lens of public media. “Strengthening your brand identity isn’t about being everywhere,” Gronski asserts. “It’s about being authentically you, wherever your audience is listening, watching, or engaging.”
Purpose Should Drive Platform, Not the Other Way Around
The question brands most often ask is where to tell their story. The question they should be asking is why. Platform decisions made without a clear answer to that question produce campaigns that are technically present and strategically hollow, visible without being meaningful, distributed without being coherent.
In public media, every sponsorship at PBS NewsHour begins with aligning a brand’s mission to the content it is associated with. Whether the connection is education, innovation, or community engagement, that alignment to purpose is what builds the long-term trust that no media spend alone can manufacture. “When audiences understand why you show up,” Gronski notes, “they start to believe in what you stand for.” Purpose first, platform second. Organizations that reverse it spend significant resources reaching audiences without actually moving them.
Consistency Means Clarity, Not Sameness
Audiences are sophisticated enough to recognize when a brand sounds like a different organization depending on where they encounter it. The tone is different on social. The message shifts in the broadcast spot. The live event feels disconnected from the digital campaign. That inconsistency does not read as creative versatility. It reads as a brand that does not know what it is.
Gronski draws a precise distinction that changes how consistency should be understood: it does not mean replicating the same execution across every channel. It means maintaining the same tone, values, and voice so that every touchpoint reinforces the same recognition and credibility, regardless of format.
Working with partners across national broadcasts like A Capitol Fourth and digital series tied to PBS NewsHour, his team designs campaigns that feel unified whether experienced on-air, online, or at live events. “When your voice is steady and authentic,” he reflects, “it becomes part of the audience’s daily experience, not just another ad in the mix.” That integration is what transforms a media presence from noise into identity.
Collaboration Extends What No Single Brand Can Build Alone
In a fragmented media landscape, no brand builds identity in isolation. The strongest brand-building happens when organizations partner with media properties, creators, and communities that already carry the trust the brand is trying to earn. That trust is not transferable only through proximity, it requires genuine alignment between what the brand stands for and what the content or community represents.
Strategic collaboration of this kind transforms sponsorship into shared storytelling. The brand is no longer interrupting an audience’s experience. It is contributing to it, showing up in a context where the audience’s guard is already down because the content has already earned their attention.
For brands navigating a media environment that continues to fragment, the organizations that stay anchored in purpose, maintain a consistent voice, and build the right collaborative relationships will not simply be present in the landscape. They will be part of it in a way that compounds over time.
Follow Adam Gronski on LinkedIn for more insights on brand identity, public media sponsorship, and building multi-platform strategies that connect with audiences through trust.