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March 29, 2026

KKR or RR, the sponsor shadows the team! A case study of Brand Confusion!

Featured is the jersey of Rajasthan Royals. But no… look again. It’s actually the jersey of Kolkata Knight Riders. And yet, what hits you first? RR. Loud. Clear. Unmissable. That’s the point. In a high-speed, attention-deficit environment like the IPL, people don’t read they recognize. And recognition is built on shortcuts. In cricketing shorthand, RR = Rajasthan Royals. No second thoughts. No decoding required.

 Now enter this jersey. KKR walks in wearing its iconic purple. The crest is there. The identity exists. But right at the top, dominating visual attention, sits “RR” courtesy of sponsor RR Kabel. To the casual viewer, the brain doesn’t process sponsorship hierarchies or brand ownership. It simply maps what it already knows. And what it knows is this: RR belongs to Rajasthan Royals.

A sponsor has unintentionally hijacked a team’s mental space. From RR Kabel’s point of view, this is brilliant. Their brand is front and prominent, bold and memorable. In fact, they’re benefiting from an existing IPL association without paying for that specific team identity. That’s not just visibility that’s cognitive leverage.

What about KKR? Somewhere between sponsorship revenue and jersey design approvals, a basic question was missed: What will the viewer actually see in 2 seconds on screen? This is not a design problem. It’s not even a marketing problem.

This is a product thinking failure. Because a jersey is not fabric. It is a product of identity. And identity operates on:

  • Visual hierarchy
  • Instant recall
  • Cognitive clarity

When those are compromised, the product fails—no matter how strong the sponsorship deal is. This is where large organizations often slip. Decisions happen in silos. Sponsorship teams chase revenue. Branding teams focus on aesthetics. Execution teams ensure delivery. But very few step back and ask:

 “Does this make sense to the consumer?” Common sense says: Don’t let another team’s identity dominate yours on your own jersey. But common sense, as always, is not common. And that’s the lesson.

In Marketing and  in life, If your core identity is overshadowed by what surrounds it, you may have optimized for visibility… but you’ve lost ownership. And once identity is diluted, recall follows.

Keywords: Product Management blog, brand identity in sports, IPL marketing strategy, sponsorship branding mistakes, consumer perception marketing, visual branding errors, KKR jersey analysis, Rajasthan Royals branding, sports marketing case study, brand recall psychology, logo visibility impact, marketing insights IPL

#ProductManagement #Branding #MarketingStrategy #SportsMarketing #IPL #BrandIdentity #ConsumerBehavior #MarketingInsights #BrandStrategy #CaseStudy #VisualBranding #Sponsorship #MarketingLessons

2 comments:

  1. when I saw that, first thing came in my mind is why the RR jersey is in KKR jersey color later I realised it is an sponser. This made me thing that what if MI(Xaiomi) sponser on CSK jersey isn't this is stealing the attention from the least expected place that could be
    I totally agree with your point sir. Mistake like this not expected from big brands
    It is a good read sir.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It is clearly shows how strong sponsor visibility can sometimes create confusion with a team’s identity. It highlights an important marketing lesson that in fast-paced sports, clarity and instant recognition matter more than just visibility.

    ReplyDelete