The Visibility Shift: Why Private Equity Firms Must Compete on Brand, Not Just Returns

Posted on May 26, 2026 by Danielle Anderson

The shift: from quiet operators to visible competitors 

Private equity has grown up: more capital, more strategies, more managers, and a much bigger role in building, transforming and scaling companies across the economy. Performance, relationships and discretion still matter, but they now play out in a far more crowded field. In most fundraising processes, you’re not being judged in a vacuum; you’re being compared directly with a handful of peers. The question is less “are you good enough?” and more “do you genuinely stand out from the other firms in the mix?”

At the same time, private markets are becoming more visible to regulators, employees, communities and the media as products move into wealth and semi-liquid channels. This is where visibility stops being optional. According to our latest research, Intelligent Brands, C-Suite expectations of private equity firms’ Intelligent Brand behaviour is 6x higher than how they are actually perceived.

An Intelligent Brand is one that makes its expertise, thinking and judgment visible and compelling to the people who matter most. For PE firms, that means going beyond credentials and track record to articulate a genuine point of view — on sectors, on value creation, on where the market is heading. It's what turns a capable manager into a trusted partner, and a trusted partner into the default choice when capital is being allocated.

Firms that can explain who they are and how they think have an edge when LPs, boards and investment committees are weighing up their options.

    Firms fail to differentiate, with little beyond logos separating one set of marketing materials from another. That is where how you frame your story quietly becomes a source of advantage.

A more crowded market – and a blurrier story

Across buyout, infrastructure, private credit and hybrids, many firms now legitimately describe themselves as flexible, solutions-driven partners offering bespoke capital in complex situations. On paper, a lot of firms can underwrite the same deal in the same sector on fundamentally similar terms. The positioning that shows up on pitch decks and websites often reflects that: “specialist generalists”, “flexible capital partners”, “bespoke solutions across cycles”.

The risk is obvious to anyone running communications: the narrative around different firms starts to converge into the same handful of phrases. Firms fail to differentiate, with little beyond logos separating one set of marketing materials from another. That is where how you frame your story quietly becomes a source of advantage. Call it brand, call it reputation – in practice, it is the shorthand investors use to decide where the next allocation of capital should go.

Returns under pressure, scrutiny turned up 

The macro backdrop has also become less forgiving. Higher financing costs and more expensive debt make it harder to generate the same returns in capital-intensive and hard-asset strategies; global fundraising has become more challenging and more polarised between top-tier and everyone else. Deals still get done, but with a thinner margin for error and fewer easy fixes if things don’t go to plan. Internally, investment and risk teams are already adapting to that reality.

LPs are doing the same. They are not only asking whether a manager can deploy capital, but how that manager thinks about downside protection, discipline and risk when the cycle turns. When several managers present similar numbers and similar deals, softer signals start to carry more weight: how clearly a firm can articulate its edge, how consistently it has behaved across cycles, whether it feels like a genuinely “safe pair of hands”. That narrative is what travels into the rooms you are not in – the CIO’s summary slide and the IC chair’s quick read-out before decisions are made. The firms that make those conversations easier tend to find capital easier to raise.

Why “how you show up” is part of the growth recipe

Given all of this, the way a firm shows up – its story, its language, the cues it sends – has drifted closer to the commercial core. This is not about glossy campaigns or trying to sound like a consumer brand. It’s about whether your current narrative does justice to the sophistication of what you already do, and whether it makes life easier or harder for people deciding between you and a shortlist of credible peers.

For marketing and leadership teams, this manifests in very practical ways. It means a smoother path from first meeting to commitment, fewer conversations where you are treated as interchangeable with peers, and more moments where decision-makers can confidently argue for choosing you. Over time, that clarity shows up in the numbers, with less friction in fundraising, stronger re-ups and better support for new strategies. There is good evidence from listed markets that strong, distinctive brands are associated with better financial performance, suggesting that these effects are not just cosmetic but commercially material.

In the UK, an IPA-commissioned Brand Finance study found that in 2021 the 50 strongest brands delivered shareholder returns about 30% higher than the FTSE 100. A subset of companies where a large part of the business’s value came from brand reputation and recognition did even better, outperforming the index by close to 80% over the same period. 

Distinctiveness as a growth driver rather than a ‘nice to have’

All of this points to a simple question. As you look ahead to your next fundraise, does the story you’re telling today still fit the market you’re walking into and clearly set your firm apart? In a world where capital is harder to raise and LPs have more choice, distinctiveness is not a nice to have; it’s a growth driver that shapes how fast you close, how big you can go, and how often investors come back.

Taking a hard look at how you show up in the market means making sure partners, your materials, and your LPs are all telling the same, distinctive story. When firms get this right, brand becomes a quiet economic lever – supporting better fundraising outcomes, smoother launches for new strategies, and ultimately, more capital to put to work on the terms you want.

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