Tuesday, December 17, 2019
Heres Why Your Branding Strategy Isnt Working
Heres Why Your Branding Strategy Isnt WorkingHeres Why Your Branding Strategy Isnt WorkingBranding is the image your company creates in the minds of customers. Many popular companies convey images that you probably know well, even if you dont use their products. The marketplace is littered with other offerings that have muddy brand images. They dont seem to stand for anything or anybody. If your product is in this category, there likely are reasons why. Branding looks easy until you try it. Major corporations spend millions making sure their message is just right. While few businesses have those resources, you can examine your product, your competitors, and your target audience. Whatever you do, be methodical in your approach and make sure youre satisfied with what you want to say before you ever present it publicly. Learn how to identify problems and address them appropriately. Missing Your Audience Branding that conflicts with the wants and needs of your target audience wont br ing results. If you design and sell elegant wristwatches for business professionals and for formal occasions, a logo, slogan, or advertising campaign that emphasizes active lifestyles would be missing the mark. Ways that branding efforts miss the target often are more subtle than this, but the fundamental lesson is that the company, the customers it is seeking, and its branding all need to align. In the consumer food industry, Smuckers has a wholesome family image for its line of jelly, jam, and preserves. Branding comparable to that of companies that sell male-oriented energy drinks wouldnt work. Smuckers knows its product and its space in the market. The Wrong Look In all forms of media, the company logo and the overall look of advertisements are as important as the look of the product. Select fonts and colors carefully because those decisions communicate a lot about your brand. Media companies usually update their looks regularly, to be seen as fresh, high-tech and trendy. Th eres a look to the USA Today newspaper thats much different from The New York Times. Neither paper could adopt the others look without causing a major disruption in what their readers expect to see. How often companies change their look can say a lot about their brand. Long-standing conservative brands have steady logos, changing rarely and only in small ways. Edgier products change more often to keep up with the times and trends. Take a page out of the book of Google, Yahoo, or Microsoft. When these companies update their corporate look, it is subtle. All three companies have billions of dollars in resources to change their logos if they wanted, but their executives know that isnt the correct strategy. Consider the consequences if you undergo a dramatic overhaul. An Inconsistent Message Beyond your logo, your company probably has a tagline thats used to represent everything you stand for. Popular examples include Just Do It, Breakfast of Champions, and Finger-Lickin Good. These standard examples are effective largely because they accurately define Nike, Wheaties, and KFC. Taglines are short statements designed carefully to best define a companys image. They differ from slogans in the sense that slogans are less permanent and often tied to a single marketing campaign. Taglines are designed to last. However, if you have a tagline that doesnt fit your companys place in the market, its unlikely to be memorable no matter how catchy or clever it might be. For example, a classic jupe radio station wont be successful with The Sounds of the 70s as its tagline if it also plays rock hits from the 60s and the 80s. If anything, a tagline so inconsistent with the actual product would most likely confuse customers and damage your brand identity. Impatience You may be tempted to change your logo or tagline regularly to stay fresh, but you risk not giving your audience enough time to digest what youre saying before you say something else. Your energy would be better s pent on spreading the logo and tagline you already have instead of starting over. To have this patience, its important to understand the difference between branding and individual marketing campaigns. Branding is about overall image and consistent with a companys mission. Marketing campaigns often are designed to have a short-term impact, while branding defines companies for generations. Nike has multiple marketing campaigns every year, and they can be abandoned or expanded on short notice. The swoosh logo and the Just Do It tagline, however, were given time to take hold and have lasted for decades. Sometimes, dramatic change is hiding a bigger problem. A struggling company might view a rebranding as a quick fix when money and time would be better spent on market research, product development, or staff training. Lacks Excitement A lack of excitement might be the hardest problem to overcome. You want your branding to be creative and excite your audience, but youre probably scared to push the boundaries too far, especially since you dont want to totally throw out your logo or do anything to upset your current customers. By playing it too safe, you may not turn off anyone, but your branding could bring yawns rather than interest. A campaign that says, Were the One would probably have customers wondering about the one that does what? A vague statement that can be applied to anything wont resonate with customers because they wont connect it to anything specific. The food industry is full of classic branding strategies that work. Burger Kings Have It Your Way campaign from decades ago is simple, easy to remember and was put to music. It worked by highlighting a specific service that was different from other hamburger chains, which did not take special orders. Apply branding principles that give your target audience a reason to see how and why you are different from the competition.
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