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The Art
of Successful Branding
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by:
Dina Giolitto
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Branding:
it’s a term that carries great weight in the world of advertising.
Successful branding is best illustrated by the world’s most prominent
corporations, but it’s no less important to the small business owner.
Your Brand is your identity; it’s every single puzzle piece, fitted
into the big picture of your company. From your name and logo to your
business philosophy and corporate mission; from your advertising
campaign message to your design elements; from your products and
services; all that is owned, produced, stated, sold and marketed by
your company falls under the broad heading of your Brand.
What exactly is a “brand?” The term probably originated at a time when
when ours was a strictly agricultural society. Ranchers take a branding
iron to their cattle, as a way to signify they OWN those cows.
Likewise, modern corporations choose a logo to brand their name into
the mind of the consumer. Every time you label an ad or website with
your company logo; every time you take a political stance on behalf of
your corporation, you’re putting your brand into effect. And if a brand
indicates ownership, then it should be your ultimate mission to
dominate, or own, your niche. Brand your company. Own the cow.
How do you determine your style of branding? Analyze your audience.
Zero in on the group you’re trying to reach. Are they male, female, or
both? What's the age group and economical level? What are their
spending habits, their values? How do they TALK? What are they
concerned about? What do they think they NEED? Where will their focus
be in six months? And most importantly, how does your marketable
product fit into the scheme? If you never really get to know your
audience, you can read all the marketing how-to strategies in the
world, and it isn't going to mean diddly-squat for your business. It
isn’t going to help you build your brand.
What’s the next step? Always, always, always put yourself in their
shoes. Jump right into their heads, if you can. Think of your audience
during the business-plan conception process. How do they communicate?
What do they find visually appealing? Are you marketing to senior
citizens? Use bigger fonts, a nostalgic tone, and a morally forthright
attitude. Is it the filthy, stinking rich whom you’re trying to
attract? Save the Crazy Eddie shtick, because money is no object here.
Every bit of energy used to promote your brand should be focused toward
winning over your key customer.
There will be a time when you completely lose sight of who you’re
trying to attract. This, in turn, dilutes the power of your brand.
You’ll be in the middle of writing an ad, when suddenly your head is
racing with potential buyer types. This happened to me once during my
writing stint with a digital media company who sold Santa Claus
greetings. In my sales letter, which went on for pages and pages, there
was no limit to what Santa could do! He could praise tiny tots for
using the potty. He could play matchmaker to a couple of young lovers.
He could patch up an argument you had with Aunt Freida in Topeka. All
of this was great, but it was really convoluting Who We Were as a
company, and our Santa was becoming a Jack Frost of all trades. It was
no good! So we went back to square one. And through simple words and a
more narrow focus on our original audience of children, we finally
captured the Magic of Christmas that we had originally intended to be
Our Brand.
Reflect your brand in everything you do; from your website design, to
your public relations, to how you go about selling your product. Once
you’ve done this, the next step is to create Brand Awareness. This is
achieved through consistency. You can dream up the most brilliant ad
campaign on the planet, but if you’re not consistent about putting it
in place, you’ll never establish brand recognizability.
If the tone of your company is “fun, light and noncontroversial”, steer
clear of anti-war demonstrations. If Arial is your font of choice, then
don’t go switching it up mid-campaign and putting out affiliate program
materials using Tahoma. If tongue-in-cheek humor is how you attract
attention, don’t line your website borders with super-mushy personal
ads. Ask yourself: will this resonate with my key customer? And use
your logo and company tagline wherever possible—in your email
correspondence, on your website, as your letterhead, on your business
cards, in your advertising and on your product packaging. Remind people
of who you are. Burn your brand into their minds.
To some extent, branding is following the herd... emulating respected
companies that capture what you’d like to be known for. Still, a wise
entrepreneur must never forget that today's success story is tomorrow's
dot-com that went under. "What sold" for someone else may not work for
your company. Just because Joe Baloney made millions selling with a
bilingual circus clown doesn't mean that will work for you... or that
anyone's even going to find it remotely interesting in six months. The
market changes like the tide, depending on what direction society is
going in. Where they were before, which way they're headed, and
wherever it's likely they'll end up... socially, economically,
ethically, politically, culturally, intellectually, psychologically,
philosophically.
How will you know that you’ve branded successfully? When people start
listening to you. Not just hearing what you say, but letting you call
the shots. You’ll know it when people start imitating you, too. You’ll
start seeing knock-offs of your products and your company image. This
may flatter you or it may annoy you, but when it happens, it’s your cue
to lead the pack in a new direction. That's how to stay on top of the
Branding Game.
The day that you find yourself functioning as a real, live spokesman
for a group of individuals, is the day you’ve achieved Brand
Recognition. The day that you make the front page news headlines is the
day you’ve become a household name. But a word to the wise: once your
brand achieves true power, someone will try and take you down. Remind
them that you own this cow.
Copyright 2005 Dina Giolitto. All rights reserved.
About the author:
Dina Giolitto is a New-Jersey based Copywriting Consultant with nine
years' industry experience. Her current focus is web content and web
marketing for a multitude of products and services although the bulk of
her experience lies in retail for big-name companies like Toys"R"Us.
Visit http://www.wordfeeder.comfor
rates and samples.
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