How Essential Is Having an Updated, Brand Marketing Strategy to Your Bottom Line?

  • You sell products and/or services to B2C and/or B2B target audiences.

  • You‘ve been in business for years, have done fairly well, and after all this time are certain you know how to profile who wants and purchases your offering and the best ways to reach and communicate with them.

  • So, why bother spending time, brain power, and maybe some money developing a formal, strategic brand marketing document?

First off, let’s look at what a “brand” is.

For veteran providers of goods and/or services, this may seem like a no-brainer.  But, based on my 45+ years of experience, please indulge me, just in case your definition could be a tad off the mark. (Truth: If I had a dollar for every prospect or client – even some folks from large, publicly-traded companies – who said, “I want to rebrand” and meant updating the logo or devising a fresh tagline, well, I’d have lotsa dollars.)

A brand is not a logo, a tagline or the two together – Name, symbol, color palette, and/or broad recognition of your “snappy tagline,” while certainly signposts to the brand, are not, in and of themselves, makers of a brand. Credible, consistent performance, delivery, and messaging/imagery supporting and reflecting that performance and delivery form the foundation of the brand.     

So, again: What’s a brand, and why is a cohesive brand so critical for promoting awareness, interest, engagement, and loyalty to your offering?

For my money, the late, great, marketing strategist, Al Reis, put it  best: A brand, he said, is “ a singular idea or concept that you own inside the mind of the prospect.”  Its foundation is trust; a signature, believable, focused impression that resides with the person or persons who have encountered a product, service, family of products/services, the company (and/or the person, e.g.) offering them. 

Just so all the cards are on the table, note that the opposite of a cohesive brand is brand identity crisis. That occurs when there's a core disconnect between how a company (from the leaders all the way down to the people who answer the phones) perceives and presents the brand and its attributes versus how it actually is received/perceived by the public, or when the brand no longer reflects the company's reality (Hello “X”, formerly Twitter!). The result is confusion among target publics, a dilution of the brand's essential meaning, credibility, value to its target audiences and its raison d'etre, and a measurable decline in consumer trust and loyalty.   

Examples? On the plus side, think “Target” and we all likely have similar impressions of the right way to merchandise, present and retail upscale-discount goods. Think Mercedes, BMW, McDonald’s, Coca-Cola, even 1-800-Kars for Kids. Ditto. All are cohesive brands that most of us would describe the same way.  Now flip that around and think about brands seemingly in freefall: J.C. Penney, Yahoo, Banana Republic, and Subway (Once upon a time their sandwiches were good and good deals. These days toilet paper’s thicker than their meats, veggies are more often than not mushy and browning, and  the breads often appear to be holdovers from yesterday or maybe two-days ago).

OK, so how does one build a credible, durable, effective brand?

“Branding” for products, services and companies is the act of carefully and dispassionately evaluating the offering:

  • Identify its central point or points of differentiation from all others in its class

  • Allow data (real data, not opinions) to point you to the current and emerging or prospective, target audiences

  • Develop AND TEST! prioritized messages and images that, nurtured and promoted online and/or off with strategic consistency, competitively will sustain and elevate that branded impression for target audiences. 

Branding’s key benefits

A brand’s credible expression/projection of a promise – of satisfaction, success, of quality-of-life benefits – and audiences’ awareness of and appreciation for that unique promise underlie all facets of business attraction/retention success (as long as the promise and perception of the brand match the reality of it as delivered!). 

The overall benefits of successful branding are widespread, with target audience(s)’ perceptions that are positive and appropriately attuned and responsive to the info and the emotions the brand communicates.  Specifically, a successfully developed and promulgated brand:                                    

  • Encapsulates/reflects key benefit(s) for internal and external, constituent audiences

  • Promotes signature differentiation from the competition

  • Concisely communicates the brand’s intent, its overall mission and values

  • Clearly defines and promotes the brand’s personality attributes

  • Supports the goals of business attraction and overall, financial objectives

  • Underscores internal/external perceptions of economic credibility/viability for the long- term                    

OK, so exactly what is a brand strategy and how do I (you!) develop one?

Brand strategy is a comprehensive plan and ‘roadmap’ (what to do and when) detailing how a business intends to position and differentiate its brand in the marketplace to meet its marketing and sales promotion objectives. It’s your guide for creating, establishing, and maintaining a competitively muscular, compelling, and consistent brand image, and how that image will overshadow others in your competitive arena.

Here comes the hard part – or maybe not: Developing the brand strategy.

Basically, you have two choices when deciding to develop a comprehensive and competent brand strategy: DIY or work with experienced, strategic marketing professionals.

It’ll come as no big surprise that, as the owner of a nearly 30-year-old marketing communications agency in DC, Return On Investment (ROI; www.roiadvertising.com), I’m partial to the latter course of action. Whether it’s me and my team or folks from another marcom (marketing communications) agency, your chances of really nailing the new brand path forward are so much better when working with people like us who know what to do and have done this before.

Either way, here’s a general list of steps to follow when developing your brand strategy:

  1. Define your purpose – The brand’s purpose supersedes the importance and marketing value of your name/ logo/tagline. It inspires and drives you and your team and sets you apart from competitors. Some in marketing say that there are two types of brand purpose: functional, which focuses on financial success and value to stakeholders, and intentional, which relates to the larger role and ambitions of your brand. To those I add a third: emotional. Your brand’s purpose is what can excite, inspire, and motivate your team, from the front office to the loading dock, to dig deeper, reach higher, always seek improved performance, and respect and support the brand and how it is to be portrayed in every aspect for the business, from internal meetings to sales meetings, trade shows, advertising …even down to phone conversations. Respect the brand. Expect the right results.

  2. Define positioning for your target audience(s) – Who’s buying what you have to offer? Who wants to buy what you have to offer? Who would want to buy what you have to offer, if only they knew more about it and you? The positioning section must include definitions or  profiles of the target audience segments. Start by creating a demographic/ psychographic profile of your typical customers, considering their perceived wants and needs, behaviors, etc. and how your offering is a “must have” for them. Tuning your strategy into their “gotta haves” and “wanna haves” is the first step toward fostering qualified, target audience awareness and interest in your branded offering.                                                                                

  3. Brand value(s) – You’ve probably heard a lot about corporate values. So, what’s that really mean? Simply, “values” are “principles or standards of behavior; one's judgment of what is important in life.” What does your company stand for as an employer, a provider of goods/services, and as a corporate citizen? And what are the core values that make you and your brand special and different from the competition? In what ways do you stand behind the quality of what you create for or provide to your customers? How do you treat your team to be more productive? To promote from the inside? What kind of environmental responsibility do you weave into corporate policies and practices? When detailing your values as a company, try to avoid generalities (e.g., “To have satisfied customers”). Try to be as specific as possible. Getting that down on paper lays a solid foundation for crisp communication to customers, prospects, and internal/external stakeholders.               

  4. Brand Positioning – Positioning is essential for knitting together all the prior previously mentioned elements. It incorporates real-world marketing lessons learned and client experience to establish, hold onto, or to further empower your brand’s marketplace status/position among target audiences, stakeholders, media, etc.. By aligning the business’s identity, communication, and understanding of competitors with client perceptions, positioning ensures the brand remains strong and relevant in the market.                          

  5. Brand Personality – “Personality” for a brand or a living, breathing homo sapien is the difference maker setting one or the other apart from the herd. A cohesive brand personality makes communicating with audiences more effective by use of distinct, targeted marketing messages. Look to develop signature brand personalities that speak directly to target audiences’ wants, needs, and expectations.                  

  6. Your Brand Voice – OK, you’ve defined your brand’s personality. Now, how to communicate it? The key is to craft messaging that gets personality and tone voice in sync. What’s the sort of tone to which your target audience will resonate and respond? Business-like and buttoned down? Playful and punny? Remember that your target audience plays a crucial role in driving tone. (For example, a bank or, perhaps, an established company with an older client base will likely adopt a serious and reassuring tone, while a bottled cocktail brand brand catering to millennials might try to be more friendly and humorous.) Knowing your audience, its preferences and expectations for communicating with them, and committing to “brand voice consistency” are key, since your brand voice should resonate across all communication channels. It goes beyond words and encompasses elements such as logos, typography, and color palettes. By maintaining a consistent voice, your brand’s promise and values are effectively communicated to your audience.

  7. Market Analysis – A business never markets in a void. Duh! In all likelihood, you are operating in an aggressively acquisitive arena vying against able, smart competitors. With new brands constantly popping up and industries becoming crowded, truly understanding your marketplace dynamics and rigorously/continually evaluating competitor strengths and weaknesses is essential to your bottom-line success (and quality of sleep!). Identifying unique differentiators between your business and the other guy’s or guys’ helps your brand stand out and be memorable and preferable to your targets. There is a variety of means and resources available to you for regularly surveying and researching the competitive landscape as part of maintaining an effective brand strategy.

Wrapping up

Whew! I agree … that was a lot. But, by weaving these essential elements into your brand strategy. You stand the best, possible chance of fully empowering your business enables businesses to establish a potent, consistent brand presence that connects with your target audiences to the core, while effectively “cross-checking”* your competition and its branded outreach (*my favorite reference to hockey, even though I can’t even skate!).

This is all stuff you can do yourself; it’s time-consuming but totally worth it. If for any reason you can't or don’t want to take it all on to buttress or renovate your brand and its measured performance, I and my team at ROI (www.roiadvertising.com) are here to help. I/we’ve been at this for decades, working successfully with companies as small as local credit unions and retailers to huge, Fortune 150 conglomerates. We’d be delighted to chat about what we can do to help you address your brand marketing challenges.

ROI Gives Back!

Carolyn and Tina were happy to be able to return to ROI’s yearly volunteer effort with Northern VA Family Services. Their annual Operation Turkey program provides a Thanksgiving meal to over 1000 needy families in Prince William County.

Did you know that…

 
 
  • Every year since 2008, ROI has designed, produced and annually overseen printing of more than 80,000 copies of the annual report for Danaher Corporation (NYSE: DAN), #162 on the 2017 Fortune 500 list. And, in 2016, Danaher spun off 20 of its operating companies into another, publicly traded company, Fortive (NYSE: FTV), already #420 on the 2017 Fortune 500 list. ROI also designed, produced and delivered the 2016 and 2017 Fortive annual reports. See them here.
     
  • In 2018, working with our awesomely talented partners at Brave, a terrific, UX firm located in Downtown D.C., ROI also helped direct production of Fortive’s first, interactive version of the 2017 Fortive annual report. See it at at annualreport.fortive.com.

Whew! Two, Hardcopy Annual Reports Down; Two Interactive Ones To Go!

For the ROI team January through March traditionally is a time to rock and roll on designing and producing annual reports. 

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This year, we produced two; one for Danaher (NYSE: DHR; www.danaher.com), a Fortune 144 Company, and the other for Fortive (NYSE: FTV; www.fortive.com), a relatively new company, spun out of Danaher, yet still large enough to make Fortune’s next 500 list.
 
The annual report work, produced to perfection by ROI’s VP, Creative Director, Sean Causley, and art director Carolyn Belefski, takes a lot of talent, analysis and a lot of focused effort, since (per the SEC), both pieces have to be locked down, printed and in the mail by early April each year. And much of the data and analysis isn’t ready for primetime until late January. The results (pictured below) are two, exceptionally fine-tuned and spot-on branded pieces that both deliver essential information to the respective companies’ shareholders and set high standards for the fine art of annual report design.

Next up: ROI’s collaboration with BRAVE (www.braveux.com), one of the nation’s foremost, UX (user experience) developers of interactive websites. Brave and ROI are collaborating on development of interactive sites that will bring both the Danaher and Fortive annual reports to life, enabling viewers to enjoy customized, graphically engaging, deep dives into the data and other information presented in the annual reports and otherwise of interest to shareholders, analysts and the media.

Why is branding so important? And, by the way, what is a “brand strategy,” anyway?

When people talk about “brand,” they’re often referring to what you can see: a logo, the color palette, typefaces and/or taglines. But, logos, colors, type fonts and taglines are mere signposts to a brand; “brand” is so much more than that. It's what sort of experience you offer and how you relate to customers.  It’s even how your employees answer the phone. Best put, your brand is your company's/product’s personality, as perceived across your target marketplace.

Brand is powerful – way more powerful than many will acknowledge. In a world or choices, it is what makes people prefer and choose one product, service on company over another. That’s true even when there are no, discernible, real differences when products are like coffee. The look, the price and the taste often are the same from brand to brand. That being the case, what influences the buying decision? Often, it’s what’s ON the cup – the name and the label. (Hello, Starbucks) Why? Because, through marketing, word-of-mouth and other influential media, we often identify with and prefer some brands over others – we become aware of and attached to them, because we see ourselves in their reflection; they make us feel  something special, differentiated, signature about ourselves and our lives or about the impression they confer about us to others.  

Could a cup influence coffee purchase decisions?

You bet!

When it comes to attracting and keeping customers, clearly, “brand” is hugely powerful. I mean, how many people would choose Starbucks over “Brand B,” even when Brand B might be tastier, fresh roasted, less expensive etc., because the brand has acquired such a cachet, such prestige? But the actual brand is way more substantive than just what a company says about itself or how its graphics look. A brand – YOUR
brand – is really more a reflection of how – and how consistently, credibly,
reliably – people feel that you deliver as promised. Your brand is really a reflection of your reputation in your broader marketplace, based on what past and present customers/clients say and feel about their interactions and experiences with you, your products, services and people.

Brand Strategy

That’s why having a cogent, reality-based brand strategy is so essential to continuity of positive, brand awareness and success. Because your brand strategy is your holistic “battle plan” for making sure your customers continue to perceive and respond to your brand as you strategically want them to do.

Getting a brand strategy together is usually the first thing we at ROI do for new clients. Sometimes (for an existing brand), the first step is a “deep dive” brand audit to help us and you understand how external audiences (past, present, prospective customers) and internal audiences (senior leadership, middle management, staff and other stakeholders) perceive and describe the brand and its attributes against what we learn from our own, dispassionate research. From that analysis we can see areas of consensus and disagreement and identify where we need to do “brand triage” to reach true consensus. 

Once the analysis is completed and you/we are confident that you have your “brand bearings,” it’s time to develop a comprehensive brand
strategy – the forward plan for how you will refocus, reassert, expand targeted awareness of the brand to underscore engagement and sales growth. The plan must be a detailed, actionable roadmap toward where
you want your brand to go what you want it to represent in the future.  

Building that plan is a lot of work; but it’s essential work that will promote measurable success. By stepping back to evaluate and, as necessary, reorient your brand messaging, images, graphics etc., and to rethink your strategy, you’ll start building a strong(er) brand. And a good strategy will underscore and infuse everything you do with regard to marketing and sales with the smartest, possible thinking.

We describe ROI with a wink as, “the agency that’s completely full of BS.”  Of course, you know that we mean “Brand Strategy.” In a world where many are in (too big!) a hurry to get going and succeed, they often initiate out of sequence, “Ready, fire, aim!” marketing plans and tactics that fail to deliver.  Conversely, we at ROI are wedded to a process-driven, “Ready, aim, fire” approach that follows time-proven steps toward measured success. We are firm believers in the foundational value of brand strategy, and we are ready, willing and able to help our clients develop and implement their own.

And that’s no BS!

ROI principal, David Nellis, recently returned from Richmond and meetings with the new members of the VALET (Virginia Leaders in Export Trade) class.

VALET is a very successful, two-year, international business acceleration program run by the Commonwealth.  It provides a world of training and assistance to developing exporters; that is, to Virginia businesses with firmly established, domestic operations and that are committed to international export as an expansion strategy. This award-winning program offers a powerful combination of capital resources provided by the Commonwealth and professional services from expert, private sector partners (referred to by VALET as trade partners). Only 25 companies each year are accepted into the VALET program, and the VALET program generates an average increase in international sales of 54% for participating companies.

ROI was selected to serve as a VALET trade partner in January 2017 and is the exclusive, strategic brand marketing agency in Northern Virginia to serve in that capacity.

It’s That Time Again: Our Annual, Annual Report Time!

We are pleased to report that two of our publicly traded clients, Danaher Corporation (NYSE: DHR) and Fortive (NYSE: FTV) again have assigned design and production of their annual reports to ROI. This is the tenth year we will have produced the Danaher annual report and the second time for Fortive. 

Annual reports are due out to shareholders the first week of April 2018. So, as you can imagine, we are hustling now to nail down concepts for covers and interior pages, so that the long design/copy process can move forward apace, in time for the March deadline for release of both publications’ digital files to the printer.

ROI’s David Nellis Is a Featured Panelist for Virginia’s 69th Annual Conference on World Trade in Williamsburg

ROI principal David Nellis was part of a three-person, CEO’s panel on social media marketing strategies and tactics, during the 69th Virginia Conference on World Trade, October 17-18, 2017, in Williamsburg.

Speaking to an audience of some 200 senior leaders representing a spectrum of businesses across the Commonwealth, David and his co-presenters offered real-world insights into effective, social media strategies and tactics that could deliver measurable success, while also measurably eliminating wasted expense.

The Virginia Conference on World Trade is an annual event bringing together the governor, senior, economic development administrators representing the Commonwealth and hundreds of business leaders to focus on developing and cultivating global, business partnerships and relationships that in turn create commerce. David was invited to speak, based on ROI’s signature membership in the Commonwealth’s esteemed, VALET program.

Run by the Virginia Economic Development Program (VEDP ),  VALET (Virginia Leaders in Export Trade (VALET) is a two-year, international business acceleration program. Program benefits include executive training, international sales plan development, educational events and customized research. This award-winning program offers a powerful combination of both capital resources provided by the Commonwealth and professional services from expert, private sector trade partners, one of which is ROI; ROI is the only Northern Virginia marketing agency serving as a VALET trade partner. In all, VALET generates an average increase in international sales of 54% for participating companies.