1 / 3

How Are Brands Created?

Youu2019ve likely heard that a brand is more than your logo and tagline. But what is the process to strategically create a brand that represents the best of your organization? Visit: https://vervemarketinggroup.com/how-create-brand/<br>

Download Presentation

How Are Brands Created?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How Are Brands Created? You’ve likely heard that a brand is more than your logo and tagline. But what is the process to strategically create a brand that represents the best of your organization? Brand Defined A brand is the unique experience audiences have with an organization or product. It is the perception your customers have based on the accumulation of all experiences with the brand. This includes the product experience itself and all communications about it — website, social media, emails, customer service interactions. Virtually every point of contact with the brand contributes to a customer’s beliefs and feelings about it. In short, the brand is what people think of and expect when they hear your name. Every organization has a brand, whether intentionally managed or not. Do the audiences you care about understand and connect with what you do? Is your brand memorable, compelling, and clearly understood? A brand created with intentionality is strategically grounded. And its creative expression brings it into reality through messaging and a visual identity that feels right. A Brand Is Like a Person Just like each of us, a brand is unique and quickly recognizable. The core things about you don’t change much over time. If you’re a big-hearted, relational, outgoing person, people pick up on that pretty quickly. And while you may act a little different with friends than with casual work acquaintances, regardless of whom you’re with, you’re still recognizably you. When Verve Marketing Group develops or relaunches a brand, we seek to uncover the core attractiveness that never changes. The brand promise is founded on the organization itself (or product, if product branding) and capitalizes on a meaningful distinctive compared with similar competing organizations. Brand strategy and development articulates the best of what the brand has to offer and expresses it in a compelling, recognizable identity. Why Purposefully Create and Manage Your Brand? A purposefully created brand is strategically grounded and leverages your marketing efforts. It is an ongoing effort that increases efficiency — and profits. Consistent messaging, look and feel leverages all the communication about the brand. It creates stronger memorability. And it makes it easier, (i.e., quicker, cheaper) to create marketing content and promotional materials. The brand process itself often leads to greater focus within an organization. And that consensus can help direct decisions and prioritizing. For example, decisions related to

  2. product initiatives, resource allocation, staffing, and budget often benefit from the clarity of the branding process. Brand Strategy While every situation is unique, creating a brand starts with a strategy phase that informs the creation of the brand’s identity in look, feel and messaging. The Verve Marketing Group brand process encompasses these 4 key facets: Brand Vision Strategy starts with an understanding of the envisioned future of the organization incorporating purpose, values, and consideration of target audiences. This captures the mission, passion, and purpose of the brand and is the internal perception of the brand. It’s at this stage where we also want to understand where the gaps are between who you are and want to be versus how customers perceive you. Brand Positioning Next, we seek to understand and articulate the unique strengths of the brand from the customer’s point of view. What do loyal customers specifically like about the brand and how does it compare to competitive options? Research may uncover gaps in perceptions by internal leadership and customers. For example, agreed upon strengths and distinctives may turn out to not be as highly valued by customers as internally perceived. Brand Promise This is a succinct, credible promise that connects with all audiences. By credible, we mean that it is true to product itself or to the organization if corporate branding. Brand Personality The articulated brand personality describes the brand’s values, beliefs, core attributes, personality, and behaviors. The analogy of a brand being like a person is very apt. Just like a person, a brand is unique. It will also should also continue to grow and change while still being recognizable. The organization will develop new products and retire old ones. Marketing campaigns will come and go. Communications will evolve and reflect the changing macro environment. Yet the core things about the brand, the brand equity, continue on. Creation of Brand Identity Brand identity is the created look, feel, and words that express your brand. Your visual identity is developed from the raw elements of color, typeface(s), use of space, photography and images, graphic elements, textures, logo usage, etc. Key messaging can include key message points to emphasize across all communications, tagline, and a concise narrative description used for press releases, etc. If a marketing campaign will launch your new or updated brand, we will also develop a central creative concept for use across the promotional campaign.

  3. A Valuable Asset Purposeful branding helps cause an increasingly larger number of people to become brand advocates — people who are emotionally attached and strongly loyal. It’s an art and a science, founded on strategy, expressed in creativity and design, and a valuable business asset to be nurtured and protected. If you have a question on branding or would like to start a conversation, please reach out to Joan Begitschke.

More Related