Be Your Brand
Let branding work for you by tapping into the truth behind your business.
By Roy H. Williams
| June 14, 2004
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/advertising/adcolumnistroyhwilliams/article71134.html
Q: I'm launching a one-person
hairstyling salon, and I'm extremely good at what I do, if I do
say so myself. Is it possible for me to "brand" my new
business, or is branding only for larger companies?
A: So you'd like to have your
own one-man brand, huh? No problem. The key is to be you with all
your heart.
Most branding campaigns are costumes worn by advertisers to the
Media Masquerade Ball. They were the hot ticket during the
pretentious baby boomer years, when blue ribbons went to those
wearing best costumes. But take a look around, and you'll see
that we're moving into an era of transparency. The only thing
offensive these days is phoniness.
To succeed in tomorrow's marketplace, your brand must
revolve around who and what you really are. You're going to
have to let your customers see the real you. This means
communicating in a language other than "adspeak." You
know what I'm talking about, right? "Low, low
prices." "Satisfaction guaranteed." "Exceeding
your expectations." "Fast, fair and friendly
service." Blah, blah, blah.
In the past, decisions to purchase revolved primarily around
features and benefits. All you had to do was
explain-intellectually-why your product was better than your
competitor's. But as the overall quality of products got
better, we became less concerned about buying a bad one, and a new
criterion was added to the list. Now we're seeing decisions to
purchase based on sympathetic vibrations, shared values, an
alignment of perspectives. Today's customers are no longer just
buying what you sell; they're buying who you are.
Near the end of her book The Popcorn Report, a very prescient
Faith Popcorn reminisces: "It seemed to me, in the '60s,
advertising was the most creative business around. The consumer
world was new, wide open; ads were all creativity, no research. I
loved the business when I started in it...You could feel that
consumer world narrowing in the seventies and eighties. Heavy
earnest research weighed down ads with somber and often meaningless
promises. The consumer world was quantified...In the '90s,
consumers don't believe the promises anymore. If the ad says,
'Ninety-out-of-a-hundred people prefer fill-in-the-blank,'
we cynically assume that those 90 are the advertiser's 90 best
friends and relatives. We know that numbers can be interpreted to
mean almost anything. So, the situation now is that numbers have
lost their credibility, and yet creativity isn't strong enough
to stand on its own."
So if data has lost its credibility, and creativity alone is no
longer enough, through what channel can you best persuade
today's customer? Through the customer's own
experience:
- Refer to things in your ads that you know your customer has
experienced. I call this technique "using a reality
hook." You might say in your ads, for example, "Have you
ever told a hair stylist how you wanted your hair to look and then
he cut it the way he thought it should look? I promise I'm NOT
that guy."
- When available, include raw, unscripted testimonials.
Your customer has a lifetime of experience sifting golden nuggets
of truth from a world of hype and empty promises. Put this highly
refined ability to work for you. In the example above, I wrote it
in the way that most people talk. This is extremely unusual in
advertising-and extremely effective. Don't rewrite your
customers' comments. Use them verbatim, misspellings and
all.
- Deliver to your customers exactly the experience you
promised them. (For those of you familiar with the Advertising
Performance Equation, this is known as the PEF, or Personal
Experience Factor.) Mass media is one voice speaking to many ears,
and it's easy to purchase-you pay your money and you take your
chances. But "interconnectivity" is one to one to one to
one to one-word-of-mouth gone exponential. And it can't be
purchased with money. The only way to trigger interconnectivity is
to create a message worth repeating, so deliver excellence to every
customer. It's the best advertising money can buy.
As the final reverberations of the baby boom fade over the
horizon, we're beginning to hear the sound of the new branding,
and it's the sound of something real. Today's hunger is for
reality and truth. I think psychologist Carl Rogers said it best:
"What I am is good enough, if only I would be it
openly."
And what you are is good enough, too. Be it openly.
Roy Williams is the founder and president of The Wizard of
Ads, a company serving the advertising and marketing needs of
business owners around the globe. Williams is also the author
of The Wizard of Ads and Secret Formulas of the Wizard of Ads.
The opinions expressed in this column are
those of the author, not of Entrepreneur.com. All answers are
intended to be general in nature, without regard to specific
geographical areas or circumstances, and should only be relied upon
after consulting an appropriate expert, such as an attorney or
accountant.
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