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Branding Mistakes To
Avoid
1. It “sells itself.” I don’t need to market.
Okay, you
might have a solid product or service. You might even routinely
satisfy your customers. They might even send their friends and
family to you. But wait. Is that your product or service selling
itself? No (that is, unless your widgets have learned to speak).
That’s one of your customers playing
out-of-the-goodness-of-my-heart salesperson for you. Yeah,
word-of-mouth is nice, and if it’s happening for you,
congratulations! It’s a sign of a great product or service. But
relying on it exclusively can hurt you. Yes, six degrees of
separation and all that, but counting on those connecting
conversations to consistently mention you, especially down the
line, is a bad gamble. Word of mouth needs help. A kick in the
butt: a reminder to your customers of their good experience with
you and an enticing offer to potential new customers to give you a
try. Providing this kick is what a well-conceived branding and
marketing strategy should do.
2. “One of these things...looks
just like the other”
You might sell red cars, and Johnny Big
Wheel down the street might sell a similar blue car. But what’s
under the hood? Even better question: what’s under the hood that
makes your better than the blue car? This is the essence of
differentiation in the marketplace, and if you’re not playing up
the things about you that make you different—and better—than your
competition, your marketing is driving nowhere.
3. Liar, liar,
your business is on fire and up and smoke
If you think
word-of-mouth is powerfully working for you, it’s just a fraction
of the punch a bad buzz can pack. The best way to a bad buzz? Over
promising and under delivering. It will kill you. That’s why it’s
important to be truthful in your marketing. Say what you can do.
Not what you wish you could do, or might be able to do. If you must
err, do so on the side of under promising and over
delivering.
4. One-trick marketing is like a no-trick
magician
It won’t do anything, and people won’t pay to see your
show. To get your message to resonate in a 21st century market, you
need to make your appeal in every corner the market looks. Print
advertising, direct mail, online, telemarketing, public relations,
and in person. In every place, a consistent brand image and
message.
5. Microsoft Word clipart is for junior high book
reports, not corporate identities
A logo is the face of your
company, so it must be unique and memorable. Not available for
millions to place into whatever bake sale flyer they’re working on
at the moment. But a corporate identity is more than a logo. It’s
your company’s unique value proposition and its products and
services…all instantly recognizable on sight of your logo, name and
tagline.
6. Don’t be visually absent
Talk can be cheap if
it’s not paired with a strong visual presence. Well-conceived
visuals connected with your market makes your message stick, no
matter the medium.
7. The typewriter and telegraph are cool
machines, but not to use today
A business owner by nature has to
have a little bit of Evil Knievel in him, but when it comes to
technology, he or she is often more of a cowardly lion. That’s
understandable. You got into your business because you know it,
like it and can put food on the table with it. Not because you like
to tinker with every new business technological innovation that
comes down the pike. However, cutting edge technology can be a
powerful profit-generating tool for your business, especially when
it comes to marketing.
8. If an employee’s 14-year-old son
designs your website, it will be painfully obvious
A website
must have a nice look, but that’s a small part of a good web
presence. You have to give your prospect information they need and
close the sale fast. Otherwise, they’ll surf on by to a
competitor’s website. In today’s digital marketplace, your website
must be an integral part of your overall sales strategy. Not just a
token presence. More than ever, prospective customers are
researching their buying decisions on the web. If your site doesn’t
substantiate who you are and your offerings, educate, inspire and
finally motivate your visitors to buy, your online presence isn’t
strong enough.
9. You have a website, but don’t tell
anybody
Having a website is pointless if no one sees it. That’s
why it’s just as important to drive traffic to your website as it
is to have one. How do you do that? A great way is through
traditional advertising like billboards, print ads, signage and
printing the web address on all your marketing collateral. Online,
there’s search engine optimization, banner ads, online
advertorials, keyword purchases, links and cross-promotion
strategies. A good mix of online and offline traffic strategies
along with solid branding will drive traffic to your
website.
10. “I don’t need to be in the paper”
On the
contrary, editorial coverage carries more credibility than any kind
of paid advertising you can do. Getting it, however, is difficult.
Only a well-conceived public relations strategy that targets media
outlets your prospective customers frequent will get the job done.
But it’s not just about writing press releases. It’s about
providing relevant information to the media outlets you’re trying
to get into and cultivating relationships with key editors and
journalists. If you’re successful, you’ll see your name in print
and a bigger number on the bottom line.
11. Branding done
yourself is branding done badly
Given the choice of doing
branding yourself and not doing it at all, you may be better off
not doing it all. There are few things worse for a business than an
“amateurish” image, and that’s usually the result with DIY
branding. Even if you know how to do some graphic design work or
are a decent writer, good branding takes strategic know-how and the
finesse and time to get it just right—things only a good branding
agency can offer.
12. If you think your employees aren’t part of
your brand… You’re wrong.
Your brand is the face of your company
in every interaction with the outside world, and your employees
interact with it quite a bit. On the phone, on sales calls, at
schmoozing and networking events, or in informal settings, you must
train your employees to represent your company in a way consistent
with its brand image. Doing so can ensure you have an army
well-groomed brand ambassadors out there.
13. Failing to track
your branding campaign’s success can lead to future failure
If
you don’t make your market’s reaction to your branding effort your
business, your business will suffer mainly because you won’t know
where to go next. Successful branding is a constantly evolving
process, and if you don’t learn from your mistakes, you’ll
continually repeat them—and make more! On the other hand, once you
know what your most successful strategies are, you can build off of
them. Any branding agency worth its salt will be able to
effectively track the success of your campaign.
14. Don’t forget
the clients who got you here, keep good relations
As businesses
grow, they sometimes forget the little people who contributed to
their success. Don’t. Those who got you here can be an invaluable
resource to you even if their business isn’t as important as it
was. Since they’ve known you for a long time, they can offer
valuable counsel as to the future direction your company, such as
offering their opinion on new products or services. They can also
continue singing your praises as another satisfied customer. Plus,
you never know when a little fish might eat a big lunch and become
a big fish to you again.