Learn the four traps when branding is mistaken for marketing
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Brand, the feeling and perception anyone has about a company, product, person or service is the result of all touch points and interactions. And so branding, the way to create that feeling and perception, is essentially everything.
But because the idea of brand and branding is born out of the field of marketing, it’s usually seen as the same as marketing. I want to tell you that it is NOT! And it can be detrimental if it is seen as such. Marketing is not everything. There is communications, there is customer service, there is HR, there are many functions that make up the entire experience! From before the purchase to during the purchase and after the purchase.
Four traps when branding is mistaken for marketing:
ONE: Time pressure
Marketing is driven by campaigns and campaigns are time bound. How did it perform? What were the metrics? While campaigns are short term, building a brand takes time. Every campaign that we introduce in the market adds to the brand, it continues to build that feeling and perception. Think about Coca Cola or even J&J, their brand is forever solidified in the minds of their audiences. Each campaign throughout time etches that perception and feeling about the brand ever so deeper into our minds. If we abandon the brand strategy because the campaign did not “perform”, we are missing the opportunity to create a snowball effect.
TWO: Stifled potential
When branding is solely seen as marketing, it’s just infinitely harder to align every touch point to create the perception you want. You are not enrolling every tool in the tool box, instead trying to imprint that perception only through one function. The potential of creating an aligned experience across every function in the organization that drives brand equity is lost. Think about the Zappos brand–an entire ecosystem that communicates and exemplifies their brand of WOW and QUIRKY DELIGHT. It’s their HR, their customer service, their culture, their emails, their shopping experience… it leverages everything the organization can muster.
THREE: ROI rabbit hole
Marketing and ROI has become inseparable. It’s fair, because marketing is business of capturing the increased perceived value through branding! It’s capturing that value by an increase in revenue, either through higher prices or a larger share of the market. A marketing budget needs to be substantiated by ROI. How much return or increased revenue are you going to deliver based on the spend? This kind of thinking would quash branding efforts… as they go beyond revenue generation (at least in the short term). It’s creating that perception, it’s shrinking the consideration set, it’s building fans. If it’s about ROI, Patagonia will not run an ad saying not to buy their jackets. If it’s about ROI, CVS would not have pulled tobacco from their shelves.
FOUR: The “not my problem” problem
Branding requires everyone. It’s not just a marketing “thing”, nor is it a “sales” thing. Successful and powerful brands permeate entire organizations internally and all those they serve externally. When branding is seen only as a marketing “thing”, disaster strikes. Other functions have no skin in the game and hence they don’t need to cooperate, they don’t need to chip-in and fund a branding initiative. When the brand is not owned by everyone, it becomes dismissed and departments/ functions can easily look the other way.
Conclusion
Insist that branding is NOT marketing. Even if marketing is accountable for initiating, organizing and orchestrating branding efforts, branding is EVERYTHING. Organizations can bring together people, processes and incentives to design branding into everything they do.
Ways I can help you
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