4 Things Social Media Has Done For B2B Marketing – A Thought: Marketing Becomes Whole Business
May 18, 2010Is Social Media and the Internet Making Bennis’ Predictions Come True?
May 22, 2010Imagine you are in a situation, whether with friends or with work colleagues and you need to buy something: a new computer, a new car, a flight to a conference or whatever. Who do you call?
In each case, the answers that come to mind will probably be driven by your experience, budget and the emotions associated with each company or supplier that comes to mind.
This, I believe, is their brand.
What this means is that every company has a brand, good or bad, whether they like it or not.
Next, think about the picture above. It’s knitted into an old jumper but whose company logo is that? Apple’s.
When you see that logo what emotions does it evoke in you?
This, I believe, is their brand.
I was going to list out what, I believe, Apple’s brand stands for. But that’s not important. What is important is what you believe or feel that they stand for and whether they deliver against those values.
A brand is not a logo, slogan, publicity campaign or a set of ads. You select a company because you trust them and you believe they will deliver. These are two issues that are important to every company of every size.
Therefore, if you agree with this, a business’ brand is subjective but, essentially, it’s about trust.
Look at some the best brands around the internet, for example: Google, eBay and Amazon. What do they all have in common? People trust them!
Good companies create good brands by creating trust.
Do you need a big marketing budget to create trust?
No! Buying awareness does not create trust or a brand. It only creates awareness.
The business world is littered with examples of failed companies that bought a lot of awareness: DeLorean Motor Company, Pets.com, Boo.com, Enron and the Fashion Cafe (remember that one) stand out as highly publicised failures. Why did they fail? Big promises and failure to deliver.
A big marketing budget can buy you attention but it does not buy you reputation or trust. That is earned by your people and your products and/or services.
So, even if you are a smaller company you don’t need lots of money to create a strong brand.
How do you create a great brand? That’s where your all of your business assets come in to play. Your business assets will include your identity (logos, campaigns, uniforms, website etc), your products and/or services, your leadership, your spokespeople, your customer service reps as well as your delivery and sales people. All of these things are elements that influence the emotional bond and the level of trust that your customer base has with your business.
So, when you build trust, you build a strong brand. If you can do that, then you will build sales and create customers. It’s then up to you how long you keep them for.
What do you think? Agree with me?
Thanks to pixelstar for the image
7 Comments
The Strength of Your Brand is Not Dependent on the Size of Your Marketing Budget @ http://bit.ly/acrQhS
The Strength of Your Brand is Not Dependent on the Size of Your Marketing Budget http://bit.ly/dzKzF9
RT @adrianswinscoe: The Strength of Your Brand is Not Dependent on the Size of Your Marketing Budget http://bit.ly/dzKzF9 <Great post,Adrian
RT @adrianswinscoe: The Strength of Your Brand is Not Dependent on the Size of Your Marketing Budget http://bit.ly/dzKzF9 <I fully agree!
Adrian,
Great post, I fully agree – good companies build trust by delivering what they promised!
Problem is it can take some time – God knows I know that – but once you made you’ve got a great business.
VB, Stefan
Hi Stefan,
Thanks for your comment. Very true. Time and patience is a critical thing. Too many times have good initiatives been abandoned because they failed to deliver quickly enough.
Like in any relationship, trust is not instant and takes time and effort to earn and even more time and effort to keep.
Adrian
RT @adrianswinscoe The Strength of Your Brand is Not Dependent on the Size of Your Marketing Budget http://bit.ly/dzKzF9