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How To Develop An Iconic Web Brand
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| Guest post by: Jerry Bader |
Article Overview: Marketing requires you to take the long-view; it’s an approach that demands a company to stake out a position and build a personality that customers can rely on to be consistent and ethical both in offering and in execution. Marketing is about building a legend, an iconic brand that explains who you are, what you do, and why anyone should care. Marketing is about psychological persuasion in order to improve the wellbeing of your audience. Marketing is about transformation, it communicates a brand story that acts as a metaphor that defines your identity, which in turn helps customers define and express themselves.
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Free Download - Essential Web Video Concepts: Make’em Feel By Jerry Bader |
How To Develop An Iconic Web Brand
Do you have an
obligation to be good, and by good, I mean good at your job? Do you have a
responsibility not just to be professional and do what you do on time and on
budget but also to be creative, thought provoking, and stimulating in the way
that you do it?
Myth-Making As A Branding Strategy
The reason I
ask the question is I recently read a comment on a business blog posted by a
self-proclaimed advertising expert that justified the notion that schlock
advertising works. I don’t know about you but I find the idea disturbing.
Sometimes ads work and sometimes they don’t. There are lots of reasons why
advertising fails and in many cases it has more to do with implementation
rather than conception. And yes we all know that schlock advertising like negative
political ad campaigns work in the short-term, but ultimately the tactic leads
to audience disillusionment and frustration, which is why we talk to our
clients about marketing not advertising.
Marketing Is About Building A Legend
Marketing
requires you to take the long-view; it’s an approach that demands a company to
stake out a position and build a personality that customers can rely on to be
consistent and ethical both in offering and in execution. Marketing is about
building a legend, an iconic brand that explains who you are, what you do, and
why anyone should care. Marketing is about psychological persuasion in order to
improve the wellbeing of your audience. Marketing is about transformation, it
communicates a brand story that acts as a metaphor that defines your identity,
which in turn helps customers define and express themselves.
Beware Junk Research
A reliance on
market research that tells you what people said as oppose to what they think is
of little or no value. Even research that tells you what people did, doesn’t
tell you what they will do when presented with an unknown option. Even opinion
polls on soon to be released products are of little use: without some
commitment of value those opinions won’t tell you how people will respond when
they have to reach into their wallets to make a decision. Sure there’s good
research, mostly available to big corporations produced by the social
scientists, psychologists and university professors who study human behavior.
Most of the rest of it is hindsight justification for whatever happens to be
trendy or in-vogue at the time.
Market Leaders Are Proactive
Research that
asks people what they want is useless, how can they know if they want something
if it hasn’t been put on the market yet. Marketing is about defining your
audience’s need not reacting to what your competitor has already established.
By definition that kind of approach will leave you as an also-ran, never a
market leader.
Market leaders
are proactive not reactive. Asking everyone’s opinion on what and how to sell
is weak and ineffectual and is not only reactive, it’s downright regressive.
Your customers can’t tell you what they don’t know, that’s why they rely on
you.
Brand Stories
Brand Stories are how companies use psychological
persuasion to transform viewers into loyal customers (brand evangelists) by
changing attitudes, preferences, and preconceptions. Brand stories allow the
audience to vicariously transform themselves by providing a look at what could
be.
Business is
obsessed with technological solutions to psychological problems, one very
significant reason why so many tech-based advertising tactics fail. Whether
it’s Ad Placement Auctions, Search Engine Optimization techniques, or QR codes,
if the final destination is a peace of junk, you lose!
Mainstream
media promotes techie-solutions mostly because it’s easy and can be presented
in a twenty-second sound bite rather than providing the underlying significance
of why something really works, a process that is more complicated and takes
more time. Take the Old Spice commercials that were hyped based on the
technical wizardry of the creators, when the real genius of these ads was the
message. Businesses run out and emulate the technique without a clear
understanding of why it worked and more often than not miss the target
altogether.
What’s Your Big Idea?
So if
technique is merely the how, what’s the why, the why anyone should care? Ask
yourself, and be honest, what’s your big idea? Steve Jobs famously asked John
Sculley, the head of PepsiCo, whether he wanted to sell sugar water for the
rest of his life or change the world? What self-respecting senior executive
could resist the challenge and opportunity? Are you selling today’s sugar water
laced with Facebook, Twitter, and whatever the next big thing is, while
allowing your main online presentation channel, your website, to fall behind?
Sure there’s a
place for these IPO-based gimmick sites, but are you following the crowd
because that’s what the carpetbaggers are promoting this week, or are you a
true entrepreneur with a real idea, a honest point-of-view, a fascinating story
to tell, and a real product or service that will set-off the endorphins in your
audience’s heads when they hear about it?
What’s Your Emotional Value Proposition?
The key to
successful marketing is finding your Emotional Value Proposition. It’s how you
humanize the outdated notion of a sales-value proposition that no
self-respecting marketing expert gives a hoot about. If you look at what Jobs
offered Sculley, it breaks down to an opportunity to achieve
‘self-actualization’ the highest rung on Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Jobs
understood that in order to attract a high-powered, success-oriented executive
he had to offer him something big, and from a psychological perspective there
is nothing bigger than being all you can be.
In the case of
Old Spice the message was more primal, it’s about sex, a basic level ingredient
on Maslow’s Hierarchy. The message is clear: buy the product and you attract
and satisfy women, what could be more fundamental? Everyone knows sex sells but
do you understand why? Sex sells because it’s essential to our survival as a
species; we either propagate or we disappear like the Neanderthals. It doesn’t
get anymore Maslowian than that.
How To Find Your Big Idea
So if you’re
selling the most features, lower prices, better service, and best staff in the
business you’re communicating the wrong message. Your audience isn’t stupid;
nobody promotes the idea that they have no service and sell cheap crap that
doesn’t work. Nobody really cares that you Tweet, Facebook, Google, or text
message your day away. What people want to know is what are you going to do to
move them up the Maslowian latter. Every successful brand, product, or company
is based on a big idea. What’s yours?
Article Tags: advertising, big ideas, brand legend, brand storytelling, branded entertainment, branding, emotional branding, Facebook, marketing, marketing campaigns, Maslows Hierarchy of Needs, psychological persuasion, SEO, social media, Twitter, video marketing, Web video, website marketing, website presentations
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About the Author: Jerry Bader RSS for Jerry's articles - Visit Jerry's website Jerry Bader is Senior Partner at MRPwebmedia, a website design firm that specializes in Web-audio and Web-video. Visit http://www.mrpwebmedia.com/ads, http://www.sonicpersonality.com, and http://www.136words.com. Contact at info@mrpwebmedia.com or telephone (905) 764-1246. About MRPwebmedia People ask, "What do you do?" You could say we inform, enlighten, innovate, and create; you could also say we deliver our clients' marketing messages in memorable ways using video, audio, webmedia campaigns and websites; all created in-house from concept to implementation, from graphic and motion design to Web-design, from script writing to video-production to post-production, from music composition to signature sound design. What do we do? We motivate action by speaking to your audience's real needs. We tell your story so your brand, your message, embeds in the minds of your clients. We are corporate storytellers. Click here to visit Jerry's website Essential Web Video Concepts Makeem Feel Case Study For Award Winning Video Micro Site 8 BrainBranding Web Presentation Concepts Part II 18 WebMarketing Concepts That Make A Difference Building An Online Brand |
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