|
Click Here
for more Articles |
Internet search
|
Magnetic
Branding - How To Attract vs Acquire
Customers |
|
by:Phillip Davis |
What makes a company brand magnetic -- one that seems to effortlessly
attract customers, revenue, media attention and employees alike? It
only requires a look at nature itself to discover the answers.
Invisible forces such as magnetism and gravity have a constant
influence on our lives. They govern us without our awareness of their
presence. Their enegies are not overt and go largely unnoticed, yet
they govern so much of what we do.
Just as in science, magnetic companies and brands are ones that are
aligned and “pulling” in the same direction. Magnetism works when
electrons are charged and line up in the same direction. In much the
same way, when businesses are charged behind a unified and coherent
message, employees and customers alike will begin to align themselves
to that vision. The target customer is no longer a “target”, since they
begin to find you. The emphasis slowly shifts from atrificially
capturing customers to naturally attracting them.
Magnetism then comes from a distilled and powerful sense of purpose.
This purpose revirberates throughout the organization and intuitvely
instructs the organization’s members to act and behave in ways that
promote this vision. The cost of top down driven, internal messaging is
greatly reduced. The process becomes more natural, more fluid and
instinctive.
So is this purpose the same as a mission statement or brand strategy?
Yes and no. Most mission statements are written in boardrooms and sit
in nice plaques on the walls. Purpose is something that comes from the
heart, and it needs to come from the heart of top management. Again,
this is about alignment, and if top management is all about maximizing
the bottom line, it cannot create a magnetic company whose mission
statement expounds the virtues of altruistic, self sacrificing service.
It just won’t vibrate, resonate and ultimately attract the desired
customer. So you can also say magnetic companies are genuine in nature.
Their values are consistant at all levels of the organization. Profit
then becomes a natural byproduct of doing what the company believes in,
whether it’s delivering on price, quality or service.
How does a company find its purpose? It’s already there, waiting to be
acknowledged and promoted. For example, many owners I’ve dealt with
felt passionate about their quality, but also felt compelled and
pressured to compete based on price. They are brainwashed by their
sales force or other outside influences to believe they can only
compete by selling for less. When these company presidents/owners begin
to realize there is an audience that doesn’t buy on price alone, they
become emboldend and that energy translates throughout the company-
enegizing everyone. Soon “the talk” is about product quality and
innovatioins, new customers appear and old (time consuming,
complaining, incongruent) ones begin to leave. The company, the brand,
the image, begin to align and “pull” in a quiet but powerful way.
An Optometrist came to me years ago, desparte to create an image of
speedy service, to combat the one hour vision centers that were
devouring the market. When I asked him how long it took him to provide
the service, his reply was “one week, but I think I can get it down to
three days”. Someone looking for glasses in one hour is not going to be
thrilled with waiting three days. So I designed a campaign with a
headline that read “We take time.” It went on to extoll the vital role
of vison in our lives and why it’s important to wait to make sure an
eyeglass prescription is done right by a professional. The doctor felt
I had completely missed his point, but he trusted my judgement and ran
the campaign. The phone began to ring and one lady said “I haven’t had
my prescription filled because I was waiting to find someone who took
more than one hour to ‘grind’ my glasses”. He has run the ad for over
15 years and “taking the time” has now become his position in the
market. His revenue, share and bottom line all increased when he became
comfortable and congruent with who he was and what he did best-
regardless of the market.
Transforming a company or brand from mediocre to magnetic requires
refocusing on the passion that created it and aligning all else around
it. Rather than chasing the market, the market will find you. And that
makes work, and life in general, much more attractive.
About the Author
Phil’s life goal of “creating environments where
people thrive” reflects his desire to assist in both personal and
corporate growth. With 18 years experience as the president and owner
of a full service advertising and branding firm, Phil posseses a
marketing "sixth sense" that has helped launch several national and
internet companies. Phil resides with wife Michelle and four energetic
offspring outside Asheville, North Carolina. |
Perhaps this
Google Internet Search function may be able to
offer some additional ideas
If you found these Articles helpful
perhaps thefollowing subjects
maybe of interest:
Accounting Autoresponders
Acne Aviation
Adsense Bankruptcy
Advertising Beauty
Aerobics Blogging
Affiliate Bodybuilding
Articles Branding
Attraction BreastCancer
Auctions BusinessPlan
AudioStreaming eBay
AlternativeMedicine
Babiesand Toddlers
YoungBaby
|