Branding is a hot topic in marketing these days,
but it's defined in different ways and looked at from different angles.
There are many components that make up a brand, and we call each
component a Brand Layer.
Here are our definitions of some of the most important Brand Layers:
Brand Foundation
The base from which all brand elements will be created and measured
against for accuracy. This layer consists of the following elements:
- Brand Vision is your company's plan for itself-how your company wants
to appear to the world, and how your company wants to grow and change
in coming years.
- Brand Mission is what your company wants to create in the world,
through its products or services.
- Brand Values are those ideas that your company brand stands for and
that you believe in-and also what you don't want to and won't do. These
values help your potential clients to decide whether you can help them,
and they also help you decide who you will help and what you can't
offer or deliver. Brand Values are largely an internal measure against
which you can process incoming jobs, but they will also be communicated
through all of your marketing materials.
Brand Basics
These components of your brand form your business's "face" to the
public. Brand Basics shape and direct your customers' views of your
business. Telling your customers how you want to be perceived is an
essential piece of a Brand Strategy for any small business, and the
easiest way for you to do this as a small business owner is through
your:
- Brand Identity, the suite of visual elements that are used
consistently in your marketing, including:
- Brand Names of your company and product or service lines
- Logo
- Visual Vocabulary
- Collateral system/stationery set (business card, letterhead,
envelope, and so on)
- Marketing materials (brochure, postcard, flyer, and so on)
- Website
- Brand Content, the way you write and talk about your brand, including
your:
- Marketing Copy
- Tagline
- 30-second Pitch or Elevator Speech
- Brand Marketing that integrates both visuals and text about your
brand, and that gets your message out to your audience. This is made up
of your:
- Advertising
- Trade shows
- Public Relations
- All other outreach/marketing programs
- Brand Offerings, the products or services that you present, along
with the quality, warranties, and value that you include with your
products and services.
- Brand Experience, the process of working with you as seen from the
clients' perspective. But in order to create a positive experience, you
have to have a strong foundation of systems, procedures, and processes
built in to your business-this is a basic level of professionalism
that's expected of every business. Things that factor in here include:
- Returning calls
- Availability
- Turnaround time
- Professional interaction and communication
- Process
These Brand Basics can also help to shape your Brand Personality, which
is the persona that your business projects to the world. This is
defined through the way that your brand expresses itself-the
characteristics that give your business a life of its own, outside of
your own personality.
Competitor Comparison
These components of your brand speak about your business's relation to
the competition:
- Brand Positioning is basically how your brand compares with that of
the competition. There are probably many businesses that provide the
services or products that you provide: Brand Positioning determines
where your business falls in the continuum of businesses in your field.
- Brand Differentiation is another, more specific piece of your Brand
Positioning. Your Differentiators are those things that make your
business stand out from your competition-the things that you do or
offer that are unlike anything your competition offers.
You can control these Competitor Comparison factors through careful
market research, market monitoring, and your definition of both your
Brand Positioning and Brand Differentiation.
Internal Measures
These components of your brand are defined largely through your
business's actions:
- Brand Environment is the atmosphere at and within your company.
- Brand Promise is the underlying guarantee or benefits that you offer
as part of all of your services. These promises can be of quality,
service, greatness, affordability, or speed of delivery; regardless,
every business presents a Brand Promise to the public, promising what
the experience of doing business with them will be like or what
benefits the consumer/client will get from doing business with that
company. While your Brand Promise is often initially shaped by promises
made in your external communications, it must be fully realized through
the internal execution of your services.
- Brand Values, which are an important part of your Brand Foundation,
are also helpful in deciding
External Measures
These components of your brand are defined by the public's perception:
- Brand Awareness is the level of public awareness of your brand-who
knows who you are and what you do. This is influenced by the strength
and effective distribution of your Brand Basics, as well as by
word-of-mouth.
- Brand Gap is the difference between your Brand Positioning and
Differentiation and how your consumers and clients actually view these
things.
So, what is a Brand?
Your brand is really the combination of all of the above Brand Layers.
A brand is both your presentation and public's perception of your
business. It's the way that people think about your business, and it is
shaped through all of the layers described above.
Once you've established your brand and started putting your Brand
Basics before the public eye, there are some other branding issues you
should consider:
- Brand Alignment is the biggest challenge in building a brand comes
from creating alignment across all of the Brand Layers described above,
and in creating that same alignment between your audience and your
message: making sure that the message that you're presenting is the
same message that your customers and contacts are walking away with.
- Brand Management is the process of managing all of the Brand Layers
and achieving or maintaining Brand Alignment. It is a constant process;
you should check up on your Brand Layers and Brand Alignment from time
to time.
When all of your Brand Layers are working together, you'll have a
strong Brand that will help your business to grow and prosper.
Article Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/
the-layers-of-your-brand-215505.html About the Author
Erin Ferree is a brand identity designer who
creates big visibility for small businesses. As the owner of elf
design, Erin is passionate about helping her clients stand out in front
of their competition and attract more clients.
Her "Define Your Difference Branding Workbook" will help you with your
brand definition - the most important step in the logo design process.
http://www.elf-design.com/products-define.html |