The Art of Silver Bullets... Top Ten




Silver Bullet Branding Top Ten

1. Understand that brand and branding are different concepts. The “ing” makes a huge difference in meaning. A brand exists in your mind. It’s a collection of associations or feelings people have about a particular product, service, or an organization. Branding is the tangible process of creating the signals that generate these associations.

2. Establish a differentiated meaning for your brand that the consumers you want to reach care about – find relevant – before you try to begin branding. Differentiation and relevance – not awareness – make a brand strong and keep it strong. You can’t build awareness without having something to build it on. The most successful brands know this.

3. Know exactly who you want to talk to – that is, know your audience. Also, know exactly who you want to beat – who your competition is – and make sure the difference between you and the other guy is crystal clear.
4. To find a different and relevant brand idea, look for the obvious. The best answers are usually right under your nose. Good brand people never stop looking for insights, and they know to look in the most obvious places. They read letters from customers, go to call centers, speak to retailers, hang out in supermarket aisles. The key is to find something meaningful that no one has noticed before.
5. Make sure your brand idea aligns with your business strategy. What exactly are you selling? Is your brand idea in sync? You can deliver what your brand idea promises to deliver by validating the brand experience at optimal points of customer contact.

6. Capture the essence of your brand idea in a brand driver – a simple statement of what your brand stands for. Make sure it’s as succinct, as focused, and as compelling as possible. It has to be able to drive your branding signals, brand actions, and brand behavior – intuitively. It’s your brand recipe and it has to be simple to follow and remember by heart.

7. Draw a map of the customer’s journey with your brand. Take everyone in your organization on this journey to give them an understanding of the points of interaction that have the greatest potential to impact people’s perceptions of the brand. Doing so also allows them to see how their role in the organization influences customer perception through the branding signals they bring into being.

8. Pick your battles. After you’ve established which points of customer interaction have the greatest potential to drive consumer perception of your brand idea, invest your branding dollars in these interactions. These are your power branding signals.

9. Remember, only the paranoid survive. Make sure you keep your brand difference differentiated, and make sure it’s a difference people care about. Always pay attention to your core customers. Don’t lose the center.

10. Remember that brand building is a marathon event. Success is not a one-time thing. Make sure you have the nerve and the verve for the long haul. Good brands last and there’s a reason they do

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