Brand identity vs.
image
1. What kind
of models do different companies use for branding?
·
Aaker’s Brand Equity Model
In his brand
equity model, David Aaker identifies 5 brand equity components:
1)
Brand loyalty: the extent to which people are loyal
to a brand is expressed in the following factors:
a.
Reduced marketing costs – hanging on to loyal customers is
cheaper than attracting new ones
b.
Trade leverage – loyal customers represent a stable
source of revenue for the distributive trade
c.
Attracting new customers – current customers can boost brand
awareness, hence bring in new customers
d.
Time to respond to competitive
threats – loyal
customers are not quick to switch brands → company has more time to respond to
competitive threats
2)
Brand awareness: the extent to which the brand is known
among the public, which can be measured using the following parameters:
a.
Anchor to which associations can be
attached
b.
Familiarity and liking
c.
Signal of substance/commitment to
a brand
d.
Brand to be considered during the
purchasing process
3)
Perceived quality: the extent to which the brand is
considered to provide good quality products can be measured on the basis of
these 5 criteria:
a.
The quality is the reason to buy
b.
Level of differentiation among
competitors
c.
Price – consumers tend to take price as a
quality indicator
d.
Availability in different sales
channels – consumers
have a higher quality perception of brands that are widely available
e.
The number of line/brand
extensions – can tell the consumer the brand stands for a certain quality
guarantee that is applicable on a wide scale
4)
Brand associations:
a.
The extent to which the brand is able to ‘retrieve’ associations form the consumer’s brain
b.
The extent to which associations contribute
to a brand differentiation
c.
The extent to which brand associations play a role in the buying process
d.
The extent to which brand associations create positive attitude/feelings
e.
The number of brand extensions
in the market
5)
Other proprietary assets: patents, intellectual property
rights, relations with trade partners etc.
Brand equity
is the set of brand assets and liabilities linked to the brand – its name and
symbols – that add value to, or subtract value from, a product or service.
These assets include brand loyalty, brand awareness, perceived quality and
associations.
His model,
however, does not make a strict distinction between added value for the
customer and added value for the brand owner/company.
·
Keller's Brand Equity Model
It is also
known as the Customer-Based Brand Equity (CBBE) Model.
The concept
behind the Brand Equity Model is simple: in order to build a strong brand, you
must shape how customers think and feel about your product. You have to build
the right type of experiences around your brand, so that customers have
specific, positive thoughts, feelings, beliefs, opinions, and perceptions about
it.
When you
have strong brand equity, your customers will buy more from you, they'll
recommend you to other people, they're more loyal, and you're less likely to
lose them to competitors.
The four
steps of the pyramid represent four fundamental questions that your customers
will ask – often subconsciously – about your brand.
The four
steps contain six building blocks that must be in place for you to reach the
top of the pyramid, and to develop a successful brand.
Step 1: Brand Identity – Who Are You?
In this
first step, your goal is to create
"brand salience," or awareness – in other words, you need to make
sure that your brand stands out, and
that customers recognize it and are aware of it.
You're not just creating brand identity and
awareness here; you're also trying to ensure that brand perceptions are "correct" at key stages of the
buying process.
Application
To begin,
you first need to know who your
customers are. Research your market to gain a thorough understanding of how your customers see your brand, and
explore whether there are different
market segments with different needs
and different relationships with
your brand.
Next,
identify how your customers narrow down
their choices and decide between your brand and your competitors' brands.
What decision-making processes do
your customers go through when they choose your product? How are they classifying your product or brand? And,
when you follow their decision making process, how well does your brand stand out at key stages of this process?
You are able
to sell your product because it satisfies a particular set of your customers'
needs; this is your unique selling
proposition, or USP. You should already be familiar with these needs, but
it's important to communicate to your
customers how your brand fulfills these. Do your clients understand these USPs when they're making their buying
decisions?
By the end
of this step, you should understand whether
your clients perceive your brand as
you want them to, or whether there are specific
perceptual problems that you need to address – either by adjusting your product or service, or
by adjusting the way that you
communicate your message. Identify the actions that you need to take as a
result.
Step 2: Brand Meaning – What Are You?
Your goal in
step two is to identify and communicate
what your brand means, and what it
stands for. The two building blocks in this step are: "performance" and "imagery."
"Performance" defines how well your product meets your customers'
needs. According to the model, performance consists of five categories:
1.
primary characteristics and features
2.
product reliability, durability, and
serviceability
3.
service effectiveness, efficiency,
and empathy
4.
style and design
5.
price
"Imagery" refers to how well your brand meets your customers'
needs on a social and psychological level. Your brand can meet these needs directly, from a customer's own experiences with a product; or indirectly, with targeted marketing, or with word
of mouth.
Application
The
experiences that your customers have with your brand come as a direct result of
your product's performance. Your product must meet, and, ideally, exceed
their expectations if you want to build
loyalty.
Next, think
carefully about the type of experience
that you want your customers to have with your product. Take both performance
and imagery into account, and create a "brand personality." Again, identify any gaps between where you are now and where you want to be, and look
at how you can bridge these.
Step 3: Brand Response – What Do I
Think, or Feel, About You?
Your customers' responses to your brand fall
into two categories: "judgments"
and "feelings." These are
the two building blocks in this step.
Your
customers constantly make judgments about your brand and these fall into four
key categories:
1. Quality:
Customers judge a product or brand based on its actual and perceived quality.
2. Credibility:
Customers judge credibility using three dimensions – expertise (which includes innovation), trustworthiness, and likability.
3. Consideration:
Customers judge how relevant your product is to their unique needs.
4. Superiority:
Customers assess how superior your brand is, compared with your competitors'
brands.
Customers
also respond to your brand according to how
it makes them feel. Your brand can evoke feelings directly, but they also respond emotionally to how a brand makes them feel about themselves. According to the
model, there are six positive brand
feelings:
·
Warmth
·
Fun
·
Excitement
·
Security
·
Social
approval
·
Self-respect
Application
First,
examine the four categories of judgments
listed above. Consider the following questions carefully in relation to these:
1. What can you do to improve the actual and perceived quality
of your product or brand?
2. How can you enhance your brand's credibility?
3. How well does your marketing strategy communicate your brand's
relevancy to people's needs?
4. How does your product or brand compare with those of your competitors?
Next, think
carefully about the six brand feelings listed above. Which, if any, of these feelings does your current marketing strategy focus on? What can
you do to enhance these feelings for
your customers?
Identify
actions that you need to take as a result of asking these questions.
Step 4: Brand Resonance – How Much of
a Connection Would I Like to Have With You?
Brand "resonance" sits at the top of the brand equity
pyramid because it's the most difficult
– and the most desirable – level to reach. You have achieved brand resonance
when your customers feel a deep,
psychological bond with your brand.
Keller
breaks resonance down into four categories:
1. Behavioral loyalty: This includes regular, repeat
purchases.
2.
Attitudinal attachment: Your customers love your brand or your product, and they see it as a special purchase.
3. Sense of community: Your customers feel a sense of
community with people associated with the brand, including other consumers and company representatives.
4. Active engagement: This is the strongest example of brand loyalty. Customers are actively engaged with your brand, even
when they are not purchasing it or consuming it. This could include joining a club related to the brand; participating in online chats, marketing
rallies, or events; following your brand on social media; or taking part in
other, outside activities.
Application
Your goal in
the last stage of the pyramid is to strengthen
each resonance category.
For example,
what can you do to encourage behavioral
loyalty? Consider gifts with purchase, or customer loyalty programs.
Ask yourself
what you can do to reward customers who
are champions of your brand. What events
could you plan and host to increase
customer involvement with your brand or product? List the actions that you
could take.
·
Focus on great design
Another way
to set your company apart from the crowd that is becoming increasingly
important is to focus on good design and to make products or experiences that
are remarkable.
Making
things that are beautiful or at least look nice is certainly not a new
strategy, but great design doesn’t necessarily equate to beauty in the
traditional sense. As many products move towards software, looks cease to be of
central importance. The real important thing for interactive products is the
overall user experience.
An unlikely example of a product that
succeeded largely due to great design is Tinder. Now, Tinder is not exactly the
most elegant or beautiful piece of software. In fact, it is unapologetically
crass and blunt. Most people equate great design to subtlety and charm, and
Tinder possesses neither.
Yet Tinder is a marvel of wonderful
user experience design. Its simple, intuitive interface not only made the
service incredibly addictive, it perfectly communicated the company’s casual
approach to online dating.
Tinder embodied a number of branding
tactics that will become increasingly effective in the coming years. Beyond
focusing on great design, Tinder also took a stand. The company claimed that online
dating could be as natural and casual as a bar, and in doing so, defied
expectations.
Think, for a second, about everything
you know about the Coca-Cola brand. Now, imagine that the company released a
new purple can with the words “Coca-Cola” in a bold sans-serif font.
You can’t picture it, can you?
That’s because Coca-Cola has one of
the clearest all-encompassing brand standards out there. Everything from the
company’s packaging, its social-media profiles to its television commercials
draws on the same colors, fonts, motifs and experiences. None of that is by
accident.
A big part of Coca-Cola’s success
comes from its ability to transmit feelings and expectations through its
branded elements. When you see that red and white can, you know you’re going to
get a crisp, refreshing beverage, no matter where in the world you’re buying
it.
The best ads
and sales tactics -- the ones that move us to get up, go out and buy something
-- are a feast for the senses. And that’s no accident. It’s a ploy, in every
sense.
Retailers,
and the marketers who promote them, are master manipulators. They toy with our
delicate senses -- smell, sight, hearing, taste and touch -- to have their way
with us, all the way to the checkout.
Apple
Apple is more touchy-feely. The
iconic computer giant displays sample products in clever, carefully plotted
ways that tempt shoppers to reach out and play with them. Before each
meticulously uncluttered Apple store opens, employees tilt Macbook screens open
to a seductive perfect viewing angle of 70 degrees. It’s not a coincidence.
It’s an effective sales tactic or Apple wouldn’t bother.
Meanwhile,
studies show that offering customers a soft, cozy chair to kick back in can
improve negotiations in ways that favor retailers. Comfort is key to
establishing brand trust and brand trust often leads to sales.
Apple is more touchy-feely. The iconic computer giant displays sample products in clever, carefully plotted ways that tempt shoppers to reach out and play with them. Before each meticulously uncluttered Apple store opens, employees tilt Macbook screens open to a seductive perfect viewing angle of 70 degrees. It’s not a coincidence. It’s an effective sales tactic or Apple wouldn’t bother.
2) What is the
customer’s role in building brand image?
One of the key
findings in a recent study by Burst Media, which represents independent web
publishers and their communities, is that bloggers
cast an influential net with their audiences. Findings revealed that
overall, more than half (57 percent)
of respondents surveyed of the 1,453 U.S. online adults aged 18 or older say
they read blogs. It also revealed
that more than half of the respondents
said that a brand mentioned or promoted
in a blog influences their purchasing decisions.
Social-media outreach – where brands work with mom
bloggers, food bloggers, travel bloggers and lifestyle bloggers – is now a viable marketing strategy that allows
brands to connect with their audience in
an authentic way. Whether the social-media outreach is online, in person at an
event, or both, brands have
found value in working with bloggers.
In 2013 53%
of consumers in the U.S. said videos on YouTube have influenced their purchase
decisions at least once, according to a survey conducted by Walker Sands. 55%
of consumers said they have engaged with brands on Facebook, followed by 21%
who have done so on Twitter, and 10% who have done so on Pinterest.
Harvard
Business Review recently devoted attention to two business trends reorienting the corporate world. One is the growing fascination for how to tap into
social media to amplify brand marketing. The other is the rising pressure on businesses to be more
socially responsible and rethink value creation as a long-term investment in
society. Each of these asks corporate leaders to make a substantial shift
in their thinking about accepted business models. Adopting just one of these issues
alone would suffice to seriously alter business structures and processes in
profound ways.
What is
missing from these two insights, however, is that these two trends will increasingly intersect. Social media is on the verge of evolving far beyond being “just a new
marketing and branding tool.” It is actually driving a growing force for large-scale global transformation, led
by socially conscious consumers seeking
to use their voices and purchasing power to halt unsustainable business
practices and temper reckless capitalism. In the coming years, if not
sooner, social media will become a
powerful tool that consumers will aggressively use to influence business
attitudes and force companies into greater social responsibility—and, I
suggest, move us towards a more sustainable practice of capitalism.
The evolution of social media into a robust
mechanism for social transformation is already visible.
The leverage and influence social
media gives citizens
are rapidly spreading into the business world. Concerned consumers are
realizing that they can use social media
to organize themselves around shared values to start effective movements.
Social media gives them a sounding board
to share ideas, as well as a means
to punish irresponsible corporate behaviors. One early example was the Greenpeace-led Facebook protests against
Nestlé’s tacit support for deforestation in Malaysia, and since then, more
Facebook protest pages have followed.
On the other
hand, consumers are gravitating towards
companies that are using social media to dialogue with them about social issues.
A well-known example of this is the Pepsi
Refresh Project that used crowdsourcing
to invite consumers to co-create where Pepsi puts its charitable contributions.
The point
is, social media creates not just a new marketing dialogue between brands and
consumers but a powerful rationale for why corporations must begin partnering
with the rising tide of customers who can now demand new standards for
corporate behavior and a higher commitment to purpose, not just profit.
The capacity
of social media to link millions of people around the world, to shape opinions and foment the “cognitive dissonance” necessary to create broad-based movements for change, is putting real power behind consumer challenges to
unethical, inauthentic, or irresponsible corporate behaviors.
3) When do you
need to renew your brand?
·
19 Questions That Every Rebrand Needs
to Ask
1. Why are we doing a rebrand?
2. What problem are we attempting to
solve?
3. Has there been a change in the
competitive landscape that is impacting our growth potential?
4. Has our customer profile changed?
5. Are we pigeonholed as something that
we (and our customers) have outgrown?
6. Does our brand tell the wrong (or
outdated) story?
7. What do we want to convey? To whom?
8. Why should anyone care about our
brand?
9. Have we isolated exactly who should
care about our brand?
10. Have their needs, or the way they
define them, changed?
11. Are we asking our customer to care
more about our brand — and what it means — than we do?
12. Is our brand associated with something
that is no longer meaningful?
13. Is our brand out of step with the
current needs and desires of our customers?
14. Are we leading with our brand
direction?
15. Are we following with our brand
direction?
16. Is the goal of this rebrand a
stepping stone (evolutionary) or a milestone (revolutionary)?
17. Will this solution work in 5, 10 and
15 years from now based on what we can anticipate?
18. Have we assigned some committee to
manage the project versus someone (or at most, two people) who is/are focused,
inspired and can lead?
19. If we were starting our business
today, would this be the brand solution we would come up with?
·
The top ten reasons for rebranding
1.
Mergers, acquisitions and demergers
For the most
part, changes of business ownership, such as mergers, acquisitions and
demergers, result in an immediate rebranding. The aim here is not only to make
the change visible, but also to comply with legal requirements. In the case of
demergers, the party that has split off is obliged to develop its own brand.
This makes clear that it no longer forms part of the organization. Over the
past few years this process has taken place at grid operators, which were
obliged to split off from their energy company. This resulted in the companies
Enexis, Alliander and Stedin. There are several possibilities when it comes to
mergers and acquisitions. The new company may develop a completely new brand
(as in the case of @home, Casema and Multikabel, which together became Ziggo).
In other cases the name of one of the parties is used (e.g. Getronics, which
continued under the KPN brand following its acquisition by KPN).
2.
Repositioning
If
implemented properly, a change to the positioning and brand promise of a
company has major consequences for the organization. Everything is adapted in
line with the organization’s new strategy and promise: its products or
services, HR policy, customer contact, corporate identity, etc. Rebranding
makes this change visible for all stakeholders. We saw an example of this last
year with Gamma, which repositioned itself by moving away from traditional home
improvements (DIY) and towards interiors (enjoyment).
3.
Internationalization
In some
cases, rebranding is necessary so that a brand can also be used
internationally. This may be because the brand name is too specific to a
particular country (e.g.: NS Internationaal, which has become NS Hispeed). In
certain countries a brand name may also conjure up the wrong associations. Organizations
that sell the same products in several countries, but under different brand
names, are also increasingly opting to use one brand internationally. Famous
examples include the rebranding of Jif to Cif, Smiths to Lay’s, Raider to Twix
and Postbank (which was only used in the Netherlands) to ING (the brand that is
used everywhere internationally).
4.
Changing markets
For some
companies, changes in the market situation mean that their very existence comes
under threat. The digitization of society in particular is making it necessary
for certain sectors to reinvent themselves. Different requirements call for a
different product to be offered. One example here is the Free Record Shop,
which adapted its logo, corporate identity and retail environment in 2008 to
give its brand a boost.
5.
Bad reputation
If a brand
has a bad reputation and this is having a serious impact on its operating
result, rebranding can ensure that negative associations with the brand are
ameliorated or dispelled. It is important here that not only the exterior
changes, but that the change is also implemented in all other aspects of the organization.
This is the only way that a rebranding project can remove any negative
associations with the brand and therefore be successful. The rebranding of
VendexKBB to Maxeda is one example of this.
6.
Conflict with stakeholders
Developing a
brand may in itself also lead to a rebranding. This may be because the new
style is too similar to an existing brand, for example. Such a situation was
faced by MultiMate, which, after its rebranding, lost a lawsuit against Ikea as
the two brands had become too similar. MultiMate had to make sure that its new
logo was no longer visible in any shape or form within a period of six months.
Another reason is that a rebranding can sometimes be so negatively received by
internal and external stakeholders that it stands in the way of the organization’s
success. An example of this from last year was the rebranding of clothing
company Gap, which decided within the space of a week that it would keep its
old logo after all.
A new CEO
often brings a new lease of life to an organization. This may result in (major)
organizational changes that also influence the course the company takes. Such a
situation arose at Apple, for example, following the return of Steve Jobs in
1997. At that time Apple had to change in order to survive. Jobs himself took a
hand in choosing the new logo, which changed from the rainbow-colored apple to
the more modern metallic variant.
8.
Outdated image
One of the
most common reasons for undertaking a corporate rebranding project is modernization.
Trends mean that over time brands come across as old-fashioned if they have not
been updated. Although in many cases it is not the main reason, a more modern
image is often one of the motivations behind a rebranding project.
9.
Changing brand portfolio
Over the
years, an organization has to deal with the development and acquisition of
numerous new brands. In time this results in an extremely diverse and broad
brand portfolio that is no longer logical for anyone and is therefore only
still understood by a handful of people. Furthermore, carrying many different
brands often leads to high costs when it comes to maintaining and promoting the
brand. In such cases, rebranding ensures that the entire brand portfolio is
brought into line and tells a clear story about the organization. A number of
years ago, USG People rationalized and coordinated its brand portfolio in this
way.
10. Further development of corporate identity
A few years
ago, for the majority of organizations a corporate identity consisted of just a
logo, a primary color palette and typography. Brand elements such as a
photographic style, visual language and a secondary color palette had not been
defined back then. This meant that there was a great deal of freedom when it
came to applying the corporate identity, with the result that the brand’s
visual image ultimately became something of a mess. In such cases the further
development of an organization’s corporate identity is a must to ensure the
creation of a consistent and recognizable brand.
Even if you don’t know the name
Burberry, you would probably recognize its trademark black, tan and red check
pattern. Founded in England more than 150 years ago, the once small brand,
which introduced the waterproof fabric gabardine and trench coats, has been
embraced by celebrities, royalty and preppies alike.
Not too long ago, Burberry was at
risk of being dismissed as frumpy and over-extended, however. It was even
considered gangwear. Due to rumors that the Burberry brand was popular amongst
hooligans, two pubs in Leicester famously banned anyone wearing the label.
New leadership and savvy product
design are what transformed the brand into one of the hottest fashion labels,
say retail experts. Christopher Bailey, Burberry's creative director since 2001,
overhauled the brand with a mix of modern and classic looks that included a
sexier trench coat and swimwear, and snapped up high-profile celebrities like
Kate Moss and actress Emma Watson of Harry Potter fame.
An increase in Burberry's sales is
proof that luxury brands are staging a comeback with shoppers, according to
analysts. Sales rose 27 percent to $747 million in the third quarter ended Dec.
31 and may expand 11 percent in the fiscal year ending March 2012, reported The
Market Oracle. Burberry has also been steadily expanding in China and built 50
stores in 2010.
The Lesson: Brands can be successfully revamped by adapting current styles while
celebrating its history. "Burberry is about heritage, but about making
that heritage relevant for today," said Bailey in 2009. "You have to
make sure what you do is right for the moment you live in. What makes things
relevant? Without wishing to sound flaky, it's a sensitivity to the spirit we
live by today."
In the late 90s, Target was seen as
just another low-brow discount retailer, indistinguishable from Wal-Mart or
K-Mart. By offering pared down versions of designer apparel and merchandise
through exclusive deals with high-profile designers such as Issac Mizrahi,
Mossimo Giannulli, Michael Graves, Fiorucci and more, Target began to stand out
from its competitors.
Target is now the second largest
discount retailer in the United States, after Wal-Mart. Its stores are in
nearly every state and the company announced in January that it will be
expanding into Canada with 100 to 150 Canadian stores by 2013.
The Lesson: Set yourself apart from competitors with high-quality merchandise at
lower prices.
Thanks to former NFL player Isaiah
Mustafa who told women to "Look at your man, now back at me," Old
Spice is suddenly a new Old Spice. Since the first commercial launched a year
ago, the 70-year-old brand's ad campaign generated tens of millions of online
views and a new catch-phrase: "I'm on a horse."
Old Spice followed up with 186
related videos in which Mustafa directly responded to digital queries from
bloggers and celebrities including Perez Hilton, Ellen DeGeneres, and Alyssa
Milano.
The company's efforts worked when
sales of Old Spice Body Wash—the line touted in the Wieden + Kennedy-created
campaign—rose 11 percent over the past 12 months in 2010, and sales continued
to gain momentum, reported BrandWeek.
Mustafa returned in the first of
three new commercials promoting Old Spice's latest collection of sprays, body
washes and deodorants as a "scent vacation" in exotic locales
(including a grass skirt).
The Lesson: A clever ad + smart use of social media can produce a fresh identity,
even for a brand that many associate with their grandfather's deodorant.
"Old Spice didn't change its logo, it changed the experience," said
Marc Shillum, principal at Method, Inc. a consulting agency for brand designs.
In 1997, Apple was veering
dangerously close to bankruptcy. Nearly 15 years later, stock prices have gone
from $6 to $350 and the company is stronger than ever. What changed? By
producing reliable and elegantly designed products such as the iMac, iPods, and
iPads, Apple became a juggernaut in technology. Nearly every product released
has been an instant hit, and every move Steve Jobs makes drives a media frenzy.
"Jobs is a technologist with the
heart of an artist," said Shillum.
Another thing that Apple does well,
Shillum noted, is the way it articulates its brand from its products down to
the store level experience.
"Actions underlie brands,"
he said. "Everyone from the CEO to a sales rep needs to understand the
company's mission and be free to articulate it in their own way."
The Lesson: Build creative products that are well-made and enhanced by beautiful
packaging. Also, create a positive experience for customers as Apple has done
with its stores.
·
7 rebranding mistakes you should
avoid
1.
It’s more than a name (or logo)
Too often, a
brand is confused with its physical markers: its logo, name, website, or
culture. Slapping a new mascot on your company won’t fix all of its problems –
and might even make them worse.
2.
Forgetting your market position
You can’t be
beholden to the whims of your target market, but you should still understand
their lifestyle and what they need and want from your brand. You need to be a
leader, but you also have to understand how your product or service fits into
the life of your consumers.
3.
Changing your name… just because
Your name
should tell an important story about your company. It’s a big part of the
reason we decided to change our name to show clients our dedication to a truly
collaborative experience.
Naming,
however, is truly an art form. We live in a world where FreeCreditReport.com,
Google and Apple are all brand names (some are even being used as a verb, like
the act of Googling something).
Names can be
esoteric or they can be definitive, and each of those naming strategies comes
with its own form of challenge.
For
instance, for every Apple success story, there’s a story like Wesabe. The
personal finance app was beaten out by competitor Mint, in part because the
name didn’t tell enough of the company story.
Other
companies have gotten into trouble by dropping the most important part of their
names, like when Pizza Hut briefly began referring to itself as “The Hut.” The
company soon learned it was important to keep Pizza in its name, as that was the
important part of its brand identity.
4.
Not doing your homework
Why is the
rebrand necessary? What does the new brand say about your company? When Gap
tried to rebrand with a new logo, the results weren’t exactly what it’d
anticipated. Not only were consumers not excited about the new brand image,
many thought it made the brand look cheap.
It’s
important to test new brand images and copy to ensure it still works for your
audience. While you need to lead, not follow, your market, you should also
understand how your company fits into their lifestyle.
5.
Following the herd
Your brand
should capture a larger conversation your company is trying to have with its
market, instead of rebranding to look hip or modern for a certain customer
segment. It’s important for the company leaders to take control of any
rebranding effort and set the agenda from the top.
6.
Failing to integrate your new brand
Don’t just
slap a new label on a few things and think you can call it a day. Too many
companies ignore systematic integration in favor of a shiny new logo; the
rebrand has to trickle into every aspect and part of your business. Everything
from the financial practices to the HR policies should be measured against the
rebranding promise you have chosen.
Too often,
companies stop before they’ve even really begun. They’ve confused a minor physical
brand expression like a logo or motto with the larger promise the rebrand is
making to employees, customers, and clients
Look at the
rebrand for fast food chain Wendy’s, which has been inconsistently applied in
the chain’s restaurants. Go to a Wendy’s today and it’s often a hodgepodge of
old and new logo and branding materials. If your company is rebranding, commit
100 percent to the effort.
7.
Burying the lead
Be authentic
to make your brand one to remember. If your company is amazing at something,
make this an essential part of your brand. Know what you’re good at, what makes
your company great, and what differentiates you from the competition. Make sure
this is an important part of your brand messaging.
Rebranding
your company can be a big challenge, but it can also be a huge opportunity to
redirect your organization and change your story. If you truly believe in your
message, keep your brand authentic and avoid these missteps, a successful
rebrand is just around the corner.


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