Lead your consumers to strong brand sales
No marketer today can count on unquestioning brand loyalty; few ever could. Nevertheless, success demands that you build and maintain your brand. You have to give your product or service a personality, a sense of being โ something that sets you apart from competitors and emphasizes a benefit to customers.
Why? Think about how you choose laundry detergent or a package delivery service. Chances are you may consider as many as three options acceptable. Those options make up your โcompetitive set.โ Those brand names immediately pop into your mind when you think about buying a product or service.
Strong brand identity can lead you to include a product or service in your set โ and choose it more frequently. That edge jumps in importance when price and service differences dwindle, or when consumers find it hard to differentiate between products or services.
You can take steps to gain that edge. Use the steps in the โbranding pyramidโ to maximize the opportunity for your product or service to be considered and purchased. Evaluate your communications to be sure you lead consumers through each level:
Awareness: โIโve heard of you.โ Awareness is the foundation of successful selling. Whoโll buy from you if they havenโt heard of you? Advertising is just one way to create and sustain awareness. Consider direct marketing, public relations and other ways to communicate with your target audience.
Your message needs to do more than get attention. It should be rooted in a strategy that ensures youโll reach the audience you want with a message theyโll find meaningful and relevant.
Familiarity: โI know who you are.โ Communicate with enough frequency to maintain awareness. The purchase cycle for your product or service can help you determine the right frequency level. Also, a message may be quickly forgotten if it is not repeated with some degree of regularity.
Image: โI know what you stand for.โ Use your marketing communications to give consumers a definite idea of what your brand stands for and the benefits it delivers. Think, for example, of Federal Express, โWhen it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight.โ
Inclination: โIโll look for you.โ When youโve established a positive image with your target audience, your brand becomes part of their competitive set. Theyโre predisposed to seek you out.
Trial: โShow me what you can do!โ At this point, communications take a back seat to quality and service. Product performance is what counts.
Reinforcement: โDid I make the right decision?โ Advertising or other direct contact with the customer after the sale will support their buying decision.
Satisfaction: โI like you.โ Again, quality and service are the keys. But itโs important that your communications have built realistic expectations. Be positive, enthusiastic, but donโt over promise. Thereโs nothing less satisfying than puffery.
Referral: โIโll tell my friends to try you.โ Advocacy is the ultimate form of satisfaction; recommending a product or service puts a personโs reputation on the line. Marketers also look at advocacy from the other direction โ from consumersโ willingness to listen to people we respect (as in endorsements by celebrities, experts, or satisfied customers).
Itโs possible to measure your progress. Market share growth tells you customers are moving from awareness, familiarity and image to trial and satisfaction. Begin, though, by determining where youโre at in brand building.
A strong brand maintains its identity against the competition, encouraging repurchase. Itโs also the base for introducing new or improved products and line extensions. Follow the pyramid to build your brand, and establish trust with the consumer and sales for your company.
Ronald Luskin is senior vice president and general account group manager for Blue Horse, Inc., in downtown Milwaukee. The firm handles advertising, marketing and public relations.
July 1998 Small Business Times, Milwaukee
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