Want to Land Your Brand? Deliver a Great Experience
How does Starbucks get away with charging $3.50 for a cup of coffee
when there's plenty of good coffee for a lot less all over town? Yes,
their product is good, but the driver in their brand success is about
delivering a consistent experience that the market values and will pay
for.
Your brand or any brand for that matter is the sum of all you do.
It's something you earn over time by how you behave and treat your
market or customers. Your brand is the mental imprint that you plant in
your market's head. Like a brain tattoo, it's what your market thinks
when they see one of your ads, it's how they feel when they hear your
name and it's what they expect when they select you over one of your
competitors.
So many organizations miss the branding boat. They think the brand
starts and stops with the product or service they offer. Those are
important factors, but many buyers quickly lose sight of product
features and instead deeply store the memories of the experience you
deliver. A brand experience is the journey, the adventure, the trip you
send your customers on when they decide to check you out and or do
business with you. And it also includes the experience after they buy.
There are many branding opportunities you can leverage to land your
brand. Start by mapping out all the points of contact your buyers have
with your brand. If your brand of focus is your company, then ask
yourself what activities happen when customers do business with you? Do
they call you? Visit you? Do you visit them? Do they meet you at a trade
show? If so, then the following should be explored: your customer
service center, phone contact, your office environment, your
presentation and your trade show presence.
If you have a product brand, take a look at your distribution points
of contact. Are they retail, Internet or direct sales? Whatever your
path of contact, put yourself in those shoes. How does it feel? Good? Or
like a nightmare? Does the experience tap into all the senses of the
buyer? Does it resonate through by touch, scent, sight, feel and sound?
Think about Starbucks again. The experience they offer includes a
very cool, hip environment; cozy chairs; great jazz tunes; the smell of
robust coffee; the choice of several intellectual periodicals;
informative literature about their product; buyer-friendly merchandise
displays and a friendly, well-informed staff.
Your brand personality, purpose and market position should direct the
experience you offer. And remember the brand is not only about impacting
the buyer of your offering. It's about your employees, who are your
brand champions; the media, who can be brand cheerleaders; and the
stakeholders, who need confidence to keep the resources coming.
Consider your environment. Is it consistent with your brand? Are you
selling high-tech innovation and your retail store looks like 1960
stopped in time? Is your brand about hip fashion and is your staff
dressed in dated garb?
Think about your customer contact. Is it supportive of your "We
truly care; we are the friendly company"? Or is your phone system
obnoxiously annoying, and is your receptionist rude and mumbles all the
time?
Most businesses have three stages of contact to infuse a great
experience: before customers buy, while they are buying and after they
buy. What can you do to make the experience great?
Here are a few ideas to consider:
- Bring the brand to your employees; enlist their ideas on adding
experience.
- Whatever you decide, train and communicate to the troops and offer
incentives to them to deliver it.
- Develop things you can give your customers that are about giving
value, not selling.
- Breathe brand in your behind-the-scenes operation areas. Employees
who get it will deliver it.
- Think about all the senses and how you can tap into them.
- Be the customer for a day and go through your buying experience.
- Talk to your customers even when they are not buying. Send
thank-you notes and birthday cards. Know their names and what they
value.
In today's competitive business world, there are many good companies
vying for the same customers, singing the same song and pitching the
same products. Deliver a memorable experience that solidifies your brand
and customers will pay more for your offering and stick with you for a
lifetime.
Karen Post, known as The Branding Diva™, is an
international speaker, consultant and author of Brain Tattoos: Creating
Unique Brands That Stick on Your Customer's Minds (AMACOM). She can be
reached at: kp@brandingdiva.com
http://www.brandingdiva.com/