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What is brand strategy?
Brand strategy is specifically long-term goals and building a successful brand.
Successful companies take branding seriously.
Poor design, a weak brand identity, ineffective marketing, inconsistent messaging, and bad partnerships can tarnish a brand.
Brand strategy can help you do this.
Brand strategy is your plan for how you’ll help shape perceptions of your brand.
With a clear long-term strategy, your brand will be strong and focused, and your business will succeed.
Building a solid brand requires companies to make intentional, intelligent choices about their visual identity and brand story. We discussed these choices when discussing the essential components of a strong branding strategy.
Your potential partners will want to know whether your brand strategy defines how you’ll create a successful business.
Brand strategy is essential.
There are three phases to developing an effective branding strategy: discovery, identity, and execution.
Your company is unknown to anyone, and there’s nothing to discover. You can proceed to Phase 2 and create your brand identity.
Before defining your modified or new brand identity, you must understand your existing brand identity and objectively look at all factors that influence how your company presents itself publicly.
It includes evaluating your customers, industry, vision, mission, values, brand identity, brand image, and brand.
Your company’s vision, mission, and values often define your core brand identity.
You may already have your vision, mission, and values documented, but don’t worry if you don’t.
Some companies choose to document these and put them on an office wall or their website. Others need to be more formal but take the time to understand their vision, mission, and values. Here are some questions you can ask:
Once you understand your core brand identity, the next step involves competitor analysis and market research. Here are some questions when conducting market research:
A long-term brand strategy requires understanding your customers and their need. Following are some questions about your customers:
It is also known as the Net Promoter Score (NPS) question.
If you need a deep understanding of your business and brand image’s customer opinion, this is the question you need to ask.
The best way to gauge how satisfied a person is with your business is by learning whether they’d be comfortable telling their mom/brother/best friend/barista to use it.
A negative customer service experience has a vast reach and travels to more than twice as many people as praise for a positive service encounter.
Head this off at the pass: once a customer buys something, send them a short email asking them about their experience.
It will save you from scrambling in the aftermath of any potential PR disasters and will help you:
We do this after every interaction between Crowdspring’s customers and our customer support team. We want to know whether we helped each customer and any feedback they might have for us. We also do this after every project on Crowdspring.
And we’re very proud of our performance in this area – and have even won awards for our customer support. We have a customer satisfaction rating between 97 and 99%.
Every product and service has room to improve, explore features, and add refinements.
You probably have your roadmap for where you want your product to go, and that’s great.
But it’s also a good idea to involve your customers in this process. They are an invaluable source of ideas, feedback, and feature requests and often see ways of using your product that you hadn’t imagined.
That means you should place only some features requested by customers and prospects.
It means you should ask, listen, and assess.
Some of the best features and products originate from customer feedback. The challenge is to be receptive to customer requests for improvements while engaging with them meaningfully.
For example, Crowdspring offers core design and naming services in many areas. It includes logo design, web design, print design, product design, packaging design, and business names.
When we started thirteen years ago, we asked only a few questions to help customers draft a creative brief to look for design help. For example, we initially asked some general questions in logo design projects.
But the answers provided little direction to designers, and we received lots of feedback about our questionnaire.
This feedback was precious. We changed our questionnaire to be more specific and informative, and this improved the experience for everyone.
It was a win-win-win.
Whatever service or method you use, make sure you’re not only listening but responding, too.
No one likes feeling like they’re yelling into the void, and your customers are no different. Make your feedback process a conversation so your customers know their input is valued.
Customers will often take the time to give you input on ways to improve if you ask, but if the exchange feels one-sided to them, they may give up.
After completing market research and investigation, you may know who your competitors are.
But there’s always the possibility you’ve missed or passed on one because their offering seemed different from yours.
What distinguishes us from our competitors? Asking this question lets your customers tell you what makes you unique.
It is more than asking about brand identity design and your visual design. It is why a customer might prefer your company’s products or services to your competitors.
The answer tells you about your unique selling proposition.
Your USP may not be physical or tangible like a product, but instead, be more thematic or emotional.
Your goal isn’t necessarily to be better than your competitors. Apple and Samsung compete in many market segments. Some people say Apple is better. Others say Samsung is better. But nearly everyone agrees that they’re different.
Brand-led companies invest heavily in their brand and can often release new products or enter new markets at different price points with little resistance. Nike and Shinola are two good examples of brand-led companies. For each of those companies, their brand vision, not market pressure, influences decisions, and growth.
Both branded and brand-led companies can be sustainable and prosperous. There is a right choice. But you must decide about the type of company you want to build.
Leaving the floor open to unexpected responses or feedback is always good. You can only ask some of the questions, and you can know in advance what might be top of mind for your customers.
Asking this question allows your customers to mention anything they feel is essential. It also gives you insight into what’s important to them.
And it gives your customer the last word and clarifies that you’re interested in more than just your questions.
There are many different ways to gather answers to these questions.
Your choice depends on your objectives, target audience, and the best contact method. But here are some ideas to consider.
No matter what method you use, ensure you’re engaging with your customers in a conversation. As we mentioned, let your customers know you’re talking with them, not just at them.
Developing a comprehensive brand strategy and strong brand identity requires more than just understanding your market. It would help if you also analyzed competitors to determine your company’s position in the industry. This analysis should include examining the brand identity of your competitors.
Take the time to build a compelling brand strategy, and you’ll create a sustainable, profitable brand.
We regularly update this brand strategy guide. We most recently updated this guide on February 26, 2023.