Posts Tagged ‘Branding’

Stop wondering. Start Knowing.

By Josh Hoffman, October 29, 2009

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Remember to register by Friday, October 30th for the KNOW Digital Marketing Seminar! There is
no cost to attend but registration is limited.

Finding your customers in the digital maze
Thursday, November 5th, 2009
8:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Coyote Moon Grille/Territory Golf Club – lower level
St. Cloud, MN

For more information visit: www.hatlingflint.com/know

Learn about proven, measurable methods you can use to integrate marketing efforts with your
customers’ digital lifestyles. We’ll show you how to harness the potential of digital media by
putting your brand in the right place at the right time and getting your audience  to act.

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The New Brandscape

By Jodi Duncan, October 26, 2009

When I was in grad school, I wrote my thesis on branding in mergers and acquisitions. I thought I was pretty cutting-edge back then. Companies simply weren’t thinking too deeply about branding and as more and more companies were merging. They weren’t taking the brands into consideration and often ended up with a number of disparate brands or trying to force brands together – confusing everyone in their path.

Since then, I’ve paid close attention to branding. Not just the evolution of company brands, but how customers are reacting, shaping and demanding what a brand is. How do you manage that?

We used to equate branding with trust. Who are you? What do you do? And Why should I care? Answer those questions and then deliver on your answers. But it’s really more complicated than that. In this digital age, audiences are savvier and more demanding:  “tell me what I want to know, when I want to know it… and say it how I understand it.”

So much for consistency of message. So much for simply repeating what you as a company want the public to know and think.

Let’s boil this down a little further. I was recently reading an article from Adam Morgan of Admap about brands and “three dimensions of trust.” The author broke it down as follows:

Competence: What is the company’s core expertise.

Intent: What motivates the company? Where does this company stand? An, honest job for an honest price, for example, could be your company’s intent.

Character: Who am I working with? Will they make things right if I am unhappy with the deliverable?

I like the idea of considering trust as three-dimensional. We should always circle back to these dimensions of trust when defining our brand. In doing so, a business stands a much better chance of developing communications and materials that get through the sea of clutter and confusion.

Branding is about to get a resurgence of sorts, because it’s not as simple as it once was. There are so many media channels and so many ways to reach out to people. We deal with complicated audience profiling and clusters, constant dialogue and feedback… I learned branding as simplification for ease of customer choice. I like that. I get that. But maybe now, branding should be simplification and trust for ease of customer choice through communications efforts, multi-media and digital dialogue.

If you embark on a brand strategy for your company, be sure and take the time to define what the three dimensions of trust mean to your company. It’s an important and worthwhile exercise. Then start to consider how that manifests itself in your day-to-day operations, including internal and external communications.

Price points in a recession

By Elizabeth Hansen, October 19, 2009

Not many foodservice and fast food chains are growing these days. Exception: SimmonsFlint client Subway restaurants. How? $5 is an increasingly powerful price point, established before the recession hit full bore. It’s becoming a brand all its own.

SimmonsFlint serves the local advertising franchisee ad fund. Its national Ad Fund CEO has been very busy with interviews, explaining the chains success amidst in-your-face competition and competitors’ lagging sales. 

This is his interview with Brandweek.

This is with MSNBC.

He did a great job, don’t you agree?

Branding Your Transit System: September 21-23

By Bill Hatling, September 11, 2009

Bill_HiRes2Bill Hatling will be speaking at the 2009 Minnesota Public Transit Conference www.mpta-transit.org to be held in Duluth September 21 – 23. He will be conducting a workshop on the topic of “Branding Your Transit System” with participants from transits systems in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Bill is a Certified Brand Strategist receiving his designation from The Brand Establishment www.brandestablishment.com and is one of 30+ agency principles from around the United States to carry this distinction. Participates will rate their system brands www.hatlingflint.com/reportcard/ after which they will learn what they need to do to differentiate their systems.