Is Your Brand Evocative?

Branding isn't just about looks, it's about how your brand makes your customers feelIs Your Brand Evocative?

I spend a disproportionate amount of my time thinking, dreaming, talking and designing branding.

Honestly, I could talk all day about the design aspects of branding: colours, typefaces, negative space, the golden ratio, but branding is about so much more. While many people think a brand is simply a logo and that's it, in marketing, branding goes so much deeper than graphic design.

I once read a quote that said, branding is what people say about you when you're not in the room. Branding is the essence of you as a business person, your business and the products and services you offer. It's about the holistic, cohesive experience of your customer when they interact with your brand.

The one thing I say to clients: branding isn't just about looks, it's about how your brand makes your customers feel and that goes way deeper than aesthetics.

Branding is, ultimately, about a feeling. Branding is about evoking an emotion for your target audience. And remember, it comes back to your target audience and their experience, not yours.

I've worked on countless branding projects over the years, and from a design point of view, some I love, some I never want to see again. It's interesting the feedback I've received on particular projects. In the creative field, opinions... Well, everyone has one!

I've met people who have outright said “oh I HATE that logo”, and I've said, “fair enough but the target audience for that project was primary school age children and you're a middle-aged man” (OK, so I might not have been that blunt but you get my meaning).

In every aspect of your branding you need to constantly bear your customer in mind. Leave your ego at the door - there is no you (or me) in branding. It is not about what you want, it's about what will attract and engage your ideal customer.

A brand is, in fact, very specific. It is, essentially a promise made to your customers about what you will deliver to them, how you will solve their problem and how it will make them feel, communicated through multiple channels including visual, verbal and perception.

A strong brand gives a customer confidence to move forward with a purchase decision. And when you're in business, everything comes down to the purchasing decision!

Have you ever sat down and undergone an intensive brand analysis?

Answer these questions, honestly:

  1. Does your brand, your logo, your messaging, your website, your collateral, your social media represent the core of you, your business and your why?
  2. Does it take your customers on a cohesive brand journey or is it a mish-mash of hastily posted Facebook posts, confused messaging and a logo designed by your cousin's son four years ago that you've never really loved but haven't had the heart to change?
  3. Does your brand attract and engage your ideal customer?

What do your answers say about your business and what it means to you and your customers?

Every interaction you have with a customer is influenced in some way by how they perceive your brand and its position in the market, what has been communicated to them about your brand before they have made contact with you, walked into your shop or looked at your Facebook page or your website.

Your brand is the foundation upon which we lay every other element in a marketing strategy; a weak foundation means shaky messaging, cracks in your visuals and can, ultimately, mean failure for your marketing and your business.

Your brand needs to deliver a cohesive, consistent message in everything that you do.

Branding is the core of your business' marketing, it is the first impression, the messaging, the values, the purpose, the mission and the vision. At its heart, it is the essence of your business and why you do what you do and every element of your brand needs to communicate this.

If you want to talk more about your branding book a 15 minute clarity call.

Top Marketing Trends for 2014

Color-of-the-yearI spend a large amount of my time indulging my inner geek and examining, pondering and questioning the latest marketing, web, search, design and social media trends.

So here you have my top 14 marketing trends for 2014.

Marketing

  1. Good customer service is, and always will be, your most powerful marketing tool

Word of mouth still remains the most powerful influencer on purchasing decisions made by consumers; be that in person or via the internet, social media or even your local media.

Customer service that goes above and beyond (or is even just plain old basic “good” these days) speaks volumes for your organisation.

  1. Content marketing

What’s content marketing I hear you ask? At its core, content marketing is creating content that users want or need. It’s not shoving a flyer under their windscreen wiper or spamming their inbox, it’s creating a blog post, an image or a video that users actually want, that they will enjoy and, most importantly, share.

Content marketing has its origins in the need of the customer, it’s about attracting customers, not paying to reach them.

  1. Video

Despite what you’re thinking, video is cheap and easy to do and it can add another dimension to your content marketing efforts. Video marketing builds brand personality, improves customer engagement and boosts your search engine ranking.

With as little as the camera on your mobile phone you can create, edit and share a video. It doesn’t have to be slick but it does have to be informative.

Video ideas include information highlighting the features and benefits of your latest product, webinars and simple how-tos. With the focus on content and the enhancements of Google’s latest update, videos are amazingly searchable content.

Want to see some of the most successful video marketing? Go to Blendtec’s channel on YouTube.

  1. Value never goes out of style

Give your customers something in your marketing and I don’t just mean a groovy promotional item.

Whether it’s an informative “how-to” demonstration, a step-by-step tutorial or simply beautiful images that bring people joy; for your audience to be engaged with your brand, they need to perceive value in your marketing offerings. It’s the notion of “what’s in it for me” (WIIFM) marketing.

Web

  1. Responsive design is the only way

Responsive web design is basically optimising your website to be viewed on all manner of devices and screen sizes: smartphones, tablets, etc.

If your website isn’t responsive, you’re annoying a quarter of your target audience as, globally, 19.1% of all global web usage is now done using a mobile phone while tablet usage is 4.8% and on the rise. Smartphone penetration reached 65 percent in 2013, up from 44 percent in 2011 and is expected to continue climbing in 2014; some analysts predict that reach could be as high as 75 percent by the end of the year.

  1. Flash is dead, people

Sorry but Steve Jobs killed it.

If you’re not into web development you would still “know” Flash developed sites if you saw them, they were those jaw-droppingly beautiful sites created in the early-mid noughties that had animated home pages and other visual trickery. I loved Flash, I thought it was stunning but also annoying and invasive as it interfered with the native digital experience.

Basically, they’re the reason the “Skip Intro” button was invented.

When Apple made the decision to ship its iPhones without Flash Player in 2010 it sounded the death knell for Flash.

In this world where search engine rankings are critical to getting your business seen Flash is a massive no-no as Flash content cannot be crawled i.e. “seen” by search engine bots.

If your site is Flash-based, you really should look at redeveloping it. Now!

  1. Visual is king

Sites with crazy mixed-up fonts, mish-mashed, non-intuitive layouts and skewed images  make users (especially me) cranky. With larger screens and HTML5, web developers everywhere are developing more and more beautiful sites and if your site isn’t beautiful, your designer isn’t trying hard enough.

Now we’re all a bit more familiar with the interwebs, users are coming to expect stunningly-designed websites.

While it’s not always relevant to create an amazingly-visual site for every brand, it can still be attractive. If you don’t like your site, talk to a designer (and not your friend’s boyfriend who builds sites as a side gig) but an actual website designer.

This doesn’t just apply to websites but all media; advertising, packaging, apps, etc.

Media

  1. Google+

We resisted, we really did, but as a social network Google+ is simply too important to ignore.

With the added search benefits of being attached to Google, many people will be making the move from Facebook to G+ over the coming years and no doubt members of your target audience will be amongst those making the migration. This ship is sailing very soon so get on board.

  1. Paid organic social amplification or “you have to pay to play”

I often cite the statistic of Facebook posts having a reach of 17% to clients embarking on the social media journey. Recently however the team at Ignite Social Media found reach could be as low as 2.5%. Ouch!

Admittedly I have noticed my Facebook site stats have been taking a hammering lately and have been wondering whether it’s actually worth my time and it seems that to make headway as a brand on all social networks, this year marketers are going to have to cough up on these previously “free” networks.

I still think it’s valuable to have a Facebook presence but you have to put in more effort to get noticed if you’re not prepared to pay for advertising.

  1. Niche media

Looking for a place to call your own and where you feel at home with like-minded individuals on the internet? Niche social sites have the answer. Whether you’re into music, are of a “senior” age, love books, design, sewing, zombies or cats, there is a niche social network for you!

What does this mean for marketers? Cheaper, more targeted advertising than larger, generic social media networks (see point 9). No matter what your business does, there’s more than likely a relevant niche social network out there.

Search

  1. Deep, fresh content

The latest Google Hummingbird update means that semantic search as opposed to keyword search is the in thing right now. Search engines can now grasp the meaning of a search query in context, i.e. users can search “how does a cake rise”, “what makes a cake rise”, etc.

Keywords used to be the only focus for websites, leaving us copywriters very frustrated by having to focus on keyword density that yielded poor-quality content just to up Google rankings.

Google have designed their last three updates, Panda, Penguin and Hummingbird to stamp out SEO techniques that resulted in poor quality content climbing the ranks.

While I could go into the technicalities but I won’t, basically this opens up the web content space dramatically especially to those of us who love to write (or pay someone who does)!

Longer, more detailed and enriched content is the answer to this so get your content planning hat on!

  1. Online audience optimization (OAO)

If there’s one thing us marketers love it’s a jargonistic acronym.

OAO is the new SEO. It’s is already here and happening!

OAO is basically creating content with the user in mind instead of just search engine rankings. Sounds basic enough? Create high quality, more detailed, enriched content and you’re on your way (see point 11).

Design

  1. Celebrate colour

In case you missed it Radiant Orchid is the Pantone Colour of the Year. What does this mean for you?

Do you recall that scene in “The Devil Wears Prada” where Miranda (played by Meryl Streep) dresses down Andy (played by Anne Hathaway) for not appreciating that her sweater is cerulean (you can read the transcript here)? Well, that’s the importance of the Colour of the Year.

Pantone are the authority on colour and if they say a colour is hot, then it’s hot.

Expect to see a lot more purple across all design in 2014; fashion, interiors, websites, logos, etc.

Other colours that I’m picking to trend (if they aren’t already)? Navy (although Pantone selected Dazzling Blue as part of the Spring colour palette I think navy is easier to use), yellow, grey and lime green.

Ultra brights will be huge too, not fluoros which have been trending in recent years but big, bright, bold colours.

  1. Halftones

Not familiar with half tone? Think Andy Warhol, Pop Art-esque dot images or old school newspaper images that were printed with dots.

I saw a fair amount of half tone design in 2013 and expect it to a lot more of it in 2014 along with any designs that sees cyan, magenta, yellow and key (black) (CMYK) layered to dramatic effect. While we’re talking retro, expect to see a lot more geometric design to go along with the half tones.

Well, they’re my top marketing trends for 2014! What are your favourite predicted and emerging marketing trends for 2014?

Migrating from WordPress.com to WordPress.org with surprising results

codeispoetry-rgbWow! I must say, I’m impressed.

I’d put off migrating my blog from WordPress.com to my self-hosted site as I was concerned traffic would drop as a result of not being directly connected to the WordPress community.

The time had come, so I migrated on Friday. I published one post yesterday (Tuesday) and have already eclipsed the best-ever traffic day I had on WordPress.com.

So there you go, you think you’re taking a risk and it turns out to be a much better option for your business!

It’s taken a long time and a lot of (wo)man hours but it’s done and I’m happy with the result. It still needs tweaking but I’d rather have it out there than not.

So what steps did I take to migrate my blog from WordPress.com to WordPress.org?

  1. I found a decent, local host that allows a one-click WordPress install. One-click is a lot easier than trying to set up a testing site on your desktop (take it from me, I tried and failed at the mySQL database privilegesstage).
  2. I set up a “testing” sub-domain via cPanel and installed WordPress there, the equivalent of a sandbox environment where I could “play” with my new site.
  3. I built my (responsive) site. There were a few hiccups along the way, including being hacked and having to start from scratch! But here it is, using WordPress as a CMS. I know a lot more now than I ever thought I would about the mysterious workings of WordPress. Happily I know code and was able to customise the visual to my liking.
  4. I exported my old blog from WordPress.com to my WordPress.org (self-hosted) site following the instructions here. I was tempted to purchase a “guided” transfer but the transfer staff “weren’t there that day” according to the message. Was I up for the challenge? Why yes, yes I was and it was easier than I had
  5. I purchased a re-direct from WordPress.com for USD$13 for 12 months. Invaluable, in my mind, as anyone who has bookmarked your blog will still be able to find you.
  6. I installed “Velvet Blues Update URLs” plug in which updates all your internal links to point to the posts within your new site.
  7. I migrated my testing site to my main domain and, like magic, the JMC website had a major transformation from the old, image-based, non-SEOed one I whipped up one evening and was meant to be temporary, to a slicker, more visual site which is a breeze to update.

 

Things to remember:

 

I’ll update this post if I remember any other key points in my “journey”.

Is there any helpful advice you can provide to the bloggers about to go out on there own? Please add it below.

Your blog is not your showroom

promoObviously I am a believer in blogging as a marketing tool.

In this crazy mixed up world of penguins and pandas, blogging stands out as a gift from the SEO gods.

What frustrates me, however, is the distinction between editorial and advertorial in the blogging world.

Most of the bloggers I read have a background in professional writing and marketing.

Blogging, content production, article writing is what they do to earn a crust; they are spruiking their wares simply by writing.

I believe that blatant self-promotion has no place in blogging.

Find your niche, carve it out and sit there, using your words to prove your worth.

By all means use real-life examples and case studies to demonstrate how you helped solve a client’s problem with your mad skillz or insanely brilliant product but please do not hit me over the head with flagrant self-promotion.

If I wanted that I’d listen to commercial radio and be shouted at for 30 seconds of every 3 minutes.

To me, business blogging and content marketing is about demonstrating a solution to a customer’s problem, positioning yourself as an expert in your field and benefitting from the SEO goodness that comes from writing high-quality articles that are relevant to your market.

Not to mention building your brand (to an international audience), developing customer loyalty and respect and opening the door to real-life conversations with current/past/potential customers.

Simply producing content that is relevant to your chosen field will mean you’re writing about areas you’re passionate about, you (should) know a thing or two about and, therefore, can provide solutions to others looking for assistance.

I understand that the point of a blog is to promote your business but there needs to be a balance between self-promotion and editorial commentary.

As Joe Pulizzi (Content Marketing Institute) puts it, “Instead of pitching your products or services, you are delivering information that makes your buyer more intelligent.”

So please, lay off the hyperbolic language, save that for your marketing collateral. Just talk to me, as if we were having a conversation in a café, not a showroom.

101 Best and Most Proven Sales and Marketing Ideas

101 Best and Most Proven Sales and Marketing Ideas (best viewed in 800x600 resolution) includes some marketing gems from the last millennium.

I think it demonstrates how far we've come in terms of technology yet it's easy to see how translatable these ideas are in, well, the new millennium (there's a term you haven't heard for about 12 years!).

So, how do you apply these "Marketing 101" ideas to life in the content-driven, social media age?

I've taken some of Mr. Gerry Robert's pearls of wisdom and translated them, post-Y2K.

7. Send Out 35 Sales Letters Every Week Regardless: Get in the habit of sending out at least that many letters to prospects every week. No matter what, make sure they go out every Friday.
These days we call this LinkedIn: find and make connections that will enhance your business. Remember: 35 a week people!

13. Write A Special Report: If you are in selling, you are in solving. What do you solve for people? Write a 10 pages report, offer it to your prospects for Free and your telephone will ring off the wall.
White papers can establish you as a leading thinker in your industry and garner respect from your peers. I don't know if your telephone will ring off the wall but your Twitter might go nuts.

44. Use Pictures: Pictures of satisfied clients go further than lengthy letters. People are visual and if they see people just like them they will think you are Okay.
Ah Pinterest, how I love thee. Instagram too. Pictures speak thousands of words and us humans are highly visual people. Create beautiful images and they will come. Even if you don't work in a particularly visual industry you can repin images relevant to your sector on your Pinterest boards and people will think you are Okay.

45. Create Your Own Marketing Binder: Put any awards you have in the binder along with photos, testimonial, product information, how you do business, your sales presentation and leave it with prospects, so they can evaluate you.
Your company website is the perfect place to post testimonials, awards and other information to demonstrate how awesome you are at what you do. No one is going to do it for you!

65. Instead Of A Letter Send An Audio Cassette: You may have noticed something called the "jam". Instead of writing a letter, speak your letter into a cassette and they will listen to it in their cars in the "jam".
Quality content is much more likely to go viral in video format than on text-only platforms. With Google's Penguin release video will also increase the perceived quality of your website and also move your site further up in Google’s search results. People can watch your videos on the "tube".

66. Get On Everyone's Mailing List: I love to learn from what people send me.
Follow everyone and anyone who is respected in your industry on Twitter. I love to learn from what people Tweet!

76. Position Yourself As An "Expert And Authority": Even if you are new to your industry you can be perceived as an expert. The way to do it is with information. Write something, research something or print something and you are an instant "expert".
Well look at that, I'm an instant expert. Blogging is an amazing way to express your views or post well-researched position papers that will have you looking like an expert in no time.

91. Keep In touch By Fax: Send a weekly or monthly report or newsletter via the fax machine. Send a positive quotation of the day.
Facebook is the "sometimes food" social media platform for many businesses but don't overlook it in your content plan. Be sure to "send a positive quotation of the day" at least once a week.

What's your favourite of Mr Robert's gems? Are there any translations I have overlooked?

[UPDATE: I just found the original publication of this work in the New Straits Times, July 11, 1995.]