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Launching & Building a Brand For Dummies. Amy WillЧитать онлайн книгу.

Launching & Building a Brand For Dummies - Amy Will


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names, such as Google, Target, and Louis Vuitton.

      Brainstorming brand names

      Brainstorming is a creative activity in which you suspend critical thinking and give your right brain free rein. It’s generally a group activity involving several team members gathered in a conference room with a whiteboard and markers, calling out and jotting down ideas that pop into their heads.

      I encourage you to take the same approach, alone or with others, to come up with a long list of possible brand names. Suspend your critical mind, and jot down any brand names that pop into your head or the heads of other participants. There should be no criticizing, ignoring, scoffing at, or crossing off any ideas.

      

Encourage everyone to participate, consider alternative perspectives (such as the target customer’s), and explain their thinking. Sometimes, digging into the thought process behind a suggested brand name can spark additional ideas.

      Choosing the best brand name

      When you have a long list of brand-name candidates, narrow it down to three to five names. At this point, you switch from right-brain (creative) mode to left-brain (critical) mode.

      You can start by crossing obviously lousy names off the list, but as you cut more names, competition for the top spot stiffens. Evaluate the remaining names based on the criteria presented in the earlier section “Following brand naming parameters.”

      When only a few brand name candidates remain, you can debate the merits of each in the hopes of narrowing the list further. If that approach doesn’t work, you may want to engage in another brainstorming session.

      

Try to avoid choosing a brand name by popular vote. That approach often results in choosing a brand name that’s simply not as bad as the others. Instead, continue debating which brand name candidate is best, or conduct another brainstorming session to generate fresh ideas to consider.

      

Once you’ve landed on a name you’d like to use for your brand, you need to make sure it is not trademarked and that you can legally use it. For more information on trademarking, go to Chapter 19.

      Clarifying Your Branding Goals

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Setting branding goals

      

Mapping out your branding activities for the year

      

Making your goals measurable

      

Monitoring your branding success and making adjustments

      One of the biggest mistakes people make when they start branding is that they start branding. I know that sounds odd, but my point is that most people start by creating a website or blog or podcast before they have any idea of what they’re trying to accomplish. As a result, they work too hard at it, everything they do has little or no impact, they have nothing in place to figure out why, and they begin to wonder what they’re doing wrong. What they did wrong is that they started branding when they should have started planning.

      As Steven Covey, author of the best-seller The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, advises, “Start with the end in mind.” After all, how can you hope to get where you’re going if you don’t even know where that is?

      In this chapter, I encourage you and guide you through the process of starting with the end in mind by establishing branding goals and figuring out the best methods to achieve those goals. Then I proceed to explain how to put a system in place to measure success and identify what’s working and what’s not so you can make well-informed adjustments moving forward.

      Ultimately, many people have the same branding goals: a better, richer life: more money; more free time; enjoyable, rewarding work; and delighted customers/clients. We can all dream, right? Unfortunately, “a better, richer life” doesn’t cut it as a branding goal because it’s not SMART:

       Specific: The goal of “a better, richer life” is vague. Specifically, what do you want to accomplish? Increased sales? Lucrative speaking engagements? More and better clients for your consulting business? Book deals with major publishers?

       Measurable: Setting a measurable, quantifiable goal provides a way to evaluate success. A better goal than “increased sales,” for example, would be “a 10 percent boost in sales over last year.”

       Attainable: Aim high, but make sure you’re setting up goals along the way. Smaller goals that help you achieve your end objective are important to keep momentum going in building a brand. If you have high goals, simply make a roadmap to help get there.

       Relevant: Be sure that your goal will strengthen your brand. You must have a good answer to the question “If I achieve this goal, how will it improve my brand?” Be mindful that as your brand evolves, so do your goals and your relevance.

       Time-based: Specify a deadline for achieving your goal. Otherwise, procrastination is too easy.

      In the following sections, I introduce five branding goals/objectives to consider and present different ways to achieve each one. These goals/objectives are just a small sample to get you pointed in the right direction and spark your creativity.

      

Goals and objectives are basically the same, and I use the terms interchangeably, but I draw the following distinction in the context of planning to meet goals: A goal is the one big thing you want to accomplish, whereas an objective is a smaller goal that you need to accomplish to meet your big goal. Suppose that your goal is to increase sales by 20 percent over last year. Your objectives could be to increase direct traffic to my website by 10 percent, grow your email contact list by 5 percent, and increase positive word of mouth on social media by 20 percent.

      Increasing brand recognition and awareness

      Brand recognition and awareness are fundamental to a brand’s success. After all, if people don’t know about your brand, it’s not much of a brand. Brand recognition and awareness can open doors to customers, opportunities, and partnerships. These factors are especially important if you’re hoping to partner with large corporations because they’ll want social proof


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