Incite Blog

Marketing Ideas + Strategies In Action

Jared Smith
Principal

Two Brands, or Not Two Brands?

Posted by Incite on 05/26/10

Two Brands, or Not Two BrandsDiscussion at this month’s TEN gathering focused on a topic familiar to many business owners, especially to those whose businesses have experienced significant growth in a short period of time: the identity crisis.

Here’s the situation: if your company has grown quickly through the addition of multiple products or services, and each one targets a distinct audience, should you:

Create multiple brands for each product and service?

or

Operate with one brand that encompasses all aspects of your business?

With a brand for each product or service, you might be able to speak more directly to each of your target audiences, but with one all-encompassing brand, you have the opportunity to carry more weight in the marketplace and take advantage of cross-promotional opportunities.

Realistically, the arguments for and against each option varies greatly depending on your product mix, audience segments, and current and desired position in the market place. But two important points emerged from the TEN discussion:

  1. An identity crisis—not knowing who you are as a company—is typically a symptom of not knowing how you are perceived by your clients and target audience(s).
  2. An identity crisis is also a symptom of not clearly knowing where you want to be in the future.

Business owners that find themselves in the midst of an identity crisis should pause, and take a step back to re-evaluate their business. Take a brief time-out to reset the bricks and mortar so that your business has the support to continue growing in a way that is both manageable and profitable.

During this pause, inform yourself:

  • Find out what your audience thinks of you, how they find you, and what they really need from you. (You might be surprised to find that you’re over-valuing your current brand.)
  • Think about your goals as a company; where do you want to be in five years, ten years? (Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.)

Once you’ve established a plan for where you want to take your business, and armed yourself with accurate knowledge about how your business is perceived in the marketplace, you will be able to make an informed decision about which direction to take your brand(s).


Thanks for this post Jared. All to often businesses can explain their features and benefits, but they cannot articulate why the exist; what’s at the heart of their brand.

Michael
mikekroll.com

Posted by Michael Kroll  on  05/26  at  11:42 AM



Thanks for your comment Michael.  I completely agree.  Features and benefits are always biased and more sophisticated clients/ customers see right through them!

Posted by Jared  on  05/27  at  12:49 PM



Very interesting points. I recall a conversation I had with a young entrepreneur—head of an up-and-coming ad agency—who was very persistent in defining the term “brand”.
He postulated that in today’s business world, the term is used quite interchangeably with “slogan”, “logo”, or “identity”. This can lead to objective issues with the process.

Posted by Patrick  on  05/28  at  12:20 PM



What was being missed, he commented, was in a very strict sense, a “brand” was not something that is only arbitrary, but moreover, it needs to be earned.

In other words, “brand” is the perceptual notion in the consumers mind which can only be achieved successfully once a marketing program has been effectively executed. Then, and only then, can a company confidently say that “we have a brand”.

Posted by Patrick  on  05/28  at  12:21 PM



Patrick you’re bang on.  Brand is not about your look and feel (it’s only a part of it).  It’s the business equivalent of a personality.  It’s every experience a customer has with you and the feeling they get from that experience.  As with our own personalities, brands start and evolve over time but the core is consistently there.

Posted by Doug  on  05/28  at  03:06 PM



This makes sense. I found this interesting for two reasons: 1) People attempting to define their companies generally think that they can simply impute their brand, 2) Once business realize that their brand must be built, they would act accordingly to insure the steps they take will progressively work towards the actual market perception of the company.

Posted by Patrick  on  05/28  at  03:16 PM



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