
Essential
first steps for building a successful brand

Branding, specifically successful branding, is
the act of imbedding a word into the mind of consumers in a positive
manner
for
as long as possible. It is a methodical, time-intensive process
that is first established via a tenacious PR campaign over a period
of years, and finally maintained through advertising once a brand
has taken root.

Step 1a: Define a new category
The first thing a company should consider is what category
the company, its services, or its products belong. Ideally,
a new category will need to be created, and named. This is perhaps
the
most important decision a company can make on it's path towards
branding nirvana.
- New categories
allow companies to profess a kind of ownership, with claims
of originality being among the most
effective and respected strategies used during successful branding
campaigns.
- Companies whose products and services do not
warrant the creation of a new category are doomed to follow the
leaders and originators of whichever existing category the company's
products and services
fit.
Step 1b: Choose a short, Unique name for the new category
- The category name is just as
important as the category itself. Step 2 below outlines the key
points to follow in choosing names.
Step 2a: Choose a short, unique name
Whether it's a company, a product, or a service,
the name chosen should be as short and unique as possible. Generic
names, acronyms, or long and complex names are harder to remember,
have
little character,
and are eventually shortened by the consumer.
- Acronyms are a last ditch effort to turn generic
names into something shorter and more memorable. Acronyms are not
necessary for short, unique names.
- Federal Express changed it's name to FedEx after years of consumers
trying to give its generic name character, and make it more memorable.
- Trends are not to be followed when choosing a name,
unless the goal for the company, product, or service is to be short-lived,
or designed to ride a fad to it's inevitable end.
- The following are a few do's and don'ts:
- Choose a name that is easy to spell accurately
when hearing it for the first time.
- Meaningless, or meaningless-sounding words
(Altria; Microsoft; Sony) should sounding pleasing to the
ear, while conjuring up as little meaning as possible.
- Unless absolutely necessary, the name should
sound generic (North American) or have little cultural flavor.
- Avoid trends, such as placing single lowercase
letters before the name, or adding ".com" after it.
- Avoid Unique or phonetic spelling (often used in
order to capture the Web domain).
- Try to determine how the newly chosen name
might be shortened or twisted by the consumer.
| Naming Schemes (in order of effectiveness) |
| Short,
unique words (Clarica;
Dell; Yahoo; Jell-O); or short common words used in a unique
way (Apple, Tide, Palm, Amazon). |
| Acronyms (IBM;
GE; GM; ABC) |
| Generic
names (International
Business Machines; General Electric; General Motors; Computer
Associates) |
Step 2b: Choose a memorable logo
Once the category has been decided upon, and the name
of the company, product, or service has been chosen, the logo's
next. Logos can help clarify the name or business, establish a tone,
and help better position
a company, product,
or service within an industry or market.
- Most logos, or "logotypes," are made up of two components:
- wordmark: the actual name
- bug: the symbol
- The bug generally comes first. The goal is to capture
the essence of the company, product, or service with as few lines
as possible.
- The rule of thumb: less
is more (less lines = more memorable).
Step 3: PR
At this early stage, forget advertising. Advertising
can only defend a brand. It can't build one. Instead, put your efforts
into PR. Think of PR as word-of-mouth approval from a friend, and
advertising as
the
obnoxious
car salesperson.
- PR is nothing
more than third-party endorsement, i.e. news; a powerful credibility
builder. The only thing more powerful is word-of-mouth.
- PR can be anything from press releases to street-level
guerrilla marketing tactics
While the cost per person is generally more for
PR as compared to advertising, PR's "third-party" effect
runs deeper and is more effective at garnering loyal customers than
the "salesperson"
approach upon which advertising is built.
Not sold on PR? Scan this
story on the power
of PR.
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