Branding is Not the Villain
Brian Sooy
I help service companies grow by aligning business and brand strategy. Dual-certified StoryBrand & Brand Architect. Multi-book author.
I’ve been thinking a lot about this —?way too much — and want to get this out.
Everybody won't agree, and that's OK. The subject is deeper and more relevant than this short post can explore.
There’s a common misconception among some business coaches, small business owners, and even design professionals: They think a brand is a logo, and that’s all there is.
Some think branding means putting a logo on a bottle and giving it to their customers.
Some business authors argue that marketing must come before branding to create revenue that fuels the business. When they make that argument, leadership and teams get confused. It contributes to the sales and marketing silos that isolate and divide groups.
That’s an odd argument because the company name, visual identity, design choices, messaging, tone of voice, and market presence — how it shows up in the marketplace and serves consumers — are all branding elements.
Branding is not the villain.
To oversimplify, marketing is a push, and branding is the pull. Branding is visual, verbal, and experiential. Everything is connected.
Branding is visual, verbal, and experiential.
Customers care more about what they believe to be accurate and true about your small business brand than what you try to convince them to believe.
Branding must be embedded and integrated into every aspect of your business from the start.
To operationalize your business, you must optimize your brand and design your category, branding, marketing, and website for your customers.
Not for you.
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