How Constraints Deliver Brand Focus
Photo by Chris Barbalis on Unsplash

How Constraints Deliver Brand Focus

Customers, consumers, clients – whatever we call the people who buy your product or service, no business would be around for long without them.

Now, when it comes to identifying your customers, consumers, or clients (let’s call it your audience from now on), there are two schools of thought:

  • reach as many people as is possible.
  • segment your audience?and identify those most likely convert to sales

I use both of these approaches, but each of them has issues. The argument against reaching as many people as possible is often that there is a degree of ‘wastage’ in this approach. You are spending money speaking to some people for whom there is possibly no, or very little, likelihood that they will ever convert to a sale. On the other hand, the argument against segmentation can be that if you aren’t careful then you’re missing out on some people who could convert to a sale – you make your audience too narrow. In this way, the arguments against each are the inverse of each other.

Reach too many people and you’re wasting money. Reach too few people and you’re wasting opportunities.

But, there is another way to consider how you create your audience, and that’s to think about those people who either you have no interest in reaching or they would have no interest in you. In his seven part Primal Branding structure, Patrick Hanlon referred to these people as your ‘outsiders’. A brand is a vehicle through which you can align an organisation and people, and these people would be those ‘inside’ the brand – so it follows, if you have insiders you must have outsiders.

I was reminded of this approach recently when I was speaking to the excellent strategist JP Castlin. We were discussing constraints – a topic he had covered in his brilliant newsletter – and how, rather than being a negative, constraints can be extremely valuable and bring focus. Constraints can give us a framework within which to work, allowing a flexibility within that space. Often strategists try to define a set path, off which we shouldn’t veer, but this is a very restrictive and actually not at all practical approach. Instead of rigidly defining what we must do, there is a benefit in defining what we definitely mustn’t do and then anything that sits within those constraints is fair game.

This conversation brought my thinking back to the idea of outsiders – which was actually how I used to help clients define their target audience back when I was brand consulting (borrowed with kind permission of Patrick Hanlon). In the area of your target audience, it can be helpful (and actually easier) to define who those people are that you definitely don’t want to reach. Your outsiders. Dependent on your industry or offering, these people might be outsiders because they simply can’t afford what you offer, or they have a preference that’s opposite to your offering (eg meat producers and vegetarians), or even that?them being associated with your brand would be detrimental to your brand?(Burberry actively trying to distance its products from UK football hooligans is a great example of this). There are many valid reasons people might be ‘outsiders’ for your brand, both practical and emotional.

So,?rather than targeting everyone, or targeting a potentially limiting segment, how about targeting an audience that comprises of everyone who’s not an outsider?

By identifying those you want ‘outside’ your brand, then everyone else becomes your target audience.

The people who are your outsiders become your constraints – they create the framework within which everyone else is your audience. So long as people aren’t an outsider, then they are fair game and an audience worth your while and your money to speak to.

This approach may seem counter-intuitive, but it’s being utilised by organisations right now. Audi Denmark recently claimed a 70% conversion rate by testing what they term ‘exclusion lists’. Working with PHD Media Denmark and ad-tech firm Semasio, Audi Denmark reached a solution that used a mix of audience and contextual targeting. The campaign narrowed in on most likely buyers while creating an “exclusion list” of least likely buyers based on media consumption habits and demographic characteristics. Frederik Meincke, PHD Media Denmark’s digital innovations director, said that “This was somewhat of a surprise to us, and it shows the power of taking a different approach to targeting by specifying what you don’t want instead of specifying what you want,”

Now, the apparent success of the Audi Denmark test and the writing of this article isn’t to say that this is the right way to define an audience and the other approaches are wrong. Not at all. I often use STP (segmentation,?targeting,?positioning) and other times I simply advise clients that we are best to reach everyone possible.

The point is that, sometimes, it’s easier to identify who you don’t want than who you do want.?

Article originally published by Branding Strategy Insider

#brand #audience #targeting

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Paul Bailey的更多文章

  • The Role Of Brand Strategy: Lessons From The Field

    The Role Of Brand Strategy: Lessons From The Field

    So I was contacted by a young brand strategist this week, asking whether he could ask me a some questions about brand…

  • The Value Of Distinctive Brand Assets In B2B And B2C

    The Value Of Distinctive Brand Assets In B2B And B2C

    B2B and B2C brands are often assumed to be very different. One big assumption is that B2C brands are bought on emotions…

    5 条评论
  • Think Audience First. Always.

    Think Audience First. Always.

    I’ve been going to meetings, with both B2C and B2B clients, for over 25 years now. Many things have changed over this…

  • How Creators Are Challenging Traditional Brand Strategy

    How Creators Are Challenging Traditional Brand Strategy

    I recently put a post up on LinkedIn asking whether the creators are taking over from the 'traditional' brands. Why I…

    1 条评论
  • How you’re recognised

    How you’re recognised

    Working for a brand agency, I am often approached to handle the strategy for a ‘rebrand’. What this often means is one…

    4 条评论
  • The Art Of Brandalism

    The Art Of Brandalism

    There is an image of an advertising campaign poster making the rounds on social media that has been marked with…

  • 6 Brand Strategy Models For Focus And Structure

    6 Brand Strategy Models For Focus And Structure

    For over 20 years, I’ve been working in or running my own branding agency. First design side, and then moving strategy…

    8 条评论
  • How Over-Confidence Kills Creativity

    How Over-Confidence Kills Creativity

    Creativity is growth. Creativity is play.

    1 条评论
  • The original Tokyo 2020 scandal.

    The original Tokyo 2020 scandal.

    So, it's the Tokyo Olympics very soon and there are numerous issues around the safety of athletes, the lack of fans…

  • Accessing Deep Customer Insight

    Accessing Deep Customer Insight

    Back when I was an art student I had a very wise and passionate art teacher. Among the most common instructions she…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了