"How do you create a consistent and unique brand voice?"
Smart marketers use a brand voice to say what they mean, uniquely
Marketers from Accuweather, Cyrus One and Kaiser Permanente posed a series of tough questions about brand voice:
Two of these questions rank among marketers’ Top 100 Questions on content marketing. Today I’ll address all these questions.
Tune into your customers and your brand personality
The better you know your brand and your customers, the more in-tune your voice will sound. Build your brand voice on a solid foundation of customer research and branding.
If your brand hasn’t yet defined its marketplace position, promise to customers, or personality, it’s too soon to work on brand voice. Define the brand first, then its voice.
If your brand already has a clearly defined position and promise, you can move towards defining your brand personality and voice.
One way to do that? Think in analogies. Ask big questions like these:
Each person has their own tone of voice: that’s why you can pick out your friend’s voice in a crowd. Brands also have their own tone, and it's called brand voice.
What is a brand voice?
A brand’s tone of voice is how you say what you say.
The tone of voice directly affects purchase decisions – just as it affects all human interactions. For example, at the end of a meal:
Brand voice can help you make your marketing simply irresistible!
Which tone makes you likelier to have dessert? See: tone of voice really matters!
Let’s take a deeper look at how to advance your brand voice: how to discover or create it, manage it and measure it.
How smart brands speak in a unique voice?
Adopt writing guidelines
The more writers you have working on your brand, the more you need standards and guidelines for brand voice.
To start, designate standard reference books for writers to use, such as:
Develop a house style guide
You can adapt this style guide example from Uberflip .
Be curious as you explore your brand voice. Ask questions about: How do people from your company actually greet customers??
Everyday habits will hint at how your brand voice should sound. One brand says hello, another says good morning, and their competitor says howdy!
Choose a formal or informal tone
Your style guide should settle questions such as how to greet people, and how to refer to your company and customers. Here’s a quick exercise to help you discover how formal or informal your brand should sound.
How formal or informal is your company? To find out, circle the words on each continuum that sound most like your brand. Invite others to participate and compare notes:
How formal is your brand voice? Find out by circling the terms your brand uses most.
Note: If any of these examples offends customers – perhaps because you switched to a different language or sounded inappropriate to your audience – cross them off your list. They are taboo for your brand voice.
A clear brand voice definition includes what you will say and what you won’t say.
No need to piss people off. (Hmm … does that sound like the Crystal Clear Communications brand voice?)
This raises the question: can you ever go off voice? Yes, once in a while, go off voice to make a point and prevent audiences from getting bored. But be prepared to hear some blowback.
Make your voice uniquely yours
The deep question to ask is how different is your voice from competitors? Is it distinct and ownable? Can it rise above the noise in the marketplace?
To find out, audit the brand voice as it sounds today in your website and marketing communications. Go through your website and highlight the distinct, unique elements that help define a brand voice.
As you audit, ask:
A third party can bring more objectivity to your brand voice audit. To measure the starting point, rank the uniqueness of each webpage on a scale of 1 to 10 (with 10 being completely unique). How unique is your website’s voice?
Use pairs of opposites to discover your voice?
At a minimum, describe your brand voice as what it is and what it’s not – what it moves towards and what it moves away from, on a continuum. Think of it as defining pairs of opposites.
For example, define the brand’s stance: how exclusive or inclusive, is it? Circle the spot where your brand lives:
Is your brand voice exclusive or inclusive? Circle the words that best fit your brand.
What kind of relationship is your brand trying to build with your customers? How do customers see your brand? For example, is your brand more of a guru, guide, partner or helper?:
Is your brand relationship with customers that of a guru, guide, partner, or helper?
To clarify this relationship, imagine a group walking along a trail. A guru is several steps ahead of the customer. A guide is one or two steps ahead. A partner walks side by side. A helper trails behind.
How does your brand show up with customers? Read more about the specific roles of helpers, partners, guides, and gurus here .
Other dimensions of brand voice to explore include these. Is your brand voice:
For example, one of the most playful brand voices comes from Woot and its monkeys:
Monkeys deliver the voice of Woot, whose motto is Make Our Crap Your Crap.
In serious categories like healthcare, a brand found its existing voice out of step with the company’s growth strategy. So, the brand started to change its voice to sound more like the energetic, inspiring, aspirational customer advocate it wanted to be.
A healthcare brand changed its brand voice to better fit its strategy and aspirations.
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How to make your brand voice unique?
Does your brand choose to be easy or hard to read? Choose how readable your text should be, based on your audience.
A study of adult literacy in America shows that: 1 out of 5 Americans reads at a 1st to 3rd-grade level. Only 3 out of 100 Americans can read at an 11th-grade?level.
Many writers write at simpler grade levels to expand their addressable audience. Ernest Hemmingway wrote at a 7th-grade?level. The Wall Street Journal writes front-page stories at a 9th-grade?level.
Choose a target level of readability intentionally, not inadvertently. Test the readability of text by using an online readability test.
Is it readable?
The more readable your text is, the larger the audience who can comprehend it. Make the choice that fits your brand best.
If Brand A is all about mystique, it may choose to talk over people’s heads, use big words, jargon, and acronyms, and be intentionally opaque.
Brand A consciously uses long words, long sentences, long paragraphs, and difficult language intentionally – writing at a 16th-grade level, so it takes a college education to understand. Since it serves an exclusive audience of medical doctors, that works for Brand A.
Brand B chooses to be all about inclusion. It speaks so simply that even people who learned English as a second language get it.
Brand B uses short words, short paragraphs and simple language. It writes at a 3rd-grade?level, so almost everyone can read and comprehend the text.
Where does your brand fit on the readability continuum?
The lower the grade level, the more people will be able to comprehend your text. Lower-grade levels fit inclusive brands.
(Note: this blog is written at a 6.9-grade level, so more than half of Americans can easily comprehend it.)?
Choose words that stir strong emotions
Test your headlines and subheads for emotional marketing value (EMV) using this free test .
For our blog and our clients, we write lots and lots of headlines and subheads, then test each one to maximize EMV. Why focus on emotional value? Because people make decisions based on emotions, rather than rationally.
EMV also measures whether a headline has more of an intellectual, empathetic or spiritual appeal. This dimension matters because different types of appeals work with different audiences.
For example, caregivers resonate with empathetic messages. Analytical types prefer intellectual messages. Emphasize the traits that fit your brand’s personality.
Another reason to strive for a high EMV: Headlines with higher EMV scores get shared more.
Higher emotional marketing value in headlines correlates with sharing, says Andy Crestodina of Orbit Media.
Unique voices use unique words
Writers can make brands distinct with clever word choices. Some brands even define their own vocabulary!
For example, the Voice of America (VOA) defined its Special English vocabulary in 1959 to assure that non-native speaker of English could understand its radio programming.
VOA’s 1500-word vocabulary is all about inclusion, by speaking simplified global English .
Another example of choosing great words is the Altoids tagline. “Curiously Strong Mints” turns into a phrase that’s seldom heard.
Only one public figure uses the word "malarkey": President Joe Biden. He may be mocked for it, but it’s a word that’s uniquely his.
Invented words and phrases can help your brand stand out: David Meerman Scott’s book Newsjacking and Robert Cialdini’s book Pre-suasion come to mind.
What’s in your unique vocabulary? Write it down and share it.
Digital, print or live events? Use your unique voice?
No matter what your communications vehicle is, use the same consistent brand voice. You want one voice on your website and in your newsletters, ads, emails, and social media.
Make your brand speak with one consistent voice. Don’t speak in a different voice in each medium.
How to choose when to use a byline?
Should you use bylines on content? Yes.
Here’s why: A good byline adds value when readers recognize the writer’s name and authority. Give new writers the opportunity to build up their credibility with bylines.
Use bylines on articles, blogs, columns, and white papers written by a specific person or ghostwritten for a specific person.
That said, not every piece of content needs a byline. Most web pages don’t.
But if all your communications are written by “anonymous,” don’t be surprised if customers have a harder time connecting with your brand.
Speaking your brand voice even saves money?
In the end, the most powerful measure of a brand’s voice is whether it simplifies communications with customers, thereby saving money for the brand.
Suzi Williams, the former CMO of BT (formerly known as British Telecom), said, “We’ve saved or made BT many millions of pounds through getting our tone right more often. Imagine — a simpler call-center script reduces call times by 10%. In a company like BT that’s not just a happier customer, it’s a very substantial cost saving.
“Tone of voice … costs so little and delivers not only a simpler, better, warmer brand experience, but it also saves money, and empowers and engages at the same time. Even the accountants like it!”
Smart brands learn to speak in a unique voice?
And here’s how you can measure the impact of your brand voice:
Demystify brand voice with a step-by-step process?
Here’s a step-by-step process so you can cook up your own brand voice.
Where to hear unique voices
Let’s learn about unique voices from people who make a living with their unique voices: actors and singers.
You probably recognize the voices of top US voiceover artists:
Or think of distinctive singing voices, such as:
All of their voices are instantly recognizable and full of personality. You’d never mistake one of them for another.
That said, you might or might not like their voices.
For more on brand voice, see the Toptal blog .
“How can a brand quantify content ‘tone’ as in ‘brand voice’?” and “How do you create a consistent brand voice?” are two of the Top 100 Questions on Content Marketing. You’ll find the answers to all 100 questions here .