The Process and Tools You Need To Do Brand Strategy
Sarah Robb
I help people beat brand strategy imposter syndrome with my online course, Brand Strategy Academy, and work with select clients to develop brand strategies that connect with the people that drive their business forward.
“Begin with the end in mind.”??
One of the ‘Seven Habits of Highly Effective People’, and common sense, you might say.?
But very unhelpful if you’re trying to learn how to do brand strategy.
Because here’s what happens.
When people try and learn how to do brand strategy they start by researching models and frameworks - the end deliverable for a client.
But then they get stuck.
They get stuck in the muddy world of different models, frameworks and jargon promoted by different people and agencies trying to differentiate themselves with their brand strategy deliverables.??It’s understandable, but it’s not helpful if you’re trying to learn how to do brand strategy.
(I know this, because I’ve polled the 170 people who’ve taken Brand Strategy Academy and it’s where they were stuck before they took the course).?
The truth is - it doesn’t really matter what model you use, as long as your deliverable answers the fundamental questions you need to answer in a brand strategy to help to move a business forward.??
So where is a more helpful place to start when you're trying to learn how to do brand strategy?
Process and tools.
“Oooh – but I’d prefer to draw a 3-dimensional pyramid model that uses a clever anagram to explain my deliverables! Process and tools sound boring!”
Go right ahead.??
But you’re making it all about you, and not about the client and business you’re trying to help.
They don’t want a 3-dimensional pyramid, weird acronym, or brand onion.
They want to be able to stand in front of employees, shareholders and the board and talk about the type of business they are and want to be.??
The sort of culture they have and want to build – and the values and behaviours that are required to help drive them forward.??
They want to be able to explain why we’re all coming to work every day, and how that helps customers and broader stakeholders.??
They want a framework that helps decision-making across all aspects of the business.??
And they want to feel that the answers to these questions are absolutely the right ones for them.
That’s where your brand strategy process, tools and skills come in.
If you haven’t explained clearly what needs to happen and why, brought them along on the journey, shown how the voices of their customers and employees have been included, shown them how their answers compare to competitors, and given them the back-up to explain why the answers are the right ones for their business, then your 3-dimensional pyramid framework will be hidden in their ‘failed projects’ folder.??
It will not become a useful springboard for action across the business.?
Because there will be no clarity or confidence in your output.
So, what sort of process, tools and skills do you need?
Here’s your foundation:
Brand strategy Process And Tools
Process step 1:
Design the appropriate approach, with the right people involved
What does this mean?
1.??????Get the right people on the bus
Ensure the right people are engaged from the start.??Demand, in the most pleasant way, that you work with a trifecta of CEO, CMO and CHRO. Either the CMO OR the CHRO can lead the project but all must be involved. Create your project plan with their input and sign off and design clear steps in the process where they, and the broader leadership team/C-suite are consulted and involved.??
2.?????Don’t recreate, or over-engineer, the wheel.?
Design the right process for the size and complexity of their business.?
Make sure you understand your role and time and charge appropriately.?
Understand what insight and data sources they have already and use them.??
Tools you need for this stage of the brand strategy process:
Brand Strategy Process Step 2:
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Get the right insights, from the right sources
Gather insights across three areas:
This is because a brand strategy has to be relevant, authentic and sufficiently differentiated.
Before you write a brand strategy you need to figure out how your brand is -?or could be - serving the needs and desires of your key stakeholders (often called your ‘target audiences.’?All this means is?the people without whom you wouldn’t have a business.
This always includes customers and employees, and sometimes includes other audiences that have a significant impact on the decisions your customers take (e.g. high-end travel agents for luxury hotel guests; doctors or pharmacists when you’re working with pharmaceutical brands).
You need to gather insights into these audiences because?WHY you exist and what you brand is shouldn’t be all about you – it should be ALL about the value you provide your customers and employees.??Without either of them you just don’t have a business.???
Getting to these insights requires conducting some research.??This is what puts many people off learning how to do brand strategy.??But it's not complicated, and can be done in quick, easy and low-cost ways.??
Your research plan is developed with the client and can vary in size and scope depending upon the size, complexity and budgets of your client.??Just have this toolbox of options in place and you’ll be convered:
Tools you need for this stage of the brand strategy process:
The second area you need insights from is your COMPETITION.
Brands help people make choices, so a brand strategy needs to be clear on how we are DIFFERENT from our competitors. If you have the same answers to things like 'WHY we exist', 'WHO we are and HOW we do things' as major competitors then you are doing nothing to help customers or prospective employees understand why they should choose the brand you're working on over others and how they stand apart.
So when we are trying to figure out a brand strategy we need to research what competitors stand for so we can understand?areas to avoid.?
There are long and painful ways to do this and quick and easy ways.??I learnt this the hard way after doing 181 audits in a 6-month period.??I share my competitor audit template, and all my shortcuts, (and all the tools in this article) in Brand Strategy Academy. ?
Tool you need for this stage: Competitor Audit Template
The final area is COMPANY insight.
The first two areas look outside.??It’s just as important to look inside (it’s really the place you should start).??You need to make sure you are reflecting the organisation?itself; who they are, how they have got to this point, what they are building and creating and what their intentions are for the future.?
You need to make sure the brand strategy?feels right: feels authentic to the people working at the organisation and builds on any positive equity and heritage.
And it must be supported by their strengths and key capabilities, and day-to-day behaviour.?It has to reflect not just what we’d like to say about them?but what they are actually DOING, or promising they will do.?It has to ring true!
Sounds obvious, but a lot of the problems with brand strategy are down to not paying attention to this point enough.??(Read more about brand strategy problems and how to solve them here ).
Tools you need for this stage of the brand strategy process:
Brand Strategy Process Step 3:
Filtering, insight identification, strategy creation
Once you have stage 2 complete, you need to filter the information to get to the insights that are?relevant, differentiated and authentic.?Once you have filtered down to your insights, you can use them as your 'fodder' to create the answers to your brand strategy questions.??
Filter then build.
Tools you need
Now, I know all of this sounds like some work, and it is?– I’m not going to pretend that you can get to such an?important outcome in half a day and 2 cups of coffee.????It’s something that should last an organisation years, impacting every person who works there, bringing direction and focus to marketing, HR and innovation efforts.
Stay clear of anyone who tells you that a successful brand strategy can be created in a conference room with a few people in one afternoon!
But it can be done very efficiently, typically over an 8-12 week period depending upon the complexity of the business and the scale of the research needed.
And if you need it, I can help you through every step with?all the practical tools above?and support you need in Brand Strategy Academy.?
It includes every tool mentioned above: research guides, a scripted brand strategy workshop, analysis templates, lots of leading brand examples, etc.??
It also includes 21 weeks a year of live support from me, lifetime access, case studies, a real-life practice case study from one of my lovely clients, advanced masterclasses and membership of a great community of alumni who implementing and selling brand strategy to their clients,???
But hurry - enrolment for this cohort closes this Friday!??Then October, February and May each year.??
So grab it now to follow week-by-week from Monday, or to binge when you next have a space in your schedule.
Would love?to see you in there and support you in getting greater clarity, confidence and impact with your brand strategy skills.
I help businesses prosper by harnessing the power of Coherent Branding.
1 年Love this. Thank you for sharing.
creative strategy, innovation, experience, brand and culture
1 年Hi Sarah. Gold standard trade secret for your readers …. Draw a matrix. On one axis list all elements you need to deliver to do a successful brand strategy. On the other axis list all the activities you propose to undertake in the project. Tick relevant boxes mapping one against the other. Spot the gaps and overlaps and adjust. Turn into a timeline. Show to the client so them know why the heck you are doing what you’re doing.
Fractional CMO - Marketing Strategist, Leader & Advisor (B2B Tech) | Author of "The Data & AI Imperative: Designing Strategies for Exponential Growth" | Supported 10% of Fortune 100 | Educated ~2 Mil data & AI learners
1 年Good point. ?? The process and tools will help you to answer the fundamental questions that need to be answered in a brand strategy. On a side note, there are some who still prefer to start with their end goal in mind. They understand first what they really want and then come up with goals. The process and tools will now serve as answers to how they're going to achieve those goals they created for their brand. I personally think both ways work though. ?? Clearly, it depends on one's preference.
Strategic brand leader focused on driving impact and growth through clarity and alignment
1 年Hi Sarah; as ever, you provide a goldmine of value!