What are the metrics of brand strategy?
Lindsay Pedersen
Make Brand Your Unfair Advantage | Brand strategy for brands on the path to going public | Author - "Forging an Ironclad Brand Strategy"
If you like measurability, you are in good company.
Those of us who own a P&L often get uncomfortable when we’re faced with evaluating something squishy. And some consider brand to be squishiness epitomized.
But brand strategy has a deeply economic utility. It identifies your value, so that you can expand it. If you do it right, brand strategy is far from squishy.
You know your brand strategy is working when you see your business succeeding.
Brand Strategy Success = Business Success
“Brand” means different things to different people. To some it means brand strategy (i.e., the meaning we stand for). To others, it means brand marketing activities (e.g., digital ads, billboards, sponsorships, events).?And this is why I’ve noticed that there are two different questions behind the question:
#1 How do we measure the success of our brand strategy?
#2 How do we measure the success of our brand marketing tactics??
This second question is covered beautifully in my friend Laura Troyani’s blog post. ?
So let’s turn our attention to #1: measuring the success of the brand strategy.
Measuring the success of your brand strategy.
Brand strategy is the exercise of defining who you serve, what you bring, and why they should choose you.?As with any strategy, the measure of success is the degree to which the strategy realizes the stated goal.
Typically, the businesses I work with have a goal of creating enduring and profitable growth. When the brand strategy is working, one sees this growth. Some examples of metrics that lead to enduring, profitable growth include:
Elevated pricing power. You can price at a premium and resist discounts and couponing.
Increased customer retention and loyalty. Customers stay for longer, and evangelize your offering to their peers.
Strengthened employee engagement. When employees can galvanize around a North Star, they are more motivated and happy.
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Broader competitive moat. When you are competing on large, emotive benefits, it is difficult for competitors to emulate your success.
Improved scalability. When the direction is defined and specific, leadership is able to push decision-making out and down, so that everyone can collaborate toward the goal in concert.
Improved marketing ROI.?When your marketing outreach is more focused on your unique value and your sweet spot audience, your marketing effectiveness will improve.
If the answers to some of these questions are “no,” then your brand strategy is underperforming. Consider the most essential success metrics of your business.?Your brand strategy is working if your business is building something valuable for customers, that only your business can build.
About Lindsay
Ironclad Brand Strategy ?owner Lindsay Pedersen is a brand strategist whose clients include Zulily, Starbucks, T-Mobile, Coinstar and IMDb. Her brand strategies are tested in the crucible of her proprietary Ironclad Method. Lindsay arms leaders with an empowering understanding of brand, and an ironclad brand strategy so they can grow their business with intention, clarity and focus.
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LEADERS:?Lindsay’s book?Forging an Ironclad Brand: A Leader’s Guide ?will teach you the what, why, and how of using brand to supercharge your growth.
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Originally published at?ironcladbrandstrategy.com/ask-lindsay
Brand Manager, PR, Event, Photographer ??
2 年I admire the simplicity of the language in which this text is written. Everything is perfectly clear and now everything is sorted out in my mind
Strategic Problem Solver | Health Equity Champion | Passionate Connector
2 年I so enjoy everything you write! Miss you friend!
This is so good Lindsay Pedersen. I've never seen ROI on brand so clearly explained. Pricing power, customer retention, etc....all things brand impacts.