What is your brand’s reason to believe?
Lindsay Pedersen
Make Brand Your Unfair Advantage | Brand strategy for companies on a path to going public | Author - "Forging an Ironclad Brand Strategy"
Most of us would agree that one’s brand promise must be unambiguously true. Brands that fail to deliver on their promises lose customer trust and therefore long-term viability.
Your brand promise, though, must be more than just true. It must be demonstrably true. It must have the power to make people believe it by presenting compelling proof.
An ironclad brand strategy includes a forceful “reason to believe.” This is proof of your promise. Your proof stems from a tangible and indisputable attribute, feature, fact, guarantee, or ingredient.
Give us a reason to believe.
I recently saw an ordinary computer mouse package with the tagline “Enjoy what you do.” This is a big promise for a boring computer mouse that appears no different from other boring computer mice! They offered nothing to prove this lofty promise. Whether or not this mouse could indeed enable me to enjoy what I do, I don’t believe their promise because they gave me no reason to believe. The promise might have been true, but it was not demonstrably true.
Contrast this with Zappos, a brand that promises amazing customer service. That is no squishy promise, because Zappos presents a concrete reason to believe. While most retailers bury their 1-800 customer service numbers in small print, Zappos’ 1-800 number is displayed “proudly” (in the late CEO Tony Hsieh’s words) on every page of Zappos’s site. That visible display of the 1-800 number makes the Zappos promise of amazing customer service demonstrably true.
Some more brands with compelling reasons to believe:
Dove soap
Starbucks VIA instant coffee
Zildjian Cymbals
Original Pantry Café
Granular makes credible.
As you define your brand promise’s “reason to believe”, eschew the general and embrace the granular. Fine granularity increases believability.
A University of Michigan study asked participants to estimate the battery life of two GPS devices, with one device claiming a battery life of “up to 2 hours” and the other “up to 120 minutes.” Participants estimated the first to have a battery life of 89 minutes and the second 106 minutes, despite the claims’ equivalence.
People associate the finer granularity of the more granular proof point with more credibility than the more general proof point. With your reason to believe, get as granular as possible.
Challenge yourself to show concrete proof.
While articulating your brand, identify not only your true promise, but also a reason for customers to believe it.
Show that you’re good for your promise.
----
If you liked this article and want to know more about focus, you may like this:
-----
About Lindsay
Ironclad Brand Strategy?owner Lindsay Pedersen is a brand strategist whose clients include Duolingo, Starbucks, Expedia, Accolade, Pantheon, 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.
For brand insights in your inbox,?SIGN UP?for our monthly newsletter.
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.
- - -
Originally published at?ironcladbrandstrategy.com/ask-lindsay
President at Jourdan Marketing Consultants, LLC
2 天前Great, bedrock advice on how to make your brand promise believable!