Your Brand is Not a Hero. Your Customers Are.
It’s true that we are each the main character—the leading actor per se—in our own lives, in our own stories. I would think a bit of self-reflection would be required if a person ever thought of themselves in a supporting role in their own storyline.
Of course, it is easy for a brand to think that their story is also all about them—and step into that role as the lead, as the hero. But in that regard, the brand would be wrong. In the area of brand storytelling, the brand is never the hero. The customer is. The brand is simply the helpful guide, assisting the customer—the hero—as they embark upon their journey.
Here at Sagon-Phior, we often communicate a simple, albeit a powerful, message: “Everyone has a story that defines their life… and chooses brands that support that story.”
Focusing Your Brand’s Story on the Hero
When developing a brand’s story, it is imperative that you remain focused on the customer and their needs, desires, challenges, and goals—and not on your product or service’s features and benefits. Frankly speaking, no one cares.
Think of it like this as I geek out on you for a second.?In this analogy, your customer is Frodo Baggins, and you are his guide, Aragorn. Did Aragorn walk onto the scene bragging about how he was actually the heir of Isildur, how he could lead an army of the dead, and why, all in all, he was the man? Absolutely not. Instead, he first helps an injured Frodo when he meets him and pledges some level of fealty to the hobbit to assist him as he fulfills his quest to destroy The Ring. In this scenario, Frodo remains the hero, he continues to be the main character, and stays central to our focus—even as Aragorn becomes his guide.
And that should be the goal of your brand—ensure your audience knows who the story is about in order to keep their interest: It is always them.?However, that doesn’t mean your brand isn’t important, because without you guiding your hero, mentoring them, advising them, giving them the tools they need… they cannot move past their dilemma. You are their beacon, their guiding light, their North Star—and their trust, their loyalty, and their return business will make you feel like a hero.?
Brands That Do It Right
Now that you understand the importance of making your customer the hero, let’s take a look at some global brands who get it—and who do it right consistently. Keep in mind that none of these companies position their brands around features and benefits, instead they seek to inspire and motivate their hero to rise to the occasion, to do more, to push further, to achieve (using their brand, of course).
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How to Make Your Customer the Hero
The first step in making your customer live at the forefront of your brand’s story is to take their point of view. Instead of talking about a product or service… a feature or benefit… discuss how those things make the user—the customer—feel. Convey emotion that speaks to an internal, human problem, not an external frustration, and then address the philosophical hole your brand fills—why that problem is wrong in the first place.
Answer these questions when seeking to position your customer as the hero:
Will this idea, campaign, or website resonate with an audience on an emotional level? Do they see themselves in this situation and does the idea make them care enough to act? Is it transformative?
Hero Making in Action
At Sagon-Phior, given our DNA in the entertainment industry, we are very passionate about hero making. Here are two examples of how the hero making concept helped our clients reposition their brand in the eyes of the customer and transition away from offering a list of features and benefits that no one cared about.
Good Stories with Happy Endings
Everyone wants to realize their own “happily ever after.” Therefore, place your customer at the center of everything your brand does and reinforce the idea that your product or service will allow your hero to realize their mission, conquer their quest, and attain success.?Know who your main character is, understand their problem, their behavior, their emotions, and be their guide as you help them to win the day.
Expect what you don’t expect
3 年Very well written and so important. As a corollary I would add that abstaining from using the words 'we, our and us' goes a long way from defaulting to pontification about brand superiority. It puts the attention on the customer, where the words 'you and your' prevail. I also agree that emotion wins over left-brain attempts to win customers with facts and numbers. "Just do it," "Think different," and "Own Your Tomorrow" (from Charles Schwab) are winners that stick around because they work. Clear benefits in emotional terms. Thanks, Glenn for your article.
Integrated Marketing Executive | Digital Media & Brand Strategy | Data Analytics & Modeling Elevatemktg.com
3 年Well said!