Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Expectations and Promises


Do you know...

What your brand does?

What your advertising does?

What your marketing does?

Your brand and how you promote it, set an expectation and makes a promise.

The expectation is what the customer envisions they will get from your brand - this expectation is often based on the first impression or contact with your brand and like it or not, first impressions make an impact and opinions are formed. These opinions have to do with whether they like you or not, whether they trust you or not or whether your brand will make them look good or not.

So, put your best foot forward.

Its tough for people to recall their first impression of a brand they like - but we can ascertain that it was likely favourable or they would not have engaged with it any further. Negative first impressions are always hard to get past, especially in today's online environment.

Getting people to remember the first time they saw a major brand and finding out what their first impression really was about these brands can be difficult - through repetition and consistency a major brand helps solidify your first impression with follow up. Call it promotion or advertising, what this breaks down to is brand design.

A carefully crafted brand that embodies the spirit and essence of the company or offering will trigger response, even if just a way of thinking about the brand. Follow up with your messaging and keeping it consistent is important in identifying with the consumer what you want their expectation to be.

This is why graphic design plays such a heavy roll in the development and success of a brand.

Good graphic design will help communicate the essence of a brand visually. If done right, a brand will exude the feeling it wants to convey so that your expectation is in line with the brands offering.

When you create a brand, you market and promote it and in most cases, this is done through some kind of advertising. And, it is this outward promotion of the brand that makes the promise.

The promise is to the customer. And, the promise is that your brand will be as good (or as tasty, or hearty, or as durable etc, etc.) as the preconceived perception they have of your brand. Your look and feel, your essence, your personae is what your brand exudes through it's logo and word mark, its brochure, its website, what people are saying about it and how you are telling the brand story in your advertising and marketing.

This is a critical stage; the first interaction with a brand can determine continued support of the brand. This is because the brand needs to deliver on the expectation and solidify the assumptions that the consumer has made about it - this first interaction can be done a number of ways, but typically with a purchase, a visit to a retail location or even through other advertising.

If a brand fails to deliver on what the consumer is expecting, they will remember this in a not so fond way and will likely not engage with the brand.

These days, a consumer may have their first contact with a brand on the web, maybe in a forum or some social media site, where a friend mentions the brand or they have seen an ad for it, or it could be a good old fashioned way that they happen upon it like on the side of a passing vehicle with decals on it or in a magazine ad - either way, a first impression is made based on that brand immediately. Consumers are either interested or they're not.

This consumer may be intrigued enough to go look for more information on this brand at which time they may discover customer comments online, a tweet, or perhaps an official web site. This first contact with the brand will either confirm their assumption or change their perception of the brand.

Your brand needs to fulfill the promise made and meet the expectation, or your brand will cease to exist... it will just slowly disappear. You can throw all the money you have against it, but if you're not meeting the expectations you are breaking your promise to the consumer and for some reason this never seems to sit well with them.

It used to be said that consumers have the ultimate power, they choose what they purchase and can make their voices heard at the cash register. Back then, brand owners could manipulate and craft their brand as media was exclusive to big money (corporations, aka the brand owners) and communications were a one way street.

These days, consumers not only have the purchasing power, but they drive the media and communications through various online methods. Just think, 20 years ago, if a company wanted to convey a certain expectation about their product or brand they would spend a few million dollars on some TV advertising, Radio and Newspaper and consumers would get the message and understand the expectation (assuming their ad agency did it right). Fast forward to today, spend a few million dollars on traditional media and even if you reach a fraction of what you used to, views, listeners and readers will just go to the web for more info.

The information available online is not controlled by the advertiser, they put their rhetoric and propaganda out there, but in reality, they are merely a participant in the content... along with Gus from Albuquerque and Sara from Balzac and millions of others.

Considering how much information can be obtained online, you need to understand that you will not be the only one influencing consumers' impressions of your brand. People are Tweeting, Facebooking, having discussions through various chat mediums and in all these instances, they can be and are talking about your brand.

As a brand owner, you no longer have full control over your messaging. You can try to be 'plugged in' and put out the fires when they come up, post responses to negative postings, flood social sites with advertising... but when it comes down to it, you the brand owner, are now a spectator as well as a participant.

So, how do you manage to stay on top of this?

It's easy.

Deliver on the expectations and don't break your promise.

If you stay true to your brand, the people that discover you and 'buy in' to your brand will continue to do so and tell others... many others. Remember the TV commercial in the 70's for a hair shampoo... 'and she'll tell two friends and they'll tell two friends and so on, and so on...' well, times that by a million.

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