The ultimate gauge of any business's success is sales. Yes, you can measure other metrics, define non-sales related KPIs, and consider customer satisfaction. Still, the viability of a company is determined by how many products or services it sells and the margin it makes on them.
But to sell a product or service, you have to tell stories – you have to inform and persuade. And the stories and the way that you tell them is the crux of a company's marketing – it's the brand.
Brands can be powerful things. For example, some brands, like Apple, command so much power over the market that they could sell almost anything branded with their logo, and it would be a success.
At the very least, a strong brand eases the way to a sale; it opens doors and shortens the sales process. A strong brand creates an impression in a buyer's mind and silently answers questions they might have about reliability, customer service and quality before they are even asked.
Once you have established a successful brand, it becomes a powerful asset that helps to optimise your sales and marketing efforts. A buyer will come to you with only a few remaining questions, and the time and effort spent establishing credentials and reassuring your buyer will be saved.
So how do you build a brand that will optimise your sales and marketing?
The first step in developing a strong brand is to define the brand strategy. Here at Equinet, we run brand workshops to help businesses determine their brand in five steps:
The second step is developing a well-researched, well-rounded buyer persona.
A significant part of this process is understanding the customers you wish to target – your buyers.
You need to go beyond just demographics and consider what are their challenges, fears, and aspirations? What are they looking to achieve, and what other people exist in their world who help or frustrate their decisions?
You can break this down into six key considerations:
Then we consider the story you need to tell and how you position your customer.
Once you have a comprehensive buyer persona (or more likely personas), you can start to focus on the stories you want to tell to flesh out your brand. Through content and tone of voice, you establish the direction and nature of your brand. You develop its personality while making sure you communicate the basics of what your company does and how its products or services benefit the buyer.
But even more importantly, it would be best to position your customer as the hero in the story you tell and your brand as the guide. Understanding the transformation they seek, the problem they face, how that makes them feel and why it matters establishes an opportunity to empathise and establish your authority to help them.
The last step in the brand-building process is to think like a media publisher.
The key to establishing all the right reactions in your audience, triggering positive emotions and feelings, is telling the right sort of stories and helpful content at the right stage in the buyer's journey.
Once you have defined your brand, it's time to live it. No matter how perfect a brand is on paper, its success depends on the business being true to that brand, being that brand, across all of its operations and all of its customer touchpoints. No amount of marketing or sales talk will compensate for poor customer service or a product that doesn't do what it says it is going to do.
As well as successfully delivering the practical aspects of the business – meeting or exceeding expectations – everyone in your organisation has to live up to the brand's ideals.
The aspirational aspects of the brand, its character, tone of voice, and core messages must be understood and competently relayed and displayed by all business members.
We live in a world where content drives the brand, and so marketing will find itself taking a more prominent role in business than ever before.
However, this can leave sales with a lack of focus or a sense of purpose. In reality, sales are as important as ever, but their role needs to change.
With buyers now coming to you well-researched and with a clear idea of what they want, it's now up to sales to take on a more consultative role and become the human face of the organisation.
The new role for sales is to advise and suggest, rather than pitch and sell. They will need to answer the specific questions that the prospect can't find the answer to anywhere else.
An essential aspect of this approach is telling stories – case studies, anecdotes, the kind of stories that the prospect can directly relate to because they care about their peers – people in a similar position to where they are now.
Stories of working through issues that the buyer is familiar with and describing situations they can relate to.
Marketing will supply sales with all the data and information that the salesperson needs to fulfil this role – keeping them informed about the prospect requirements and desires to reduce surprises.
Conversely, when contact is made with sales – it is up to sales to capture information and ensure that it gets passed on to marketing to keep track of all the prospect's interactions with the company and push appropriate content in their direction.
The best way for sales and marketing to implement this coordinated approach is to use a comprehensive, company-wide Customer Relationship Management system (CRM) that allows any Sales or Marketing member to view relevant data on current prospects and customers.
A comprehensive system will enable data-driven marketing, integrated lead management, email workflows, agile websites and customised content publishing, along with the usual functions of a contact management system.
This integrated and united approach to customer engagement is essential to build the brand as it ensures everyone is on the same page and giving out complimentary messages.
Regular analysis of data from the CRM will allow for continuous refining of the brand and its messages. As markets and customers change, the brand should evolve, generally somewhat subtly – to maintain relevancy and retain an edge.
Every few years, a comprehensive review of the brand and its effectiveness should take place – while ensuring that it's not changed just for the sake of it – "If it ain't broke, don't fix it".
By defining a meaningful brand, thoroughly "living" it and integrating sales and marketing's approach using a CRM – you can build a brand that optimises your sales and marketing efforts.