Simple communication strategies for a complicated world.
September 20th, 2009

30 Days To A Better Brand: Day 9 – Your brand is not yours

This entry is part 9 of 12 in the series 30 Days To A Better Brand

While it may be your brand you do not actually own it. Your public owns it. Your customers decide what your brand means to them. Once you put your company out there it is now in the hands of the public.

The fact that your audience has final say in whether your product thrives or dies doesn’t change the fact that you still have the last say in the decisions implemented. If a majority of people purchasing your product decide decide they don’t like something either you must change it, change their opinion or become a victim of change.

Changing your brand based on feedback alone is shortsighted. Although there is wisdom in the crowd you ultimately are the professional. Your years of experience coupled with thorough knowledge of the category definitely weights your opinion. Just remember, you don’t pay your bills; they do.

So what do you do?

Survey your customers with key questions
List all potential pros and cons at hand
Compare with competitors and other businesses who may have had the same issue
Create a mindmap of your business / product / situation landscape
Map out the best possibility to completion
Implement your plan in timely phases
Gauge for feedback
Adjust accordingly

Not all situations are created equal and neither are your customers. By being aware of your capabilities, your customer’s savviness and the clarity of mind to know the difference between the two, you should be positioned to dominate in any situation you encounter.


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


September 19th, 2009

30 Days To A Better Brand: Day 8 – Social media is everything

This entry is part 8 of 12 in the series 30 Days To A Better Brand

Social media isn’t just one thing to everyone- it’s everything to everyone. Social media is marketing, PR, advertising, customer relations, branding, influence building and most of all, social. To focus only one area for your brand is extremely short-sighted yet ultimately it may be your best move.

Admittedly as a brand you should be proficient and well represented in all of these aspects of social media. That IS what should be happening but let’s face it- most brands are really great at one thing & need help at all the rest. So what does one do?

You could do a couple of things:

Be a Jack of all trades, master of none by continuing to spread your valuable resources and energy over many areas.

Hire a competent professional (employee or agency) to head up the areas that your brand isn’t so savvy in.

Focus on the area your brand is amazing in and just kill it. Be the number one at what you and over time your other areas will pick up because of how great you are in that niche.

The first solution is never the answer because all of the areas suffer when you just half-ass it. The area that your brand naturally shines in is losing out because you have to take away from it to give to the others. You can only split up 100% so many ways.


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


September 18th, 2009

30 Days To A Better Brand: Day 7 – No brand is an island

This entry is part 7 of 12 in the series 30 Days To A Better Brand

I know we’d all like to think our brands are original, given to us by divine inspirationbut they’re not. Regardless if youre just starting out or have been in business for many years, we all are influenced on a day to day basis.

All of your past experiences, biases, likes, dislikes and predispositions all affect your decision making process. You also must account for anyone else who influences the brand. This includes key internal players in messaging, imaging and managing among others as well as external influencers of customers, competitors and partners. Add all of this to the influence of pop culture and media consumed and you have a tremendous amount of influence.

With all the forces vying for dominancy what can you do?

HUMANIZE: Start thinking about your brand as a human. Each and every human has a personality with likes and dislikes.

PERSONIFY: Create categories where you can list your brand’s preferences in music, art, literature, movies etc. The sky’s the limit here.

SPECIFY: Give your brand specific attributes. If it were a human what would it’s demographics be? Gender, age, race, income etc

ANALYZE: Analyze all of these attributes and figure out what feeling your brand conveys. Is your brand a posh upper east sider that comes from money and summers in the Hamptons?

ATTRIBUTE: Based on your brand personality analysis what clothes should your brand wear aka what are it’s coloring, styling & imaging attributes.

SYNC: How do others regard your brand? How do you want your brand to be received? Now that you know how your brand looks & who your brand is you need to make sure that the words coming out of your brand’s mouth syncs up with your image.

We as humans are always changing. New influences come into out lives daily and must be acted upon. Your brand functions in the same way. It’ll always be the same “person” at the core but it must be flexible adaptable and aware of decisions to change on a concious level. Remember, you are what you “eat”.


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


September 17th, 2009

30 Days To A Better Brand: Day 6 – Intangible brand messages through imaging

This entry is part 6 of 12 in the series 30 Days To A Better Brand

Go look at something. What’s your first impression? That’s what counts. When people say first impressions are the most important this needs to be paid attention to, especially for your brand.

Your potential customer takes in everything about your brand at the point of contact. Your colors, fonts, wording and text shapes, and graphics all affect their purchase decision. What message is your brand conciously and subconsciously conveying?

Is your target market accurately receiving your message visually? What is the feeling your are looking to convey? Designing a brand that communicates your message effectively is so much more than colors text and image.

The most powerful brands know how to strike a balance between all of these elements. Any designer worth their salt knows that there’s a limit to the amount of colors, fonts, graphics and the scale and placement of all of these elements. The Golden Ratio is a good guideline to test this crucial balance.

People are generally intuitive. If you want to know how it feels to your custom er put yourself in their shoes. Envision yourself AS them, down to the precise specifics of their demographics. Are you a stay at home mom with 3 young kids concerned with family values and on a budget? Well now you are.

Separate your head from your heart then bring them back together. How does your brand feel to you? Now how does it seem to you logically? This is exactly what your potential customer is going through.

Take the time to account for your brand’s intangible qualities and you’ll see tangible reults in your bottom line.


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


September 15th, 2009

30 Days To A Better Brand: Day 4 – Passion does not make a relationship

This entry is part 4 of 12 in the series 30 Days To A Better Brand

Passion and romance do NOT make a relationship. They’re not sustainable in the long run. Ask anyone who’s been in a long-term relationship. They are key attributes but not essential. This goes for brand-customer relationships especially.

What’s mutually sustainable over time is love, respect, common interests and the ability to make the other person smile. Passion and romance are a sprint. Love and the above mentioned attributes are a cross country race. A burst of passion is needed every now and then to invigorate the relationship but what is truly needed in the long run is endurance.

A brand’s ultimate goal is to have a customer from cradle to grave. This also plays true for the customer. A customer doesn’t want to have to change brands often. The less thinking a customer has to do about their purchase decisions the better.

People are bombarded with tons of decisions they have to make every day. Make their lives simpler and they’ll thank you for it by purchasing often. Some things you can do to make their decision easier:

  1. Keep a consistent brand imaging and messaging on all fronts
  2. Give a personality and life to your brand. Make them smile in your own way
  3. Be honest and open with all communications
  4. Encourage discussion especially feedback. Your customers are your lifeblood. You should know if they’re unhappy even before they’re dissatisfied. Got that?
  5. Make interacting fun and interesting. There’s nothing worse than having the same corporate message drilled into your head over & over again.
  6. Foster innovation internally and externally. Some of the best ideas come from customers and workers from different departments. Remember the wisdom of the crowd.
  7. Reward for short and long term. By giving people short term rewards you satisfy their need for the now. Giving them long term rewards allows them to strive for something greater thus having a better retention rate all around.

Remember, you’re in this relationship for the long haul. Your customer is that hot blonde at the bar that everyone is eyeing and making moves on. Why should she stay with you? Give your customer enough of an incentive not to go anywhere and you’ll be the one reaping the rewards.


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


September 14th, 2009

30 Days To A Better Brand: Day 3 – Ebrandgelists, your brand evangelists

This entry is part 3 of 12 in the series 30 Days To A Better Brand

Know that old truism 80% of your business is from 20% of your clients? Well the same goes for word of mouth. Numbers are all well and good for surface value but in actuality a small group of your customers are fueling your business.

This small group of people are your brand evanglists or ebrandgelists. These are the people that are rabidly consuming your product or service. These are the people that are publicly and passionately promoting you. These are the people who are your online an offline digital soldiers. They make your brand viral in a way that counts: amongst their trusted circle, their friends.

What are you doing to cultivate this group? Are you rewarding their behavior? Are you encouraging them to ebrandgelize you more? Do you have a special incubator to allow these ebrandgelists to connect with others like them?

Whenever you encourage ebrandgelists to interact with others like them this allows enthusiasts to solidify their beliefs and actions through other enthusiasts. Setting up a system of rewards and encouragement creates an environment where people feel cared about by your brand. This ultimately drives them to utilize your product or service more as well as tell others about their wonderful experience.

People LOVE to be passionate about things. Give them a reason to be passionate time and time again. Being passionate about something makes them feel good. Feeling good allows them to connect with others in similar situations. People look to connect with like minds because humans are intrinsically social creatures.

Large numbers are important because it sends a message of prosperity to the masses. The numbers you need to focus on are the group of people most passionate about your brand. Passion is infectious. Give your ebrandgelists a reason to spread it


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


September 13th, 2009

30 Days To A Better Brand: Day 2 – The Sale is in the Details

This entry is part 2 of 12 in the series 30 Days To A Better Brand

A great successful brand has a plan for various uses of their identity. No possibility is too small or too out there to be considered. Implementation of branding at every level is key to closing the sale when you can’t be there for the hard sale. The sale is in the details and if you’re not there too then you’re losing out.

In today’s increasingly cluttered landscape consumers are vigilantly filtering out their attention. In order to grab a hold of their subconscious and conciousness minds your brand needs to be subtly placed. All the better if you do it a self-referential ironic or unforeseen way. Bonus points for collaboration.

I’m on the train. I’m listening to music. I’m reading a book. I’m playing with my multimedia phone. I’m writing something. I’m doing ALL of this at once. I’m doing all this to block out outside influences on my way to wherever I’m going in my one last area of zen in the outside world. Your advertising and constant bombardment has forced me to put up my defenses. So how do you as a successful brand break through that barrier?

Any type of countermeasure must be done with the most delicate of hands. I’m already guarding against the big in-your-face branded gestures. By the time a sneak attack is realized it’s already too late. My defenses are down and I’m thinking about your brand in a different light.

By taking the time to invest in the details I realize that you’ve taken the time and money to invest in me. As a savvy consumer I know that every little bit of branding costs money. I appreciate it especially when you do so with a fine brush rather than a spraygun.

Even when I’m not conscious of these small details, on some level I’m registering it. That’s the most important part of this whole journey- the soft sell, the long tail, buying a customer’s mindshare. If your brand is interesting enough in a way that I can’t get you out of my head long after your ingenious piece of branding is gone then ultimately you’ve won.

It could be something as simple as having your brand colors be represented on something as trivial as a straw. Regardless of what it is for you just realize that there IS something there for you. If you don’t do it be sure that someone will do it and is probably already doing it.


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


September 12th, 2009

30 Days To A Better Brand: Day 1 – You are not a rockstar

This entry is part 1 of 12 in the series 30 Days To A Better Brand

You are not Chris BroganBrian Solis or Gary Vaynerchuk. You’re not Seth Godin, Guy Kawasaki or even Robert Kiosaki. And neither am I. You’re you and I’m me. You’re not a rockstar. The moment you come to terms with that then you can truly live and love your life.

All of these men mentioned above aren’t overnight successes and don’t just glide along in life. They have been plugging away day in and day out at their claim to fame for years. Practice does indeed make perfect.

These are ordinary men who have achieved success by having passion about something they believe in on a consistent basis. Keywords – passion, believe, consistent. There’s a lesson here in which they are to be admired but by no means deified. Take a page from their books, literally – all of these men are published authors as well.

To paraphrase Gary Vaynerchuck, if everyone would stop consuming so much media and produce more content then we’d all be that much richer. Stop being so concerned with what certain rockstars are doing and be more concerned with what you’re doing.

Find out what you do well and do it, a lot. This may sound simple enough but in today’s media saturated society we increasingly have fragmented attention spans. Cut everything else except one or two things that you love and excel at. Now become legendary in your niche.

As Einstein once said ‘Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration‘. If you’re any sort of inspired genius you’ll learn to perspire and love it, then your fans will love you for the rockstar that you truly are.


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


August 14th, 2009

AutoDM + Autofollow = Autorelationship (you are who you tweet)

Frustrations have arisen as of late- yet again- with some notable bloggers on Twitter with autoDMs. I used to autoDM that I autofollowed them but since Twitter exploded with spammers I had to stop that. In a compromised network it’s not about the tactics they use but who you allow in your personal network.

The private Direct Message (or DM) is an extremely valuable tool for having timely sensitive conversations without exchanging emails. The conversation ecosystem breaks down when you allow anyone at all to connect with you. Allowing someone into your life is a privilege that shouldn’t be given out lightly.

Selective selection

My good friend & guest blogger Anaiis Flox once said to me that she’d rather give the keys to her house to someone than give them her website password. In an online world of ambient intimacy and unabashed public living in social media, your network reflects your value & worth. In other words, you are who you tweet.

There’s an old saying that goes, show me your closest 4 friends and I can tell you all about yourself. Of course I’m paraphrasing but the sentiment is still the same. Your personal brand is comprised of how you look, what you say, how you hold yourself, what you do and who you choose to associate with.

Connecting to everyone

Connecting with anyone online regardless of who they are is the offline equivalent to talking to anyone and everyone that comes into your view. With billions of people in this world (many unsavory) we can’t possibly speak to everyone we encounter everywhere. This is why we set up guidelines to who and in what capacity we’ll engage someone. Online is no different.

Today even spammers, multi-level marketers (MLM) and robots have accounts that have tens of thousands of followers. This is due to autofollowing and pump & dump tactics. You may have quantity but do you have quality? Numbers play a factor in how many people you are able to reach but they are not the only factor nor are they the most important factor to your intrinsic value.

Auto-caring

If you’ve connected with thousands upon thousands of people who all want to broadcast to you then who’s really listening to your message? Casting a wide net will net you some fish but are they the right type of fish or even up to your standards?

In Twitter you have no one to blame but yourself for the autoDM. I admit some spammy people get through every now and then on my account but when they do I immediately unfollow them. I’m not so concerned about autoDMs as I am about mentionspam. While I choose who to allow to private message me I have no control over who mentions my @ name.

Mention Spam

For more prominent higher-profile twitterers this can potentially be a huge problem. The more valuable you are to larger amounts of people that follow you the more likely they are to talk to you. Raise your profile and value enough then you are more likely to attract spammers who openly broadcast to you by attaching your Twitter name to their spammy message. A messy situation indeed.

What can you do to combat the spam?

Be selective about who you connect with. Remember it’s the depth of each relationship that will raise your value much farther than the breadth of your entire network alone.

Be proactive when curating your community. If someone is spamming your public stream then do something about it. Block them, let @spam know & ask your network to do the same.

Your network is only as good as you allow it to be. If someone is going against general accepted standards of the network you’ve curated then let them know. Be a part of the solution not the problem.


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


July 1st, 2009

Twitter is for friends not fiends

© dbking

© dbking

(Originally posted at Lisa Hickey’s The Hurricane Inside My Brain)

Gain 7 billionity followers! Make 80 trillionity by doing this!

We’re all concerned about being liked and being comfortable with money. These are two common insecurities that people prey on, especially much more so now in social media than ever. Thinking that way is the old wide fish-net push way of marketingHere’s how Twitter can be maximized so you can get the most out of it, personally AND professionally.

Man in the mirror

Who do you want to surround yourself with in your life? How do you want to be viewed by others? These are questions that should be on your mind constantly, offline AND online.

The noise won’t stop

When you follow people on Twitter that don’t mean anything to your network (i.e. the other people you’ve connected with) what  you end up with is a group of tweets that are disconnected. The conversation is almost schizophrenic. No one knows each other. Your stream is rushing past you like class 5 rapids.

Hey now you’re a ROCKSTAR get your game on go play

Maybe you CAN keep up with 80 thousand followers with your magical desktop sorting application, but I doubt it. The way you’re keeping up with them is not really getting to know them. Most likely what you’re doing is scanning for information, retweeting interesting information, replying to some random interesting tweets & monitoring your @ mentions and DMs for people talking to you.

Social media is about community. I dare you to tell me how the above situation represents community. What it feels more like is a old switchboard telephone operator. Maybe this works for you. Congratulations. This doesn’t work for me anymore.

I’m popularrrr

Recently I had conversations with Connie Reece (@ConnieReece) and Lucretia Pruitt (@GeekMommy) about how there is no way any of us can properly keep up with such a huge group of people on TwitterConnie recently resorted to making her Twitter profile private to slow down the follow/unfollow game that Twitter numbers gamers play. I have taken a slightly different approach.

Instead of just unfollowing people en masse I am unfollowing on a case by case basis according to pre-set guidelines I judge a twitter account to be suitable for connecting with. In laymens terms, if you suck you’re gone. I am also mostly following just those I’ve met offline first through my other social media friends. One RARE exception to that stipulation is if you follow me then engage me actively and I find your stream valuable. This is rare because most people don’t take the time to interact when they first add. This is the ‘hello my name is’ on Twitter.

Put me in coach I’m ready to play

Why am I telling you this? Not to showcase my follow numbers or ratio- because that alone doesn’t matter. Not to boast about unfollowing people because i’m so elite- because THAT is just ridiculous. No, it’s to show you insight into how you can get more out of your network.

Ever since I have started down this path I have seen more and more of my followers chatting with each other. Why? Most likely it could be because I go out to events that many of the same people frequent and we meet new people when they come to town thus growing our comm-unity. See that? Comm-unity, communication unity.

What’s the benefit of this? For one thing you get to see more than just broadcasted information from your friends. You get to see a whole other side of them when they speak to other people you know. This is when their personality truly comes out.

We all live in a yellow submarine

Twitter is for friends not fiendsI don’t want to be sold to, broadcasted at or have random irrelevant noise in my stream. My day and mind are noisy enough. I come online to be bolstered by community and friends when I can’t do so in my offline world. I also come online to further STRENGTHEN my offline relationships, as well as you should.

If you’re at this point, congratulations! Now you can take the next step by further tightening your network by going to your friendstwitter pages and see who they are speaking to often that you aren’t following. Notice any repeating names. Follow them and introduce yourself by saying that you noticed they speak with X Y & Z and what you value about them. Talking about your common ground of friends does SO MUCH more for everyone- you, the person AND X Y & Z- than just saying that you’re looking forward to getting to know them. That’s trite and soulless.

I wanna hold your haaaaaaaaaand

Look at that. You’ve come to the end of the story. You can now start buying what your FRIENDS are sellingIt’s much more fulfilling being able to help someone out that you care about then a random person you’re connected with. When you invest time and energy into someone you form a relationship. When this happens you create a ‘Trust Fund’ where both you and the other person either add or subtract trust from this mutual fund you have set up. Your Trust Fund grows so much more richer when you do business with those you trust greatly.

One last word, before I go..

Numbers DON’T matter, not because anti-numbers people say so. Numbers don’t matter because if there isn’t value and meaning behind them all they do is give a lovely facade of power that fools any fool. Any wise man knows that it’s the density not the breadth alone that counts. Water of the same volume spread out over a flat surface doesn’t have the same impact as water contained in a compact space. That being said, it’s not just quality, it’s also quantity of quality, so grow your real-ationships exponentially.

Cultivate your connections. Connect to people that mean something to you. Make those people mean much more to you. Introduce them into your circle to tighten relations more. Every person in my created @ChatPack and @MemeGirls groups do important things- or at least we think so. And that’s all that matters- that we do important things separately, connect and make great things together.

Perpetuate this ideal indefinitely. Your 20% will do and be your 80%. Nurture and grow your core group.

These are the people that will carry you to great heights.


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

Connect with me on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.


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