Simple communication strategies for a complicated world.
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.


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June 10th, 2009

The UN-Brand

I’m all for great branding, as you can see in one of my previous posts, Simple BrandingBranding should look, sound and feel good.  It should be cool, catchy and let people know quickly what your brand is all about.  But, there is another critical branding component that will make or break your brand I call it The UN-Brand.

The UN-Brand is what evolves from your brand, rather unintentionally.  It’s the culture, personality and tenor of your brand.  It’s what people are left with after an encounter with your company, its people and your service.  It speaks just as loudly as your masthead or logo, even more so.  It can make or break your brand.

How you treat your customers, your brand voice, enthusiasm for your product, services and clients, how your employees and customers are valued, and other intangibles make up your UN-Brand.  They are the unwritten, unspoken qualities that exude from your brand.  It’s what people are saying about you once you walk away or after you’ve performed a service.  It’s more than customer service. The UN-Brand develops from within and comes from the core values that your company and Brand actually embrace and embody. It’s the “how” behind the “what” of your brand.  It’s the character of your company and how you get the job done that makes up your UN-Brand.

Your UN-Brand will reveal itself on its own.  I’ve witnessed this with my own brand.  My area of expertise is Strategic Communications and Relationship Building skills, specifically, Social Media, Business Communications, and Interpersonal Interactions.  I teach and train people how to communicate effectively, position and promote their brand, attract customers and get great results.  If you look at comments from customers and clients who interact with me, you’ll hear words like: dynamic, inspiring, joyful, open-hearted, motivating, insightful, authentic, transparent, and compelling.  Not much to do with the what of my brand but a lot about how I get the job done.

Another great example of UN-Branding in action is the SAS Corporation.  SAS is the definitive leader in analysis and business software.  They are known worldwide for excellence in analytics.  They’re also known for some amazing things that have nothing to do with their brand that clearly set them apart from other companies.  SAS is known for how well they treat their employees. 

I would argue that it is probably one of the biggest reasons that their products are great and they have such wide success without being a publicly traded company.  In an article by 60 Minutes called “Working the Good Life“, you find that the company has only 3% turnover, offers employees a 90% discount to the company owned country club,  has in-house social workers to help employees with problems and so much more.  They’ve developed a culture of creativity, innovation and results through treating people as if they are a valued, trusted resource.

Some of the intangible qualities that make up the UN-Brand

 

  • Trust
  • Transparency
  • Authenticity
  • Empathy
  • Outlook and Attitude
  • Creativity
  • Culture
  • Community Involvement
  • Charisma

 

How to develop a great UN-Brand

Ask yourself the following questions to develop a great presence.

 

  • How do we want to be perceived by customers, suppliers, vendors and employees?
  • What are our Core Values?
  • How do we want employees and customers to feel as a result of a business relationship or employment with our company?

 

Allow these three questions to be the platform of developing your mission and vision statements for your company and your brand.

 

The ends do not justify the means.  Attention to how we grow is just as important as the growth.  I challenge people to consider how they want to be perceived in the marketplace and think of those intangible qualities that go beyond efficiency and numbers.  Allow that desired perception to guide your brand as well.  While numbers and results are critically important, none of it matters if you, your company or employees have poor interactions, communication and encounters with clients and customers. 

Brands and companies are made up of living, breathing people who are interacting with other people to provide a product or service.  How your customers feel about the service along with the service itself keeps them coming back.  By attention to the how everything gets done, your desired perception and how you want people to, UN-Brand

May 12th, 2009

Brand Your Uniqueness

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Dan Miranda / @timecommander

“The original is always worth more than the copy.”

As the quote hung across the room of my classroom, my mind started to drift away from the statistics handout I was given. First, I thought about the social situations that occurred to me throughout the day.

Then I thought more about how it affected marketing, branding and life. By the time the class was out, I already had a new post formulated in my brain. Here is precisely what I thought during that time: Read the rest of this entry »

March 11th, 2009

Quantum Metaphysics: The Present

Every day, think as you wake up, Today I am fortunate to have woken up, I am alive, I have a precious human life, I am not going to waste it, I am going to use all my energies to develop myself, To expand my heart out to others, To achieve enlightenment for the benefit of all beings, I am going to have kind thoughts towards others, I am not going to get angry, or think badly about others I am going to benefit others as much as I can ~H.H. the XIVth Dalai Lama

This quote came to me after I started writing this article. I opened an email from Manifest Mastermind, which only gave me a tiny preview and no knowledge of the full quote. My past led me to write this but I could never Read the rest of this entry »

December 11th, 2008

Seven Things Most People Don’t Know About Me

1. I slept on the streets of Paris for a night

It was the most AMAZING and frightening experience of my life. I would never take it back. In retrospect it looks like i was overreacting, but try being in a foreign country penniless not knowing anyone. I’m very grateful to Read the rest of this entry »


For branding and social media insights check out my Posterous.

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