Life Insurance
- Medical Exam
- Direct
- Exam
- Coverage
- Premiums
- Best
- Buy
- Corporation
- Selling
- Pet
- Childrens
- Comparisons
- Permanent
- Travel
- Guaranteed
- Uk
- Agencies
- Guardian
- American
- Buying
- Motor Home
- Variable
- Co
- Information
- Mobile Home
- Standard
- Affordable
- Auto Company
- Mortgage
- Aarp
- Aaa
- Rate
- New York
- Health Care
- Rates
- Prudential
- Broker
- Policy
- Settlements
- Cheap
- Universal
- Leads
- Companies
- Nationwide
- Whole
- Home
- Homeowners
- Farmers
- Term
- Quotes
- Progressive
- Health
- Auto
Company Identity Goes Far Deeper Than A Logo
By: Marcia Yudkin
Graphic designers frequently play a prominent role in launching
or repositioning a company. When they create a look (or new look)
for a company's stationery, brochure, ads and web site, this often
goes by the name of an "identity package." Don't let this
convenient term mislead you into believing that a company's
identity consists of merely the logo and look. No, every company
has an identity or image in the minds of its customers comprised of
at least nine other factors besides the graphic look.
How your market perceives your company should be deliberate,
calculated and coherent rather than accidental and confused. Think
about how you'd like your company to be perceived along these
dimensions. Then investigate whether or not actual perceptions
match your intent - and adjust your marketing to reinforce the
qualities you want your customers to associate with you.
Components of Company Identity
1. Values. Do you stand for stability, like Prudential insurance?
Innovation, like 3M? Educational curiosity, like the Discovery
Channel? Social consciousness, like Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream?
Child-friendliness, like McDonald's? Rugged individualism, like
Marlboro cigarettes? Personal freedom, like Harley-Davidson
motorcycles? Serendipity and tradition, like the local hardware
store whose owner knows where everything is and has parts and tools
dating back to the previous century?
2. Personality. If the company were a vegetable, which one would it
be? If it were a cartoon character, would it be Bugs Bunny, Wonder
Woman, Road Runner or Dick Tracy? If it were someone in a high
school yearbook, would it be Most Likely to Succeed, the Homecoming
Queen, the Nerd or the Class Clown? From the company's personality
can flow ad campaigns, kinds of special events to sponsor, company
colors and typefaces, corporate gift selection, even the talent
chosen to record company voice mail messages.
3. Behavior. Your company's image includes not only how you promote
yourselves but also how you act toward customers and the public.
Things like how you answer the phone, how you greet shoppers, how
cheerfully you correct mistakes or accept returns, how aggressively
you negotiate contracts all become bound up in one composite
image.
4. Price. How much you cost in comparison to competitors often
becomes part of your image. If you're tempted to keep price out of
the equation until someone expresses a desire to buy, think twice.
When you're candid about pricing, you cut down on the number of
"tire-kickers" you need to deal with. Above all, make sure your
pricing fits with the other components of your image.
5. Range. Customers should understand the spectrum of products and
services that you sell. If you handle only, say, commercial
cleaning accounts and not residential, or only, say, bookings of
locally based and not nationally prominent speakers, make sure your
specialty becomes part of your company image. If it's not part of
your company name or company slogan, include your focus in your
ads, brochures, sales letters and other promotional pieces.
6. Geographical roots. Where did your company come from? If you're
a locally owned family business competing with multinational
giants, make sure people know that. If you're selling nationally
but rooted in a picturesque corner of the country, make hay out of
that. The state of Vermont determined that companies linked to it
were able to charge more for their products than companies
headquartered elsewhere, and it took steps to make sure outsiders
don't try to horn in on its brand equity.
7. Longevity. Moody and Regan, a printing company in Waltham,
Massachusetts, wisely and impressively uses as its tag line,
"Established 1898." Whenever you've been around much longer than
competitors, you can profitably incorporate that into your
image.
8. Slogan. Which brand "tastes good like a cigarette should"? Which
car is "the ultimate driving machine"? What product are you not
supposed to "leave home without it"? Even local or specialized
companies can achieve this kind of awareness with their
clientele.
9. Benefits. What do buyers get when they purchase from you? Most
companies provide intangible, emotional benefits (Volvo cars:
safety; Hallmark cards: friendship; Victoria's Secret: sensuality)
as well as tangible, practical ones (Burger King: inexpensive,
satisfying meal; Boston Pops: a fun night out; Kodak: photos with
true-to-life colors).
When both you and those who buy from you know clearly what these
benefits are, and when those benefits match the other dimensions
listed above, you undoubtedly have a comprehensive, effective
company image. Congratulations!
Marcia Yudkin is the author of 6 Steps to Free Publicity and ten other books hailed for outstanding creativity. Find out more about her new discount naming company, Named At Last, which brainstorms new company names, new product names, tag lines and more for cost-conscious organizations, at www.NamedAtLast.com.
Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com
