When we talk about messaging, it can mean different things to different people depending on their perspective. A brand message is an overall story that your company is telling and the specific style and manner in which you tell that story.
In the B2C world, the brand conveys the firm’s personality and creates an emotional connection with its target audience. Colors, font choice, look and feel, and the storytelling tone create the brand personality. Taglines, such as “Just Do It” (NIKE) and “A Diamond is Forever” (DeBeers), are crafted to give voice to the brand message.
In the B2B world, the sales cycle is more complex, and therefore, brand stories need to be multi-layered to target a variety of audiences. B2B companies need to rely on investors, partners, and industry ecosystems, to be able to sell to customers.
For example,
I was cleaning out my files recently and came across a promotional campaign that was developed more than 25 years ago in the early 1990s (yikes!). It was right before remote access crossed the chasm.
What struck me about the campaign is how relevant the top level message is today. The message created over 25 years ago could still be used today – not the product information but the headline and the visual. Sure, the visual would need to be updated with more casual business attire and modern computing equipment but the essence of the campaign could be used today for a number of different products and services.
Let’s take a look.
The headline that accompanied this visual said –
Starting now, there’s no difference between the home office….and the home office.
This campaign was targeted at signing up resellers to resell remote access equipment to businesses. The goal of this campaign was to sign up 50 resellers. It was wildly successful with more than 700 resellers signing up.
With the recent pandemic and forced work-at-home directives, this concept still resonates. Here are four tips to keep in mind when crafting messages.
The technology you use impresses no one. The experience you create with it is what matters.
Last but not least, review your brand story, promotional messages, and sales messages at least two times per year to see if they are still resonating. If messages don’t continue to resonate or if the market dramatically changes, revisit the exercise.
COVID-19 has significantly changed many markets. Now is the perfect time to revisit you market, messages, and company positioning.
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