It’s inevitable.
Whether I’m hosting an “Ask Anything” call for business owners, or giving a talk to a group of entrepreneurs, or meeting a small business owner at a local party…
…someone always asks this question:
“Should I brand my business?”
By the end of this article, I’ll share my answer.
But first…if this is your question, I’d like ask YOU something first…
What are you avoiding?
Here’s why I ask:
Many, if not most, of the people who ask if they should brand their business are using the idea of branding their business to avoid the fact that right now, they simply need to go to that networking event, send out a note to their referrals, write some emails for their next marketing campaign, do that follow up phone call, or even get their first client…
…and in the mind of the oh-so-creative-and-distractible entrepreneur, all of those things feel less exciting than the idea of a kicky new logo.
Admit it. The tedious stuff is just so … tedious. So “branding your business” becomes another bright shiny way to convince yourself that you can’t possibly do the tedious stuff until you have a matchy-matchy website or a tagline to die for.
So let’s say you’re good with all of the above. Clients are beating down your door. Business is thriving. And you really do want to think about branding. Great.
Here are three things you should know about branding your business:
1 – Branding your business is not about your “look.”
Many people think that branding is about a new logo and some hip new colors on your website.
Branding is NOT about your look. It’s not about your color scheme or your cool mark or even your tagline. If you just want a logo, then you can just go to 99Designs and getting something fast and inexpensive.
When you do it right, branding is every bit as intense and deep as the first three modules of my Uplevel Your Business™ Program.
It’s a deep exploration of your ideal client, of yourself, and what you do and why you do it. It will connect you with your WHY, with your message, with your point-of-view. It will force you to face your scattered, covered and smothered product line that confuses everyone.
When I went through a branding process, it took months to work through, and months more to begin implementing it. It continues to be an on-going task for my team. There was a soulful quality to it that demanded I face some hard issues and let go of some of the splatteredness I had unknowingly created as I built this business.
So, are you ready for this level of focus? Or do you need to do some of your own clarity work before you invest a heap of cash hoping someone else will just “do it for you?”
2 – Branding (or re-branding) your business is an investment.
Look. You want to invest some money on this. You want to work with someone who knows how to do it. Depending on your revenues, that can be expensive. And it will be a waste of money if your business isn’t ready to get a return on that investment over the coming years.
The business highways and by-ways are littered with branding expenses that never got a return because the business changed, the entrepreneur went in a different direction, the ideal client wasn’t right, the branding process was too hasty or was started too early on in the business’s growth. Give this some consideration.
3 – Everything is branding. Take some simple steps on your own first.
Here’s what’s great about marketing (when you do it authentically and with service):
You can ‘brand’ yourself without spending a dime.
Three places to start:
- Positioning
Positioning is clarity about all aspects of your service, credibility, results, offer, client, message, solutions and perspective. This is contained in every touchpoint of your marketing.
- Point of View
Your point of view is your unique voice and your message. Make sure it shines through in every single thing your prospect reads or hears or sees about you.
- Testimonials
One of my Uplevel Your Business students just posted on Facebook that she got two new clients because of the testimonials that she revised based on the UYB training. The new clients told her they “related” to her prior happy customers. That feeling of “relate-ability” is what branding claims to create. You can create it by thinking about these simple elements like client success stories and how they position your results.
So, should you BRAND your business?
Sure, at some point, you should brand your business.
But first, have all the clients you need, make sure your marketing and messaging is as clear as you can get it on your own. Then, hire the finest branding expert you can and see it as a long-term investment.
– See more here.
It’s inevitable.
Whether I’m hosting an “Ask Anything” call for business owners, or giving a talk to a group of entrepreneurs, or meeting a small business owner at a local party…
…someone always asks this question:
“Should I brand my business?”
By the end of this article, I’ll share my answer.
But first…if this is your question, I’d like ask YOU something first…
What are you avoiding?
Here’s why I ask:
Many, if not most, of the people who ask if they should brand their business are using the idea of branding their business to avoid the fact that right now, they simply need to go to that networking event, send out a note to their referrals, write some emails for their next marketing campaign, do that follow up phone call, or even get their first client…
…and in the mind of the oh-so-creative-and-distractible entrepreneur, all of those things feel less exciting than the idea of a kicky new logo.
Admit it. The tedious stuff is just so … tedious. So “branding your business” becomes another bright shiny way to convince yourself that you can’t possibly do the tedious stuff until you have a matchy-matchy website or a tagline to die for.
So let’s say you’re good with all of the above. Clients are beating down your door. Business is thriving. And you really do want to think about branding. Great.
Here are three things you should know about branding your business:
1 – Branding your business is not about your “look.”
Many people think that branding is about a new logo and some hip new colors on your website.
Branding is NOT about your look. It’s not about your color scheme or your cool mark or even your tagline. If you just want a logo, then you can just go to 99Designs and getting something fast and inexpensive.
When you do it right, branding is every bit as intense and deep as the first three modules of my Uplevel Your Business™ Program.
It’s a deep exploration of your ideal client, of yourself, and what you do and why you do it. It will connect you with your WHY, with your message, with your point-of-view. It will force you to face your scattered, covered and smothered product line that confuses everyone.
When I went through a branding process, it took months to work through, and months more to begin implementing it. It continues to be an on-going task for my team. There was a soulful quality to it that demanded I face some hard issues and let go of some of the splatteredness I had unknowingly created as I built this business.
So, are you ready for this level of focus? Or do you need to do some of your own clarity work before you invest a heap of cash hoping someone else will just “do it for you?”
2 – Branding (or re-branding) your business is an investment.
Look. You want to invest some money on this. You want to work with someone who knows how to do it. Depending on your revenues, that can be expensive. And it will be a waste of money if your business isn’t ready to get a return on that investment over the coming years.
The business highways and by-ways are littered with branding expenses that never got a return because the business changed, the entrepreneur went in a different direction, the ideal client wasn’t right, the branding process was too hasty or was started too early on in the business’s growth. Give this some consideration.
3 – Everything is branding. Take some simple steps on your own first.
Here’s what’s great about marketing (when you do it authentically and with service):
You can ‘brand’ yourself without spending a dime.
Three places to start:
Positioning
Positioning is clarity about all aspects of your service, credibility, results, offer, client, message, solutions and perspective. This is contained in every touchpoint of your marketing.
Point of View
Your point of view is your unique voice and your message. Make sure it shines through in every single thing your prospect reads or hears or sees about you.
Testimonials
One of my Uplevel Your Business students just posted on Facebook that she got two new clients because of the testimonials that she revised based on the UYB training. The new clients told her they “related” to her prior happy customers. That feeling of “relate-ability” is what branding claims to create. You can create it by thinking about these simple elements like client success stories and how they position your results.
So, should you BRAND your business?
Sure, at some point, you should brand your business.
But first, have all the clients you need, make sure your marketing and messaging is as clear as you can get it on your own. Then, hire the finest branding expert you can and see it as a long-term investment.
– See more at: http://christinekane.com/should-you-brand-your-business/?inf_contact_key=69e51a58afd8284848c1973caff8631dc9b6b71c31bf3774b7e6be0944593caa#sthash.vX4lJ4KN.dpuf
It’s inevitable.
Whether I’m hosting an “Ask Anything” call for business owners, or giving a talk to a group of entrepreneurs, or meeting a small business owner at a local party…
…someone always asks this question:
“Should I brand my business?”
By the end of this article, I’ll share my answer.
But first…if this is your question, I’d like ask YOU something first…
What are you avoiding?
Here’s why I ask:
Many, if not most, of the people who ask if they should brand their business are using the idea of branding their business to avoid the fact that right now, they simply need to go to that networking event, send out a note to their referrals, write some emails for their next marketing campaign, do that follow up phone call, or even get their first client…
…and in the mind of the oh-so-creative-and-distractible entrepreneur, all of those things feel less exciting than the idea of a kicky new logo.
Admit it. The tedious stuff is just so … tedious. So “branding your business” becomes another bright shiny way to convince yourself that you can’t possibly do the tedious stuff until you have a matchy-matchy website or a tagline to die for.
So let’s say you’re good with all of the above. Clients are beating down your door. Business is thriving. And you really do want to think about branding. Great.
Here are three things you should know about branding your business:
1 – Branding your business is not about your “look.”
Many people think that branding is about a new logo and some hip new colors on your website.
Branding is NOT about your look. It’s not about your color scheme or your cool mark or even your tagline. If you just want a logo, then you can just go to 99Designs and getting something fast and inexpensive.
When you do it right, branding is every bit as intense and deep as the first three modules of my Uplevel Your Business™ Program.
It’s a deep exploration of your ideal client, of yourself, and what you do and why you do it. It will connect you with your WHY, with your message, with your point-of-view. It will force you to face your scattered, covered and smothered product line that confuses everyone.
When I went through a branding process, it took months to work through, and months more to begin implementing it. It continues to be an on-going task for my team. There was a soulful quality to it that demanded I face some hard issues and let go of some of the splatteredness I had unknowingly created as I built this business.
So, are you ready for this level of focus? Or do you need to do some of your own clarity work before you invest a heap of cash hoping someone else will just “do it for you?”
2 – Branding (or re-branding) your business is an investment.
Look. You want to invest some money on this. You want to work with someone who knows how to do it. Depending on your revenues, that can be expensive. And it will be a waste of money if your business isn’t ready to get a return on that investment over the coming years.
The business highways and by-ways are littered with branding expenses that never got a return because the business changed, the entrepreneur went in a different direction, the ideal client wasn’t right, the branding process was too hasty or was started too early on in the business’s growth. Give this some consideration.
3 – Everything is branding. Take some simple steps on your own first.
Here’s what’s great about marketing (when you do it authentically and with service):
You can ‘brand’ yourself without spending a dime.
Three places to start:
Positioning
Positioning is clarity about all aspects of your service, credibility, results, offer, client, message, solutions and perspective. This is contained in every touchpoint of your marketing.
Point of View
Your point of view is your unique voice and your message. Make sure it shines through in every single thing your prospect reads or hears or sees about you.
Testimonials
One of my Uplevel Your Business students just posted on Facebook that she got two new clients because of the testimonials that she revised based on the UYB training. The new clients told her they “related” to her prior happy customers. That feeling of “relate-ability” is what branding claims to create. You can create it by thinking about these simple elements like client success stories and how they position your results.
So, should you BRAND your business?
Sure, at some point, you should brand your business.
But first, have all the clients you need, make sure your marketing and messaging is as clear as you can get it on your own. Then, hire the finest branding expert you can and see it as a long-term investment.
– See more at: http://christinekane.com/should-you-brand-your-business/?inf_contact_key=69e51a58afd8284848c1973caff8631dc9b6b71c31bf3774b7e6be0944593caa#sthash.vX4lJ4KN.dpuf
It’s inevitable.
Whether I’m hosting an “Ask Anything” call for business owners, or giving a talk to a group of entrepreneurs, or meeting a small business owner at a local party…
…someone always asks this question:
“Should I brand my business?”
By the end of this article, I’ll share my answer.
But first…if this is your question, I’d like ask YOU something first…
What are you avoiding?
Here’s why I ask:
Many, if not most, of the people who ask if they should brand their business are using the idea of branding their business to avoid the fact that right now, they simply need to go to that networking event, send out a note to their referrals, write some emails for their next marketing campaign, do that follow up phone call, or even get their first client…
…and in the mind of the oh-so-creative-and-distractible entrepreneur, all of those things feel less exciting than the idea of a kicky new logo.
Admit it. The tedious stuff is just so … tedious. So “branding your business” becomes another bright shiny way to convince yourself that you can’t possibly do the tedious stuff until you have a matchy-matchy website or a tagline to die for.
So let’s say you’re good with all of the above. Clients are beating down your door. Business is thriving. And you really do want to think about branding. Great.
Here are three things you should know about branding your business:
1 – Branding your business is not about your “look.”
Many people think that branding is about a new logo and some hip new colors on your website.
Branding is NOT about your look. It’s not about your color scheme or your cool mark or even your tagline. If you just want a logo, then you can just go to 99Designs and getting something fast and inexpensive.
When you do it right, branding is every bit as intense and deep as the first three modules of my Uplevel Your Business™ Program.
It’s a deep exploration of your ideal client, of yourself, and what you do and why you do it. It will connect you with your WHY, with your message, with your point-of-view. It will force you to face your scattered, covered and smothered product line that confuses everyone.
When I went through a branding process, it took months to work through, and months more to begin implementing it. It continues to be an on-going task for my team. There was a soulful quality to it that demanded I face some hard issues and let go of some of the splatteredness I had unknowingly created as I built this business.
So, are you ready for this level of focus? Or do you need to do some of your own clarity work before you invest a heap of cash hoping someone else will just “do it for you?”
2 – Branding (or re-branding) your business is an investment.
Look. You want to invest some money on this. You want to work with someone who knows how to do it. Depending on your revenues, that can be expensive. And it will be a waste of money if your business isn’t ready to get a return on that investment over the coming years.
The business highways and by-ways are littered with branding expenses that never got a return because the business changed, the entrepreneur went in a different direction, the ideal client wasn’t right, the branding process was too hasty or was started too early on in the business’s growth. Give this some consideration.
3 – Everything is branding. Take some simple steps on your own first.
Here’s what’s great about marketing (when you do it authentically and with service):
You can ‘brand’ yourself without spending a dime.
Three places to start:
Positioning
Positioning is clarity about all aspects of your service, credibility, results, offer, client, message, solutions and perspective. This is contained in every touchpoint of your marketing.
Point of View
Your point of view is your unique voice and your message. Make sure it shines through in every single thing your prospect reads or hears or sees about you.
Testimonials
One of my Uplevel Your Business students just posted on Facebook that she got two new clients because of the testimonials that she revised based on the UYB training. The new clients told her they “related” to her prior happy customers. That feeling of “relate-ability” is what branding claims to create. You can create it by thinking about these simple elements like client success stories and how they position your results.
So, should you BRAND your business?
Sure, at some point, you should brand your business.
But first, have all the clients you need, make sure your marketing and messaging is as clear as you can get it on your own. Then, hire the finest branding expert you can and see it as a long-term investment.
– See more at: http://christinekane.com/should-you-brand-your-business/?inf_contact_key=69e51a58afd8284848c1973caff8631dc9b6b71c31bf3774b7e6be0944593caa#sthash.vX4lJ4KN.dpuf
It’s inevitable.
Whether I’m hosting an “Ask Anything” call for business owners, or giving a talk to a group of entrepreneurs, or meeting a small business owner at a local party…
…someone always asks this question:
“Should I brand my business?”
By the end of this article, I’ll share my answer.
But first…if this is your question, I’d like ask YOU something first…
What are you avoiding?
Here’s why I ask:
Many, if not most, of the people who ask if they should brand their business are using the idea of branding their business to avoid the fact that right now, they simply need to go to that networking event, send out a note to their referrals, write some emails for their next marketing campaign, do that follow up phone call, or even get their first client…
…and in the mind of the oh-so-creative-and-distractible entrepreneur, all of those things feel less exciting than the idea of a kicky new logo.
Admit it. The tedious stuff is just so … tedious. So “branding your business” becomes another bright shiny way to convince yourself that you can’t possibly do the tedious stuff until you have a matchy-matchy website or a tagline to die for.
So let’s say you’re good with all of the above. Clients are beating down your door. Business is thriving. And you really do want to think about branding. Great.
Here are three things you should know about branding your business:
1 – Branding your business is not about your “look.”
Many people think that branding is about a new logo and some hip new colors on your website.
Branding is NOT about your look. It’s not about your color scheme or your cool mark or even your tagline. If you just want a logo, then you can just go to 99Designs and getting something fast and inexpensive.
When you do it right, branding is every bit as intense and deep as the first three modules of my Uplevel Your Business™ Program.
It’s a deep exploration of your ideal client, of yourself, and what you do and why you do it. It will connect you with your WHY, with your message, with your point-of-view. It will force you to face your scattered, covered and smothered product line that confuses everyone.
When I went through a branding process, it took months to work through, and months more to begin implementing it. It continues to be an on-going task for my team. There was a soulful quality to it that demanded I face some hard issues and let go of some of the splatteredness I had unknowingly created as I built this business.
So, are you ready for this level of focus? Or do you need to do some of your own clarity work before you invest a heap of cash hoping someone else will just “do it for you?”
2 – Branding (or re-branding) your business is an investment.
Look. You want to invest some money on this. You want to work with someone who knows how to do it. Depending on your revenues, that can be expensive. And it will be a waste of money if your business isn’t ready to get a return on that investment over the coming years.
The business highways and by-ways are littered with branding expenses that never got a return because the business changed, the entrepreneur went in a different direction, the ideal client wasn’t right, the branding process was too hasty or was started too early on in the business’s growth. Give this some consideration.
3 – Everything is branding. Take some simple steps on your own first.
Here’s what’s great about marketing (when you do it authentically and with service):
You can ‘brand’ yourself without spending a dime.
Three places to start:
Positioning
Positioning is clarity about all aspects of your service, credibility, results, offer, client, message, solutions and perspective. This is contained in every touchpoint of your marketing.
Point of View
Your point of view is your unique voice and your message. Make sure it shines through in every single thing your prospect reads or hears or sees about you.
Testimonials
One of my Uplevel Your Business students just posted on Facebook that she got two new clients because of the testimonials that she revised based on the UYB training. The new clients told her they “related” to her prior happy customers. That feeling of “relate-ability” is what branding claims to create. You can create it by thinking about these simple elements like client success stories and how they position your results.
So, should you BRAND your business?
Sure, at some point, you should brand your business.
But first, have all the clients you need, make sure your marketing and messaging is as clear as you can get it on your own. Then, hire the finest branding expert you can and see it as a long-term investment.
– See more at: http://christinekane.com/should-you-brand-your-business/?inf_contact_key=69e51a58afd8284848c1973caff8631dc9b6b71c31bf3774b7e6be0944593caa#sthash.vX4lJ4KN.dpuf
—————————————————————————————-
Christine Kane is the Mentor to People Who are Changing the World. She helps women and men Uplevel their lives, their businesses and their success. Her weekly Uplevel You eZine goes out to over 32,000 subscribers. If you are ready to take your life and your world to the next level, you can sign up for a FREE subscription at http://christinekane.com.
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3 Replies to “Should You Brand Your Business?”
Ryan Biddulph
Hi Christine,
Well said! The message clarity is so key, glad you noted that. Keep your brand message – whatever it is – clear and consistent to vibe with your target marketing. Thanks!
Kim Wennerberg
Ouch. Right between the eyes! Yes, you caught me, trying to work on my branding this week, while I know I need to be working more towards concept, ideal customer, and content! Thanks for the perfectly timed reminder!!
Melissa Stewart
We agree Kim! The timing and message were just what the doctor ordered for us too!
Comments are closed.