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Building Inroads: the Inclusive Path to Branding
by Enzo F. Cesario
Advertising Articles

Published on this site: July 8th, 2010 - See
more articles from this month

The traditional model of brand building has been largely dictated
by the technology available. When the means of communication was
paper, the picture advertisement dominated, and gave rise to the
clever slogan. The slogan developed into the jingle with the rise
of radio, and the advent of television allowed the creation of
the commercial.
All of these have one defining trait in common; they inform in a
non-interactive sense. You can turn away or read as you wish, but
that's the extent of your control over the content of the
advertisement. This has left the power of brand building largely
in the hands of the originators. The company creates its
advertising, and people respond to it.
Most people and businesses don't have the money to create
massive media blitzes or overarching TV-radio-print campaigns,
which left this approach almost entirely to the big names or
those small companies willing to take a chance.
This is all changing.
As we've discussed before, the landscape in branding has changed
from the advertising model to the communicative one. Comments can
be left, emails sent, blogs posted and disseminated in a matter
of hours. We've established the increasing power the audience
has over brands, and have learned how vital conversation is to
the modern brand.
Brands can now be built quickly and on a shoestring budget.
Webhosting is inexpensive, and in some cases completely free. A
Facebook account and an eBay selling account can stand in for a
webpage and a storefront, and are exponentially less expensive
than a physical store and even a simple ad in the local
newspaper.
Brand success is no longer the sole domain of those with the
money to employ creative teams and retain advertising firms, but
an open territory for any willing to seize the initiative and do
the work.
Similarly, the direction of brand construction has changed.
We've mentioned the conversation, the all-important dialog
between brand and customer, and the power customers have in
shaping the image of a brand. This has lead to the development of
the inbound marketing technique. Rather than hurling information
into the ether and hoping to find a target demographic, people
are building ways for the audience to come to them, where a
friendly chat can be had.
Consider the most important purchases you've made in the last
five years. When is the last time a car advertisement on
television spurred you to make a purchase, as opposed to the time
you went into a dealership needing a car and sought one out on
your own time? How often have your computer purchases been driven
by an ad campaign as opposed to a personal desire to upgrade or
seek one out?
This is the realm of in-bound marketing techniques. Yes, they
still resort to the need to create an attraction in the
customer's mind, but the focus is different. It's less a matter
of 'look at what we have to show you,' and much more about
'come tell me what you have to say.'
Consider the success of the SomethingAwful forums. Similar to
4chan and other casual social sites, SA has indisputably
developed a brand of its own on the Internet. Ask about SA on
just about any site, and you don't need the full name, just the
initials to get a response. And yet at the heart SA is just a
forum, a place for people to come and talk, and to read
entertaining articles lampooning various facets of pop culture.
The whole message, consciously or not, is simply, 'come on in,
and let's have a chat.'
Not every site can use the exact approach of SA of course, but
that isn't the point. The point is that if you feel confident in
your product, be it a physical item to sell or ideas you wish to
promote, then you should focus less on throwing it out to the
world at large and more on trying to find ways to get people to
come in and have a closer look.
Facebook, Myspace, Twitter, Dig, Reddit, Slashdot: There are
social media networks and sites everywhere. People conveniently
arrange themselves into groups based on interests and locations,
and advertise these facts on profiles and group pages. A great
deal of the research is already done for you, all you have to do
is look for it. Put simply, these people WANT to talk about their
interests. Don't simply shout your message at them; instead,
give them a place they can come and share what they have to say,
and give them a product that relates.
Yes, digital branding requires even more hard work than big-time
traditional advertising, especially on a budget. You may not be
able to hire a bigwig designer to put out slick posters and
compose outstanding music. What you can do is tap into peoples'
desire to talk, their wish to understand and be understood, and
then give them both a place to visit and many roads to get to
that place. Build the road and the inn, and travelers will find
their way.
Copyright (c) 2010 Enzo F. Cesario

Enzo F. Cesario is an online branding specialist
and co-founder of Brandsplat, a digital content
agency. Brandsplat creates blogs, articles, videos
and social media in the "voice" of our client's
brand. It makes sites more findable and brands more
recognizable. For the free Brandcasting Report go to
http://www.BrandSplat.com/ or visit our blog at http://www.iBrandCasting.com/.


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