Brand Identity

February 1, 2010


“Yellow Trees” © R.L. Herron

If it seems I’ve spent a lot of time talking about things very personal to me, there’s a reason.

I have.

But I began to think it was time I took a closer look at the brand called me. After all, regardless of what business we happen to be in, if we are in business, all of us need to understand the importance of branding.

Simply put, branding is what makes us believe one glass of water is better than the identical one next to it. We see it all the time, whether we realize it or not. “Choosy mothers choose Jif,” and “Things go better with Coke” are two excellent examples.

These days, everything is branded.

The distinctive swoosh on the side of your running shoes, or the name on the side of your disposable coffee cup, tells everyone who it is that has you branded, because the big companies understand this fundamental principle.

One of the truths of modern business is there is almost nothing your competitors can’t duplicate in short order. So the quintessential question becomes, what competitive edge do I have that cannot be easily copied?

This is where positioning comes in. It is the art of creating a brand image for your product or service that persuades customers it really is the best glass of water!

Such positioning can be influenced, but it is not created by the marketer. It is created by how others perceive it.

The characteristics that can work in creating such a perception:

  • Relevance to the customer. Do you have the ability to produce or supply something they need?
  • Promises backed by support. Does your product or expertise support your claims?
  • Clear and focused messages. Are you consistent in what you say, and how you say it?
  • Appropriate messages. Are your messages in line with the image you want to convey?

My messages, while clearly written (at least I hope they are), may sometimes be ambiguous in their intent…at least as far as business relationships are concerned.

However, one of the things I do claim to do well is write and edit, and those skills should be evident, even in personal essays.

So, just like the nondescript photo above, transformed to be something eye-catching and, hopefully, better than an ordinary photo of several trees (branding), my personal brand may need a better focus in order to have a competitive edge.

Now all I have to do is fine tune that focus and create the buzz.

Or forget about it, and just continue to have fun.

 

 

Time Will Tell

January 28, 2010


“Worker” © R.L. Herron

I was going to post my thoughts yesterday on what I had hoped to hear in President Obama’s State of the Union Address.

However, daily life intervened and ensured I would not have time to write anything as unnecessary as my blog. As I come back to it today, I cannot help thinking we are all, like the little critter in the picture, really working toward a larger purpose.

The efforts of small societal segments, even individuals, contribute to the greater good, and I had hoped our President was going to tell us (and by “us” I mean the population in general, as well as Congressional naysayers and Wall Street) that disagreement in the course of intelligent discourse is healthy.

But there comes a time when each and every one of us must simply step up and do what’s right.

He didn’t disappoint me.

Now, I can only hope we all respond positively to his message and stop the relentless nitpicking, and senseless campaign-like rhetoric, that prevents any real progress from taking place.

Given the enmity that obviously exists between factions in our governing body, I’m not overly optimistic on that score.  I think it very likely that some of our elected leaders truly care more about their careers than the country they were asked to govern.

But perhaps, as our President said, we really can do “something worthy to be remembered.”  I hope so.

Time will tell.

 

 

Setting Goals

January 24, 2010


“Shoreline” © R.L. Herron

We, as a society, talk a lot about setting goals. Goals for our education, goals for our marriage, goals for our children, goals for our jobs and our careers, goals for retirement. Lots of goals. Some as simple as reaching the end of the shoreline in the distance.

Our goals often suffer setbacks as we pursue them. Some setbacks can’t be helped. Others, when you examine what brought them on, should never have happened, because they do not conform to conduct consistent with principles of personal and social ethics.

Perhaps that violation of ethics is what irked me so much about what happened to the goals of teenager Lauren McClusky.

Perhaps you read about her.

If not, you should have. This young lady recently found herself at the center of a dispute over the name she chose for charity concerts she’s produced for the past three years.

The name: McFest.

What’s so bad about that? Good question. They were music festivals she chaired for charity. She chose the name because her surname happened to have a “Mc” prefix as part of it (as did the young lady who was her co-chairman). It seemed a natural.

In 2007 and 2008 her festivals raised $30,000 for the Chicago chapter of Special Olympics. All good things, wonderful things, particularly coming from one so young.

Since her concerts were being so well received, she tried to have the name McFest protected. That’s when her problems began.

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