Posts Tagged ‘brand’

Online Video For Your Small Business

Online video is a great tool for building brand awareness.  It a great tool to reach new customers and increase sales.  You can spend a lot of money on a sophisticated video marketing campaign, or you can pick up your camcorder and do it yourself.  In fact, an unpretentious and honest-looking video  may be more effective than a slickly produced commercial product.

You can place your video on YouTube free or post it on your website.  The latter gives you more control and eliminates the possibility that your competitors’ videos and ads will show up next to yours.

What should your online video be about?  Will it be easy to do?  Businesses can promote themselves via three themes:

Showing what you do. The what-we-do video basically features your company’s elevator pitch – your “about us” page on your website.  Introduce yourself, how long you have been in business and the services or types of products you offer.  Keep it short – two minutes max.  Finally, tell customers how to work with you:  online, at your shop or both.

Testimonials:  short and sweet. The secret to good testimonials is to keep them concise.  Find the three most important reasons a customer loves you and shoot three separate videos.  Then do the same with another customer.  It is more interesting to have separate customers listing different reasons they recommend you than a series of customers all saying the same thing.

You’re the expert. How-to videos are effective for improving your search results on Google and other search engines.  What are the top questions your customers ask?  Those should be the subjects of your how-to videos.  For example, if you sell gloves, discusss how to select the right size.  If you fix washers and dryers, explain how to keep them clean.

Let videos help tell your company’s story.  If a picture is worth a thousand words, imagine how valuable a video could be for your business.

Photo Credit:  Torley

 

 

How to Create a Brand for Your Small Business

Business gets easier when you have a recognizable brand. Think about Coca-Cola or BMW, for example. All you need do is mention the names and millions of people throughout the world have an immediate perception and expectation of what that company stands for. There’s an emotional connection between the customer and the company name.

With a strong brand, you don’t have to sell nearly as long or as hard. Customers know what you stand for before the pitch or proposal.

Here’s how to give your company the kind of brand identity that will help drive sales. Here, too, are tips for customizing a brand personality toolkit that will keep that brand alive and growing.

Define Your Personality

A brand is the promise you make to customers combined with the customers’ judgment about how well you deliver on that promise. A successful, brand becomes an emotional bond that builds customer loyalty. A brand includes your logo, color scheme, taglines, slogan, design elements and more.

Think of branding as the personality of your enterprise. Define that and the logo and other marketing messages will follow.

To build your brand, begin by thinking through exactly what it is you sell and why customers choose your product or service. Identify the promise you are making to your customers. For instance, you may manufacture pots and pans, but what you’re really selling is a better way to cook. You must also define what makes your product more desirable to the customers you’re targeting than that of your competition.

For help in creating logos and taglines, you might meet with one of the many nonprofit small business advisory groups, like SCORE, the Service Core of Retired Executives (check your city directory to find a branch) or a local SBDC, a U.S. Small Business Development Center, often located on university campuses. Both usually offer free advice. Gather family advisors, staff, or friends to brainstorm about taglines. And don’t forget to survey customers. You want to leverage the way they see you.

Have a Brand ID

When you’re ready, create the visual look of your brand personality. Make sure that your brand ID carries  that consistent design look — coordinated colors, fonts and layouts — for commonly used business publications, from newsletters and brochures to flyers, postcards and business cards to e-mail and Web sites.   Do some online research for companies that offer free or inexpensive downloadable and customizable templates or hire a design agency that caters to small businesses to create your own unique set of templates. That way you and your staff will be able to use and customize as needed, but maintain a consistent brand identity.

Build Recognition

You want the company personality to be easily identifiable at every customer touch point, from word of mouth to final sale. Make sure that every bit and byte of packaging, presentations, communications, and marketing speaks with a brand-consistent look and voice.

The same branding should appear on your entire range of advertising and promotional options, not just stationery or sales brochures. That includes press releases, e-mail signatures, trade show displays and booths, store or office signage, banners and highway billboards, print ads, posters and marketing for sponsored or charity events — in other words, everything.

Appoint a Brand Cop

Educate everyone on staff about your brand and its tools as well. Otherwise, each employee, including the all-important sales team, could create their own version and confuse your customers. Once you assemble the brand toolkit, every employee can then access it and draw upon whatever is needed.

Even so, over time, logos tend to shape shift. Someone adds a shoreline to the water’s edge that floats your sailboat logo. Someone else re-draws the boat so the prow faces into the sun. Pretty soon, your little sailboat is sinking.

To prevent this, appoint a designer or staffer to police the brand toolkit, especially if you work with outside vendors. Keep track of who accesses the toolkit and which consultants or vendors use it for what marketing channels. You want to track all branding appearances and changes.

5 Steps to Convert Contacts Into Contracts

Following is a list of tips to help you, fellow entrepreneurs, best position your company to landing contracts and growing your business.

1.  Understand the company’s needs or pain point so you can ease, if not eliminate, their pain. So, who likes pain? No one.  Find out a company’s pain points externally through researching via the Internet, news articles, trends within the industry, and government or industry mandates.  Internally, you may want to have multiple contacts inside the organization because if you’re connecting with someone in the IT department, for example, you may find out that a pain point is in technology – a need that you can provide as a service.  Through your external and internal research there may be something of value that you can offer to that particular client through innovation or cost-saving mechanism.  Make sure to include that information in your request for proposal (RFP) process.

2.  Sell the value of your company to the appropriate audiences you are approaching. As an entrepreneur, you’re always selling your products and services through phone conversations, Websites, e-mails, social media and marketing materials, but it’s key to know your audience.  Know that your pitch to a law firm will be different from your pitch to a fashion boutique owner.  If you are selling to different audiences within the organization, the same rule applies.  If you’re talking to someone in the Purchasing Department, understand the key objective of any purchasing group – to save the company money.  Sell the value of how your company’s product and services can help save the company’s bottom line.

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