Dec
23
2009
Walk in to virtually any ad agency and you’ll find ‘em. They’re usually in distressed jeans, flat, cordovan shoes with an un-tucked shirt and strategically ever-so-slightly messed hair. Male, female… doesn’t matter, the only difference may be the thickness of stubble above the neck. They make themselves known by their piercing stare as you bring your client in and sit them on the opposing side of the shiny, oak-veneered conference table.
I’m taking about “brand experts.” They seem to be multiplying like rabbits on Viagra.
In a matter of minutes, these eager little bunnies assess the client’s brand, their marketing, the company culture – down to how the phone is answered, and determine that the only path to redemption is to spend close to the nation’s national debt on a generalized rebranding “system” they conjured up years ago when “brand” became the new hot word in marketing.
To the clients: Any agency, consultant or semi-related industry individual that comes to you with a pre-developed formula for rebranding your company is selling you a bill of goods that will only perpetuate and exacerbate more trouble. Put your checkbooks away and walk run away.
To the “experts:” Just so you’re aware, we see you. Here are 5 things everyone should know about YOUR brand (in broad, generalities to make it easy for you to follow).
- Joan Rivers looks “great,” but is still one crazy chick…
Superficial “rebranding” like reworked logos and stationery won’t solve deep branding issues. A face lift, a nip here or a tuck there won’t make what’s at the core of the brand any different. So, put away your spec creative and mounted ads and listen for a second.
- Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery… it’s also called “LAZY.”
What BBDO did for company A won’t apply to company B. If you can’t come up with an original idea on your own, then you need to get out of the “idea generation” biz. Branding is different for each-and-every company and person.
- Magic is for children and idiots… just ask David Copperfield.
Smoke and mirrors, baby. Even David Copperfield (called an “illusionist’) can’t really make an elephant disappear. So, let’s address the true elephant in the room. If you can’t deliver on your branding promises, then don’t blow smoke up our skirts.
- The proof is in the pudding… but proof alone tastes like crap.
One-hit rock stars, fly-by-night consultants… all have a single claim to their “FAME.” But part of making a great meal is marrying ingredients that, one alone, may put a pucker in your puss. If you have the acumen of a seasoned group of marketers along with strategy, compassion and concern for the client, the taste will always work out in the end. In other words, get a few under your belt before you try to claim the title.
- The louder you crow, the more you look like a… rooster.
Some of the best practitioners I’ve been involved with have been soft-spoken and understated (that goes for ANY trade). If you walk into the room like you’re the most important person there, then you’ve already put the client into a subordinate position. Why would they want to work with that looming over them? Just drop the ego.
Sure, I call myself “The Brand Chef” but that, by no means, makes me an expert on your brand.
What does it mean? Like a chef, I work with a team of proven professionals and use the tools of the trade (marketing communications, design, photography, interactive strategy, etc.) to build a TRUE brand for our clients. There are no pre-packaged recipes for branding. There is no secret formula. With research, listening, conversation, strategy and honesty, we guide our clients to the best solution for brand marketing possible.
If that’s too simple for you, then give a “Branding Expert” a call. We’ll be here to pick up the pieces when it all comes crashing down.
Keep Cooking!
Andrew B. Clark
The Brand Chef
8 comments | tags: brand expert, Branding, David Copperfield, education, Joan Rivers, marketing, motivation, Rants, rebranding, teamwork, truthful | posted in Branding, Effective Branding, Rants, education, inspiration, marketing, motivation, truthful
Nov
12
2009
Yes, I said it. As “The Brand Chef,” that’s something I never thought would come out of my mouth. But in a recent meeting with a friend, I closed my laptop, pushed my chair back and looked him straight in the eye and said these exact words:
“Your marketing can’t fix crazy…” (and this was in reference to HIS company!)
Now, this could either be a lesson on how to shoot yourself in the foot during a casual meeting with a friend; or it could turn into a logical discussion on branding versus marketing. This discussion could cover how, because branding is at the core of a company’s culture, business and communications model, your brand isn’t something that you can just decide to give a “face lift.” Marketing, on the other hand – what many people think of when branding comes up in a conversation – can be changed to suit an ever-evolving brand…
Here’s the difference: Marketing is the strategic communication effort that results from a TRUE core brand promise, targeted to a specific audience, with the goal of enticing engagement with that brand.
So, to say it again, just for affect:
“Your marketing can’t fix crazy….”
You see companies, almost on a daily basis, “rebranding” themselves. But deep-down, without a TRUE brand strategy, the marketing that results is guaranteed to reflect what is going on inside the company – for better or worse…
Based on the conversation that ensued after my “shocking” statement, my friend and I came up with five simple takeaways.
Marketing can’t fix…
- … a company that has changed its “brand strategy” 5 times in the last 5 years. This happens when deeper brand issues stall out the progress marketing should be making. Instead of stopping and performing a TRUE brand evaluation, the CEO or CMO simply jump the track to find a different way. Different doesn’t fix what’s broken.
- … a company’s inability to make brand-based decisions. Unfortunately a company with this problem usually slows or destroys its marketing efforts simply by not being able to take action.
- … a broken marketing communication system by only using “internal staffers.” Few “Internal Marketing Departments” have enough perspective to do all of the brand evaluation and execution without outside counsel. Trust me, I’ve seen many companies try and many have failed.
- … a company with a lousy product or service (even at a discount). In this economy, when people are looking for value, quality still is at the core of our decision-making process. If your product or service is at the bottom of the quality scale in that category, you’d better re-think more than your brand.
- … a program with an insufficient budget. The phrase “money talks and B.S. walks,” for this point, is painfully applicable. Plan all you want. Scheme big dreams and map out creative strategies until your face turns fuchsia. None of it will succeed unless you have the resources to support it. How many campaigns have gotten out of the starting blocks in a blur, only to fall to its knees a quarter way through the race because it’s out of funding?
TRUE Branding (Truthful/Transparent, Relevant, Unique and Engaging) is the core to building a successful marketing communications program. With strategic marketing you can analyze a company’s TRUE Brand position, develop a successful plan and implement a program to raise awareness and engage your market. But remember, branding takes time and sometimes painful effort. It shouldn’t be viewed as a quick fix, or a “face-lift.”
With that, I’d like to send a big “Thank you” out to my friend for letting me vent to (at) him. Although the coffee was good, I appreciate the conversations that make me think and evaluate how I can better help clients and their brands.
Next time, the coffee is on me.
Keep Cooking!
Andrew B. Clark
The Brand Chef
2 comments | tags: Branding, Coffee, conversation, Effective Branding, engaging, funny, marketing, Rants, truthful | posted in Branding, Effective Branding, Rants, brand extension, conversation, education, engaging, funny, inspiration, marketing, relationship, truthful
Nov
5
2009
Social media tools are easy to acquire… Sure. But just like a sharp knife, you may not want to hand it over to any shlub that walks into the kitchen. If your company wants to start cooking up some social media marketing, you’d better be ready to do some serious planning.
If social media is like a big cocktail party, let’s think of social media MARKETING this way…
When gathering recipes for your next big shindig, you probably don’t want to mingle the sushi with the snow cones (only at my parties). So, in the same spirit, why would companies insist on throwing anything and everything into their social media marketing mix?
Many companies are starting to really turn up the heat on their social media “marketing.” They’ve set up Twitter accounts and launched Facebook pages and groups; but it looks like they haven’t thought of their brand, their target audience or, in some instances, even political correctness. Seriously?
Trust me, a meal consisting of three cups of unashamed self promotion, a tablespoon of ego, 1/4 cup of chaos and a pinch of nonsense will give your target audience nothing but a serious case of indigestion.
Create engagement and value with an integrated social media marketing strategy.
Here are three simple “Brandchef-a-fied” questions to ask yourself before that next tweetfest…
- Are you working from a proven recipe?
If you have a marketing plan with goals and targets, see how social media can be integrated into it. Don’t throw the whole dish out just because there’s a new ingredient.
Social media is so new that social media marketing is struggling to keep up with new developments, new policies, new technology, not to mention new users. The right recipe – a proven crowd-pleaser – will help to solidify your position, extend your marketing message and your brand. Just spice it up using the great tools social media has to offer!
- Does your meal have any nutritional value?
Empty promises or veiled attempts at engagement, just like empty calories, won’t add value.
If you have a truly strategic marketing plan (with the customer in mind), your social media marketing efforts should reflect those same values and benefit your audience. Superficial fluff, inane updates and ego-driven campaigns will only show your audience that you’re in it for yourself and soon they’ll walk away from the table – full, and dissatisfied.
- How many dishes are in your sink?
Máma BrandCheffio used to say, “If you have a sink full of dishes, you know you have a house full of happy kids.” The same goes for your social media marketing campaign.
If you can measure results based on a working strategy, then you know what kind of appetite your audience has. Set your goals, feed them the first course, and watch for the return. With those kinds of metrics you can make changes to your recipes on-the-fly – assuring an always full sink.
With any soiree, the planner has a lot of responsibilities. As long as your strategy is truthful, transparent, relevant, unique and engaging, everyone at the party will have a great time, and soon you will be the talk of the town.
Keep Cooking (tasty social media treats)
Andrew B. Clark
The Brand Chef
1 comment | tags: education, Effective Branding, engaging, Facebook, marketing, Promotion, social media, truthful, Twitter | posted in Branding, Effective Branding, Public Relations, Rants, brand extension, conversation, education, engaging, funny, marketing, nonsense, personal brand, social media, truthful
Feb
17
2009
I ran by an article this morning on Law.com (no idea how I got there). In it, I was intrigued by the dichotomy that law students or law grads have struggled with forever – Law can be a VERY profitable career, BUT it’s frowned upon to aggressively market your services.
Doctors market themselves with very little push back. Accountants and credit counselors market themselves (especially these days). So why, if lawyers market themselves, do they come off as ambulance chasers or some kind of smarmy worms in Brooks Brothers’ suits?
Shai Littlejohn, from The National Law Journal outlines a simple solution,
“…Although you may be able to do anything with a law degree, a law degree and solid experience alone will not do it for you. For those young attorneys who dream of becoming top lawyers, the key is to be three parts lawyer and one part marketing agent.”
She continues with,
“Through expertise, involvement and shared values, top lawyers continuously cultivate reputable self-brands. It’s the essence of those brands that separates top attorneys from colleagues destined for repeated lateral moves or career stagnation.“
Using personal branding (for recent grads) and professional branding (for established careers and firms) to build a “reputation” that becomes marketable for growth — what a novel idea…
Throughout the article, while including networking, charitable involvement, and family activities, Littlejohn continues to support branding in the legal profession to benefit and advance careers and service to clients.
It makes perfect sense. In these times of exploding growth in social media networking, aggressive advertising and promotion by virtually every industry on the planet; lawyers need the same skills to build a brand that will be beneficial to their careers as well as benefit the service they can provide to their clients – without the concern for guilt or stigma of impropriety.
Hmmm. Sounds like a recipe for success to me.
Let’s cook up some conversation… I’d love to get your input. Do you know a lawyer that utilizes personal or professional branding to enhance their exposure and growth? Do you think lawyers that aggressively market their brand come off smarmy or cheap?
Keep Cooking!
Andrew B. Clark
– The Brand Chef
2 comments | tags: Branding, conversation, Effective Branding, engaging, legal, marketing, personal brand, relationship, relevant, social media, truthful | posted in Branding, education
Nov
26
2008
A picture is worth a thousand words. We’ve all been told that since we could speak. But, what if you turned it around. Have you ever wondered what our thousands of words actually portray?
Let’s take a look…
I write – sometimes all day, every day – everything from ad copy to outlines for annual reports to blog posts, comments, and tweets. But not until I started reading did I learn that the words could be saying more than what was being read.
Confused? So was I until I saw a couple of posts (here and here) over at Angela Maier’s Blog, making me pause.
Are the words you’re using really portraying your message?
Wordle is a great visual tool to see if the actual words you’re using are communicating your story. Or are you using words that confuse and distract from the overall picture?
Try this. Have Wordle crawl your latest marketing piece. It’s easy, just cut and paste the copy into their Web site. Or if you have an RSS feed, just paste that into the space provided. It’s eye opening.
Here are a couple of examples:
(Click on the thumbnails to view larger images)
The Brand Chef blog:

My LinkedIn page:

This post:

Go ahead and try it. Try it on your marketing copy. Try it on your Web site. Try it on your competitors’ Web sites.
Are your words portraying your brand? Are they True, Relevant, Unique and Engaging?
Run a couple of tests and email me {thebrandchef(at)gmail(dot)com} your link.
I’d love to SEE what you have to say!
Until next time…
Keep Cooking!
Andrew B. Clark
-The Brand Chef.
2 comments | tags: Angela Maiers, Branding, conversation, creativity, education, Effective Branding, engaging, inspiration, interactive, marketing, relevant, truthful, Twitter, Uncategorized, unique, Wordle | posted in Communications, education