Mascola B2B Marketing Blog, B2B Advertising Agency
Category Archives: Branding

Corporate Rebranding Done Right

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To rebrand an already existing company, especially one with some size, is a difficult task. You have many masters to please, and any mistake (real or perceived) will be viewed and criticized by lots of eyes. A recent rebrand that’s caught my eye is that of Dominion Energy, a company targeting businesses and residential customers throughout Virginia.

 

B2B rebranding

Take a look at a comparison of the old and new logos. You’ll notice that the proper choices were made to modernize the logo. I also applaud the removal of the hand, which looks suspiciously like the finger of God from Michelangelo’s “Creation of Adam” and could spark some backlash among certain customers.

Why It Works

Overall, the redesign does a good job of portraying a company that is modern. And, through the icon shape and placement, one that is literally rising up. The logo itself and the overall application shown in the images that follow (from Chermayeff & Geismar) are by no means groundbreaking, cutting edge, or in my mind award winning. But it’s not always about creating a brand that meets these criteria.

As a company that serves over 6 million customers in the B2B and B2C sectors, you need to keep a lot of people happy. Going too far down the road of pleasing one niche market with your rebrand will most likely turn off a good portion of another. This logo does a good job of appealing to all markets and bringing the brand to where it should be in 2017.

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How Manufacturers Can Find a Voice That Works in 8 Steps

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manufacturer brand voice
You are not a robot. Neither are your colleagues. Not most of them, anyway. So why would you want your company to sound like one? It’s time for you to find the right manufacturer brand voice. And use it everywhere.

The question you might be asking is: where do I start?

You start with a little research. Maybe you’ve done some already. But if you haven’t, there’s no need to freak out. It’s something you can gather fairly easily, using either your marketing staff or an outside agency to help you. The most important part of the research you’re about to do is simple: talk to your current customers. Your customers are your brand. The things they like about you, the reasons they’ve stuck with you for months or years or even decades, and how you have helped them overcome challenges – that is what the research is going to unearth.

This is information you may think you know already. But chances are, you only know part of it. And if the voice you are using on your current website, blog, social media, and sales tools is too dry or mechanical, you are not using your understanding of your customers in the best way possible. Because just like you, your customers are people. They may be steeped in your industry jargon, or they might be on the periphery, but your customers – and your prospects – no matter what their level, need to understand and relate to what you are saying. This is how you drive people into and through your sales funnel.

Here’s an 8-step plan to help manufacturers find their voice, and stick with it. If you are working on a new, overarching marketing plan, it’s a process that you don’t want to skip!

  1. Interview Key Staff. Assign an outside person or agency to talk to your staff about who you are. While your customers will be the predominant driving factor in creating your voice, your people will also have a role. You need to find out anonymously (so they feel comfortable talking) how they perceive the brand. What works, what doesn’t, and how they would describe what makes your company so great to a friend.
  2. Interview Your Best Customers. Your core users know you the best. They like you. What do they like? Why are they loyal? They can tell you what differentiates you from your competitors better than anyone else. Maybe they think you are more authentic. Maybe they think you are more buttoned-up and professional. Those things will determine what kind of voice you have more than anything else.
  3. Look at the Results. Have your marketing team and/or agency work through the resulting information to determine where there is agreement from most or all of the respondents. You’ll find out a lot about your company that perhaps you’ve never heard or seen in writing before.
  4. Develop Buyer Personas. You can’t have a voice if you don’t know who you’re talking to. Developing buyer personas will help you to figure out the voice of your brand, and how to alter it slightly, depending on which of your target audiences you might be addressing. For instance, the persona for a 30-something purchasing agent in the Northeast will be markedly different from the persona for a 50-something engineer in the Midwest. Your voice will likely have to change for communications targeted at each specific vertical.
  5. Create a Positioning & Messaging Document. Your research won’t just help you determine your personas; it will also help you determine a positioning statement, an elevator speech, and fleshed out language that might appear on your website and collateral pieces. This is perhaps the most important part, for every marketing material you create from here on out should be based on what comes out of this document. It’s essentially your brand bible.
  6. Roll Out Your New Voice to the Team. Once you have your bible exactly where you want it to be and you know the voice of your brand, it’s time to spread the good news to your colleagues. This is an often-overlooked step in the process, but it is an essential part. Everyone needs to be singing from the same song sheet, or it won’t work. You’ll have 20 different brand voices instead of one. Each sales person needs to know your elevator speech – he or she can revise slightly based on their own style, but the brand’s voice has to come through to the new audience. And it’s not just about the sales team. It’s about every single person in your organization. The way Jeanie from accounting talks about the company at a family BBQ or the way Joe the Operations Supervisor answers the question he gets at the weekly poker game: Where do you work, again?
  7. Give Good Content. What you say is just as important as how you say it. When it comes to content and monthly emails, make sure that you are being helpful, offering an opinion, or possibly even entertaining. Insights, tips, expert opinions on current industry events – this type of content helps you both establish authority and sound like someone who can be trusted. Your audience prefers this over a hard sell every time. A CEO is interested in learning how you can help him cut costs more than he is interested in the product itself. So are the director-level staff that answer to him.
  8. Honor thy Google. Google is constantly coming up with new algorithms that weed out impersonators and reward authentic companies. You need to be ready for it as you work on your company’s SEO. Readability is a key factor that Google takes into account when determining your credibility as a company. Simple is usually better. So as you develop your brand voice, stay away from advanced vocabulary as much as possible. The simpler and more conversational you are, the more authentic a brand you are perceived to be and the higher you rank in a search.

Some of these steps are easier than others. If you don’t have a marketing team that has time to conduct interviews, a dedicated content team, or an in-house SEO expert, you might need to make a few new hires or talk to a strategic marketing agency (or a little of both) to get things going. Finding your voice and developing content that embodies it is essential. It helps B2B brands stand out against competitors as technology, marketing, and the economy continue to evolve. If you get these 8 steps right, your company will be well ahead of the competition.

 

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Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Taglines But Were Afraid To Ask

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b2b taglines

The tagline. It defines your brand. Maybe you want it because you are the Nike of the components manufacturing world. Or the Apple of Commercial Construction. Or maybe you’re certain that you don’t need a tagline; everyone knows they’re pointless, right? You’re likely somewhere in the middle. However you may feel about taglines, this list of Frequently Asked Questions can help guide you in the right direction as you decide whether or not to have one and the best way to approach it.

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