Jan 18 2011

365: What would you like to brand?

Scarlet

What have you been wanting to brand but haven’t gotten a chance to yet?

A Public School (likely our next pro bono project). Every kid should know why they “attend” this place, what matters around here (authentically), what it means to belong “here”, what “we” collectively stand for, are made of and contribute to, and what the expectations and outcomes are beyond what everyone supposes is “obvious”.

Retirement Community

A triathlon with an interesting history and spirited purpose

A carnival in Brazil

Accountants

Water; a product or cause related campaign having anything (healthy) to do with water

Branded art that captures and expresses the sense of people and place that come together to action a significant purpose

A philharmonic or symphony

Peanut butter and jelly

A Brewery

Library system

An arts or not-for-profit cluster. Yes, Porter’s cluster theory can be applied to cultural and human services…

The City of Amsterdam

A life saving device

Parking garages

Bookstores

Cruise Ships

Advertising/sponsorship criteria for Oprah’s OWN network. Smart partners make for an indelible impact.

Extreme Sports Brand

Magazine

Surf Gear

A natural or man-made wonder of the world

Real toys

Tequila

The exterior and interior working space that inspires a community of renegades; function, look, and feel.  ”We shape our buildings and thereafter they shape us.” Winston Churchill

Something culinary

Ski’s

Visceral way-finding

Chocolate!

Something that teaches the world to sing

Mountain bikes

Cereal…This may be a pro bono project that we commandeer as a public service announcement one of these days. Not because we love cereal, but because we are unnerved by the blatant advertising deception embraced by the dirty few that ultimately misleads the busy many.

Check it out yourself…Read Serious Play for Serious Girl’s case study “General Mills: A Case Study on Corporate Values” http://www.seriousplayforseriousgirls.com/?p=601 or the Rudd Center’s original report: “Cereal FACTS: Evaluating the Nutrition Quality and Marketing of Children’s Cereals.” http://www.cerealfacts.org/media/Cereal_FACTS_Report.pdf

p.s. *We’d love to design William Gibson’s next book cover


Jan 6 2011

365:What’s a true brand champion to do?

Great Dame

We have a timid (and slightly out of touch) leadership which produces a lame brand. I can’t get money allocated for research or outside brand support because everyone holding the purse strings is afraid of the findings (change). Any suggestions (other than a career change)?

One iconic brand provides all the evidence that anyone needs to re-think what they have always thought about change and brand transformations. Once upon a time Kimberly-Clark produced a product made of “Cellucotton” that was used to line and filter gas masks during WWI in response to the cotton shortage.

Ten peaceful years later the product was re-engineered and re-positioned as a facial tissue designed to remove cold cream and make-up. The Kleenex® Brand “absorbent pad” was initially marketed to Hollywood and Broadway starlets. Sometime later Kimberly-Clark made the decision to offer the disposable solution to a slightly broader market segment, American women.

Convinced that customer feedback suggested an alternative and sizable untapped niche, a Kimberly-Clark researcher tried unsuccessfully for several years to persuade the powers that be to re-imagine the Kleenex® facial tissues. Finally in 1926 a one question, two answer survey was featured in a Peoria, Illinois newspaper. Did consumers use the Kleenex® Brand product to remove cold cream or as a disposable handkerchief? The compelling results proved that the customer-centric, insightful researcher had been on to something all along.  By 1930 Kleenex® had a re-purposed identity, a more generalized use, and advertising approach that doubled sales and made Kleenex® one of the few, but proud, *genericized products of our time.

*A genericized product is any gizmo or service that has earned a colloquial identifier synonymous with the corporate brand name or trademark…bandaid, aspirin, thermos, yo-yo, escalator, butterscotch, zipper, and zerox are on the short list. Kleenex® holds a distinguished place in Merriam-Webster and Oxford dictionaries.
Links used in this blog:
Kleenex Logo: http://logos.wikia.com/wiki/File:Original_Kleenex-mark1925-trademarkia.jpg

Jan 1 2011

365: Brand vs Advertising

Great Dame

What’s the difference between a brand and advertising?

In humanistic terms the question asks “What’s the difference between a stable personality and a really snappy look?”

Brand is a commitment to deliver a differentiated service, product, and quality standard consistently.

Winston Fletcher(1) defined a very basic but sound working definition of advertising as “a paid for communication intended to inform and/or persuade one or more people.”

Brands give advertising something credible to announce and hence, persuade.

___________
(1)Winston Fletcher is Vice President of the History of advertising Trust, Chairman of the Royal Institution governing the Advertising Standards Boards of finance, Visiting Professor in Marketing at the University of Westminster, and he serves on the advisory Council of the Barbican.
Fletcher is distinguished as the only professional to have served as Chairman of the advertising association as well as President of the IPA, and as a council member of the ASA. He was founder Chairman of the world advertising research centre. Fletcher was founder and Chairman of Fletcher Shelton Delaney; Chairman and CEO, Ted Bates UK Group; Chairman and CEO, Delaney Fletcher Bozell. He has published 12 books and over 3000 articles.

Dec 7 2010

Social Media Masterminds: Facebook Pages that Are Getting it Right!

Thoreau Bred

Social Media isn’t a fad, it’s a fundamental shift in the way we communicate.”   Erik Qualman, The Social Media Revolution(1)

Unfortunately, most companies use their Facebook pages as little more than a new medium for their old school marketing tactics. Facebook isn’t a place for interruption marketing, engagement through bribery, or standard issue syndication and news aggregation. Social media revolves around community and conversations. It’s a place for art, expression, and contribution – not advertising.

In a sea of mediocre Facebook pages, here are a few pages that reign supreme, knock our socks off, and are clearly deserving of a little attention:

Outside Magazine Outside’s page vibrantly, creatively, and successfully connects a spirited tribe. Outside uses their Facebook to connect explorers, adventurers, and outdoor enthusiasts who have stories to tell and hard-earned pearls of wisdom to share.
Outside goes way above and beyond just using their Facebook as an aggregate news source for their online content (which is, unfortunately, a widely accepted Facebook strategy). Our favorite thing about Outside’s Facebook is their use of fan photos. This page’s fan photos are not only beautiful, they’re inspiring- they actually leave us craving adventure and a subscription to the magazine. Adding to Outside’s engagement is the fact that the best Facebook fan photo of the month is published in the prestigious glossy pages of Outdoor’s print magazine. We also love that Outside has kept its wall as its landing page!

Outside gets Facebook!

Skittles and Skittles UK
The infinitely wacky creators of “Tube Sock” and the Midas/Skittles Touch have successfully created two different Facebook pages with posts as consistently random and zany as their commercials. Thanks to the UK page’s “Super Mega Rainbow Updater Staff 2010” photo album and their Update Library tab, you can also meet the Skittles employees who wrote said posts. Skittles’ content rocks, but trippy posts about the antiques of the future aren’t really what make Skittles such a success. Skittles gets its audience, gets the brilliance of the random status update, and really gets Facebook.

Skittles gets a ten out of ten for using Facebook to authentically capture and convey their brand.

Warning: The New York Times tweeting rules applies here- your FB strategy needs to be tailored specifically for your brand. The tone that works for Skittles won’t necessarily work for you, so get your own.

Grammar Girl
Mignon Fogarty is a grammar geek turned super hero. Have an urgent question regarding spelling, punctuation, capitalization, or syntax? Under her super alias, Grammar Girl, Mignon uses Facebook to right the grammatical errors that universally confound us. She also lets us know when her new grammar podcasts and books come out or go on sale. She does an excellent job of starting conversations and has successfully created a go-to forum for those of us not yet worthy of the “grammarian” title. If you dig words, or get excited over Oxford commas, Mignon has a page that’ll fan your nerdy flames.

Grammar Girl gets her audience and uses Facebook to make a contribution!

Eye Magazine
Eye Magazine is a uniquely inspired international graphic design review for artists who contribute to visual culture. From coverage of American fashion trends to the deeply philosophical and socially conscious Buenos Aires Cardboard Book Project , Eye uses their Facebook to provoke thought, showcase remarkable design projects, engage the global artistic community in collective graphic initiatives, and inject inspired foreign perspectives into our news feeds. Eye’s posts are short, include outstanding images, and link us to fascinating content. Our favorite things about Eye’s Facebook are that it exposes us to emerging veins of graphic expression, and that it instantly connects such a diverse community of creators and helps facilitate the exchange of inspired creative thought.

Eye could do a better job of engaging conversation, but they do an excellent job of initiating visual impressions.

Additional helpful links –>>

To see which Tweeters are getting Twitter right, check out our blog Twitter: The Medium is the Message.

For a guide on using social media to make a contribution and shift the way you’re communicating, check out our blog Social Media: The Prize Inside.

_______

1 Qualman, Erik. The Social Media Revolution


Nov 8 2010

An Open Letter to Health Insurers

Great Dame

We appreciate that you operate in a complicated cultural reality – economic uncertainty, political divide, scarcity mentalities, and fear have collided in the health-care sector. The insured, underinsured, and uninsured are feeling anxious, concerned, entitled, angry, and threatened. We find it frustrating and shortsighted that the health-care “hysteria” is largely avoided by the very industry that is positioned to address the uncertainties and acknowledge the prevailing social vulnerability that we all sense when sea change is required.

We suspect that the majority of advertising campaigns designed and launched by health insurers are well-intentioned. But the reality is that the messages communicated have less to do with the higher order needs, desires, sensitivities, and fears of people than they do with promoting what any one insurer has to offer as a “program” or a “perk” in the same-old, same-old approach. It seems to us that the messages conveyed and brand promises made seem to rely on consumption axioms that actually provoke cultural contradictions and rouse social anxieties. Meaningless programs and messaging dominate the awareness strategies of insurers distracted by their own positioning. Even the most thoughtful participants in the industry are minimizing their role and limiting their potential by skirting the blazing issues.

Not long ago McKinsey reported that people are less concerned with having to change than they are that no one is defining how in relation to health-care. People want to know that health insurers understand that more and more decision-making power and financial responsibility fall to people, not companies. People want to know that health insurers intuit the seriousness with which they fear illness- given that more than half of the working population reports being ‘unprepared’ for an injury or illness. People want to know that health insurers realize health-care is costly to them, regardless of the “value” offered.

Until health insurers recognize the relevant, deeply personal influences and the range of emotions that control decision making it is impossible to speak the same language, elevate cultural understanding, evolve behavior – or – attract, woo, and secure ideal subscribers.

The times and reality cry out  for a thought leader, a compassionate visionary that is willing to address head on what must be done. A thought leader driven by deep convictions, that appreciates that it is moral to be realistic and realistic to be moral. A thought leader that acknowledges the uncertainty with a perspective that communicates solutions in an open declaration of confidence to an insecure people, at such a time as this. Rather than advertising quips that gloss and avoid the cultural tensions and political divide – a thought leader that speaks directly to the collective psyche of society, one ad, one sponsorship, one promotion at a time. A thought leader that will keep it real; interacting authentically and sincerely. No visionary should ignore the well-being of people in conflict, especially in the wellness industry. An energized industry insider ready to make a promise that can be kept, and communicated, through a perspective that holistically and strategically connects with the needs of people. What is needed is “a utopian moment of healing built around” 1 solutions and concepts that address the way forward.

If the programs, products, and partnerships of health-care providers are in-sync with an honorable philosophy, a robust purpose and a motivating vision then the organization should NOT be dumbed-down with trite messaging and out-of-touch promotions. Health insurers have a responsibility to make explicitly plain how the industry and providers intend to participate and interact in the colliding worlds of health, wellness, and fear.

When the needs are great, the issues sensitive, and the future uncertain, it is necessary for organizations in competitive and personal arenas to reveal more of ‘who they are’ rather than what programs they sell. The insured and uninsured want to know the motives of health insurers; key to understanding and deciding who can and should be trusted in the new and uncertain world order. The contrast between health insurer’s campaigns and their organizational way of being were less important once upon a time then they are now. In the new health insurance world order who you are, what you stand for, and why anyone wants your version of health-care genuinely matters. Your purpose and philosophy, as it relates to health, disease, trust, and people are intensely relevant.

The debate on health-care seems to hover and stall at cost. To not integrate or speak to the emotional aspect of health insurance is to ignore a fundamental aspect of the very real human experience. What people are concerned about is security, which is related to freedom. Freedom certainly has a cost but it’s far more complex than premium rates. Freedom, and control, are foundational to our national health and wellness mindsets. It will take a confident thought leader with a genuine interest in the wellness of people to motivate a nation to healthier behavioral choices, key to securing their freedom and health in the new world order. To sincerely address the real issues, thoughtfully, in a relevant voice is to alleviate the fears that will ultimately distract people’s ability to make sound decisions. Once a sense of direction hits tipping point a sense of acceptance, responsibility, certainty, and progress will infuse the human spirit and collective willpower transcending powerlessness, confusion, fear, anger, resentment, entitlement…

We challenge the health insurance industry to reconsider and re-imagine their influence, relevance, and role moving forward. Visionary, purpose-driven, people-centric providers are in a position to offer more than benefits within a category. What is needed now is a compassionate visionary who has the potential to innovate, negotiate, and champion change within the industry and society. Competitive forces and the anxiety of the masses demand that insurers develop wider brand strategies that develop and broadcast differences that truly make a difference. To our way of thinking, an authentic brand is driven by a humanizing philosophy and a captivating purpose, fueled by relentless conviction intent on guiding people-centric, spot-on decision making that doesn’t disappoint. Anything less is just malarkey. Relevance, credibility, and awareness are not an accidental consequence of advertising campaigns nor are they fringe activities unrelated to the greater purposes and objectives that providers sincerely intend to achieve, short and long term.

In times of trouble we listen for the confident; we are willing to follow the confident. Are you confident? Are you different? Are you relevant? Credible? Compelling? Do you care?

There will be plenty of those that simply wait and watch to see what the future holds. Insurers that ignore the realities that keep us up at night and chewing our nails during the day, do so at our collective peril. We implore relevant providers to rise to the occasion as champions of the health-care revolution, provoking conversations, deepening their relevance and proving that the exceptional is possible. Genuine leadership finds the courage to address the conflicts of society, culture, and people…not merely customers, consumers, and programming.

The best prospects for a meaningful future demand that we all do our part, giving the best of what we have, generously.


Oct 27 2010

Crazy. Inspired. Bold. Successful.

Great Dame and Pavlovs Dog

Here’s one plan…innovate a dynamic, new product; one that can change staid perspectives and whole industries…and then place it in the hands of people who only know and understand how to do what has always been done…and you will get predictable results.

Here’s another…innovate a dynamic, new product; one that can change staid perspectives and whole industries…one that explores the limits, plays at the boundaries, and harnesses the unique competencies that will disrupt business as usual creating new possibilities and offering a completely new experience.

In other words…“Stand out. Be conspicuous, at all cost. Make yourself a magnet of attention by appearing larger, more colorful, more mysterious than the bland and timid masses” (Robert Greene. The 48 Laws of Power) or blend into the blandness.

Inspired by functional design, engaged by practical innovation, and driven by a brand that sees the needs of people not a consumer market, truly innovative new products have the power to persuade and invigorate the tired, tried and true methodology with a bold approach that reinforces  uniqueness and sparks intrigue.

The humanizing nature of the offering itself, paired with a brand worth believing, and an introduction that dazzles should make room for whole markets and select buyers to find their own detailed story in the buying experience. Through and through the offering should stand apart and stick in the minds of ‘creatures of habit’ as an unapologetically,  vivid, healthy, sustainable, durable, and flexible departure from the mundane.

Ease the resistance, seduce, command attention, and never forget that everything is judged by appearance…so keep it real and dream big. When the stakes are high, timidity is risky business.  

So, are there examples of bold thinking… inspired moves… wildly successful crazy ideas?

  • In 1950 Dunkin’ Donuts was born. Tim Hortons went live in 1964. One thing for sure… people loved their coffee, and paying a buck for a cup of joe was apparently right on the money. The market was happy… business was growing. So why would an entrepreneur in the early 80’s decide that a new category was possible, one that would change the coffee landscape forever? Because he was inspired by what he knew was possible. And out of that instinct to act, to be bold, came his mission statement: to inspire and nurture the human spirit – one person, one cup, and one neighborhood at a time. Starbucks knew it was different, and they were told it was crazy… it would never work. The naysayers questioned who the heck would pay $4 for a cup of coffee? Starbucks separated themselves from the pack and you know the rest of the story. Crazy. Inspired. Bold. Successful.
  • A bra is a bra is a bra… so why start a lingerie store when bras and panties were available everywhere in 1977? Victoria Secrets’ products were not uniquely different, but placed in a comfortable, male-friendly environment, an amazing phenomenon was born. Stand-alone stores and the Internet of its day- mail order catalogs created the foundation for this $5B giant today. Crazy. Inspired. Bold. Successful.
  • Everybody buys a vacuum cleaner at one time or another. And then they buy bags and more bags… often. The bag industry is a $500M business… why would anyone interfere  with the magic of the razor/razor blade, keep’em coming back for more, classic approach? It’s no surprise that when James Dyson invented a bag-less vacuum cleaner in the late 70s big manufacturers didn’t get turned on, but rather turned him and his design away. Dyson and his crazy, inspired and bold innovation threatened to destroy  dependable revenue streams. Today Dyson is a $10B behemoth and much bigger than the bag industry it threatened. Crazy. Inspired. Bold. Successful.

Crazy. Inspired. Bold. Successful.

First, they were crazy. Did anyone really believe that the human spirit was worth the cost of an expensive cup of coffee made from beans in distant and exotic lands? Did anyone really want to be seen buying the aura of sex in the form of underwear in a larger than life, too-hot-to-handle, glitzy lingerie showroom? And why do women pay twice as much for a “cyclone” vacuum cleaner in outrageous colors, designed around “ball technology” that redistributes the center of gravity for easier maneuverability that uses a filter rather than a bag? What is known is that these are great ideas turned break-a-way successes because the founders turned an audacious perspective into a larger than life reality that woos people to them.

Second, they were inspired. The inventors, the backers, the founders, the employees… and the market all wanted more than a dose of bitter reality on the way to work and under her suit. The Dyson vacuum worked for people that didn’t expect to suction bowling balls and did hope for a practical life in living color that rolled along smoothly. As it turns out wanting more and paying for it was exactly what a large market segment has hoping for all along in each category. People have been gravitating to products and brands that mine deep and go big in lieu of what has always been available and ordinary, time and time again.

Third, they were bold. They broke the rules, invented new ones and disrupted the market in grand style. They knew success meant sticking to their ideals. Undaunted by the popular world view; the successes that get talked about refuse to pay lip service to lofty missions or shallow pursuits. These are the visionaries that fearlessly parted from the herd and refused to be homogenized. They were different; they created value in a style that was all their own. They were the masters of their own experience and hence, the experience of others, driving  customer loyalty unlike any advertising scheme or shallow gimmick.

And then they became successful!  These geniuses created new categories because they were just crazy enough to do what they believed in despite the disbelievers, inspired enough by the possibilities and willing to act bold when the time was right. Success came because they did something different and weren’t  persuaded or engaged by those that see through the lens of what can’t be done.

We want to be a part of the crazy, inspired, bold, successful stories. All others need not apply.

A Bold Brand Is A Necessity

A Vague Brand Is A Liability

____________________________________________________


Oct 1 2010

The Rolling Stones Didn’t Have to Bribe THEIR Groupies

Thoreau Bred

We came across a newsletter this week that actually said: “‘like’ our Facebook page and receive an exclusive offer.” We’re not sure what the offer was, because we’re not interested in being bribed, manhandled, or coerced into social media engagement (…but we’re guessing it’s free shipping or a discount promo code).

Social media revolves around community and conversations. It’s a place for art, expression, and contribution – not advertising. Facebook isn’t just another notch in your touch-point belt, so have some respect.

You don’t need the gimmicks if you’re doing something that’s actually worthy of people’s time, interest, and attention. Real groupies- genuinely impassioned and impressed followers- aren’t bought; they’re earned.

Before you go out and set up a fan page or start a promo campaign to non-organically grow your following, read our social media guide: Social Media- The Prize Inside


Sep 23 2010

The Past Begets the Future

ShowDog

Urban renewal gained a justifiably notorious connotation following World War II. For more than 70 years countries followed architectural, city planning and governmental policies that were based on the ideas of a few and the will of even fewer .   In putting commerce ahead of community we built places that ignored how people interacted. Now we collectively face stagnant brownfield sites, cultural commercialization, unsustainable industrial development, hollow urban centers and significant damage to our natural resources.

As we reconfigure the places where we live, as we strive to bring the suburbs and urban core into alignment, we can not ignore anthropological necessities nor forget historical lessons of the past.  People want to connect, people want to interact, people need community.  In this century, we will face significant challenges stemming from population growth and breakneck development in many developed nations and a growing list of last century’s developing countries.  To survive we must seek balance between the common good and commerce.  To thrive we must incorporate lessons learned with thoughtful design, focused on our human existence.

Here’s the funny thing- we had it more right than not before the era of “modernist” urban planning (circa 1920 – 1970).  Cities with strong growth at the turn of the last century featured many of the features and concepts that are so necessary for our future.  Greenspace, mixed use neighborhoods, entrepreneurial populations, and more. Which today must be coupled with multi-disciplinary approaches including design and project  -based thinking, sustainable alignment of suburban and urban considerations and grassroots, community lead involvement.

Today, many of these citiesthat served as the bedrock on which we grew  are considered also-rans or, even worse, dead. Yet they serve as both yesterday’s lesson and tomorrow’s classroom and some will find the will to emerge as leaders in authentic city planning and revitalization. We must learn from our past, both good and bad, to ensure our future.


Sep 9 2010

Banners, Logos, and Neon Lights, oh my!

Thoreau Bred

We were recently at a sponsored event that was hosted by a world renowned art museum and showcased the talents of several remarkably gifted musicians.

One sponsor, clearly still living in the land of magical thinking, elected to give away an ordinary solid-color t-shirt emblazoned with nothing but their logo and slogan. Instead of positioning the sponsor as an in-tune patron of the arts, the t-shirts commercialized and tarnished the event while awkwardly positioning the sponsor as ‘out of touch’ and ‘out of place.’

Abusing your logo
and slinging together a trite tag line do not constitute a sponsorship strategy. It’s unlikely that your name alone inspires much impassioned support. Here’s a simple test… If you wouldn’t tattoo it on your own flesh, don’t waste the money emblazing it on a t-shirt.

Who you allow to sponsor your event and what you sponsor impacts your brand. Your brand’s story is reinforced or diluted by your real-life, day to day, actions, decisions, products, events, partnerships, sponsors…..

Allowing lackluster intrusions negatively impacts your event experience, cheapens your brand image, and devalues the return on investment for sponsors.  When it’s clear that a sponsor can’t wrap their head around the inherent meaning and value of a particular event or organization, they reduce sponsorship to obnoxious noise and unwanted advertising

Event sponsorship demands far more than just banners, logos, and neon lights.
If your sponsors don’t passionately share your philosophy, get your values, relate your purpose, or connect with your target audience, it’s time to re-evaluate your sponsorship criteria.

An exampleof an event with well-paired sponsors is Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating Contest. This year, Nathan’s was sponsored by Heinz and Pepto-Bismol.
Pepto-Bismol actually went on to host an official Major League Eating follow-up tour with the winner of the Nathan’s Famous contest, which they detailed via their facebook fan page.


Sep 1 2010

How Buff is Your Brand Narrative?

Thoreau Bred

Everything that you say says something about you.

Your brand narrative is how you tell your story. It runs deeper than a marketing rollout or an advertising campaign.  Your brand narrative is told in and through newsletters, press releases, promotions, CRM, sales, programming, products, annual reports, and internal communications- day in and day out. Your ongoing narrative should reflect your brand vision and purpose, your strategic direction, your operational tactics, your intent and partnerships. If crafting your brand narrative isn’t a constant, grueling, and tedious ongoing process, then it’s likely you’re producing ineffective noise.

Wrestling your brand narrative into focus requires skill and authenticity. Calling yourself cool doesn’t make you cool and calling your brand relevant doesn’t make it relevant. Drop the ego, the corporate-bologna, and the stuffy verbiage from your self-promotions and figure out how to reflect who you really are and what you really have to offer. Narrativity is not vague or generic.

Meticulously crafted brand narratives connect with people; they gracefully distinguish your unique interests, voice, differentiators, and the powerful benefits that genuinely matter to clients and customers. Brands that make a connection, reinforce their relevance, and speak to people are identified immediately as the must-have solution; the real deal, second to none. Your brand narrative should convey the personality, style, and strengths that enliven your collective organization.

Your communications are a reflection of your brand identity and directly contribute to your brand image, whether you intended them to be or not.

Here are a few questions to help you do a quick audit of your Brand Narrative:

  • Do your messages accurately communicate your story?
  • Are your messages genuine and authentic or just feel-good self-compliments and well-worded spin?
  • Does your brand’s spunk, funk, credibility, attitude, personality, sensitivity, or vibe shine through your messages?
  • How do your messages reflect your brand identity, values, and strategy?
  • Are your messages clear and concise?
  • Do your messages speak to the real issues that concern your audience?
  • Do your messages reflect the values of your audience?
  • Are you addressing the relevant issues on the minds and the immediate ‘To-Do’ lists of your customers?