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Building an Agile Brand

The notion of ‘business agility’ — the ability to quickly adjust business resources and assets in a way that enables your business to prepare for or react to shifting markets and global conditions has always been important — but the experience of COVID-19 and the past 12 + months have driven that point home relentlessly. As we enter into this next phase of ‘the new normal’ one thing is certain: the world and how we work is forever changed and will keep changing — building a brand that enables your business to respond is the new opportunity.

What’s required? The ability to adapt to changing market conditions, customer needs, and shifts in demand all while avoiding perceptions of being reactionary or haphazard. It’s the challenge of maintaining a steady focus on your company’s North Star while navigating an operational environment that may be in a state of flux. It’s the need to keep the sails full, and the boat moving forward while making the necessary changes to stay on track in real-time.

Brand as an Enabler of Business Agility

It is certainly true that the agile businesses of today owe a great deal of that ability to flex and pivot to underlying technologies and organizational structures, but it’s also true that a company’s brand and positioning in the marketplace is also a critical factor in enabling business agility. In our experience working with companies both big and small, we’ve uncovered some key factors that go into building a brand that supports the agile business.

Allow Your Brand To Aspire to More

No one has a magic crystal ball that can predict the future, but most companies do have a business plan and a roadmap that maps the trajectory of where they are today and where they aspire to be in the future. When working with our clients to develop a brand strategy and positioning, it’s our job is to help companies build a brand that is strategically focused and works in the present — but also allows for predicted future growth and unpredictable turns of events. This can be achieved through a disciplined process of understanding how the brand needs to support current sales, revenue development, and be elastic enough to still be relevant for future expansion.

Personality Matters

Your brand’s personality is another important aspect of branding that’s often overlooked when planning for an unpredictable future. If your company is large, established, and predictable, that’s an important aspect of your brand’s personality. When it comes time to pivot, flex, or change, lean into the credibility of your size, strength, and track record as a proof point as to why it’s ok for the business to shift. Conversely, if you’re a scrappy startup, your brand’s personality should reflect that — and when you find yourself needing to pivot or adapt to new conditions, use your reputation and personality as an ‘agile upstart or challenger of the status quo’ to help make sense of change.

Trust and Permission To Change

Lastly, but perhaps most importantly, brand building is ultimately about creating trust between your company and your customers. When it comes time for your business to make a sudden change — whether due to unforeseen competitive factors, global events, or simply to take advantage of new opportunities — the brand trust that you build with your customers today is what will give you permission to adapt down the road.

There are of course multiple other factors that make business agility possible, from its technical infrastructure and organizational structure, to how a company thinks about and manages change — but ultimately those must be supported by a strong, flexible, and trusted brand that permits you to change in the mind of your customers.

Emotive Brand is a brand strategy and design agency in Oakland, California.

Is an Agile Strategy the Right Approach for Brand Strategy?

Dynamic Times Require Agile Strategy

We have seen a a large rise of requests for our proprietary agile strategy methodology for brand strategy. More than ever, sudden market changes, disruptive business models, rapid-paced technology, and ever-evolving competition demand agility. As customers change, new competition enters and new categories emerge, so businesses must be able to flex and adapt with the times.

Without Agility, Less Impact

Agility is becoming more and more of an expectation. And being agile doesn’t mean being hasty or impulsive. In fact, it’s the opposite. Agile strategy should help businesses and brands make better, smarter decisions faster and enable teams to get to the heart of key business problems, prioritize goals, and stay true to their purpose.

High-growth companies who aren’t able to move fast and work in sprints face potential complications. Projects that get stalled lose impact. Slow deliberation leads to decision-paralysis and can deter leaders who simply need to put a stake in the ground and stick to it. And doing incremental parts of a strategy, over a long period of time, can render that strategy irrelevant by the time it’s actually brought to life. Agile strategy is all about quickly getting to the heart of the problem at hand, and creating smart, efficient, maximum-impact solutions.

Accelerating into Brand Strategy

High-growth companies need new ways to adapt their business, product, culture, and brand with an agile approach to brand strategy.

An Agile Approach to Brand Strategy

1. A Sprint Mindset

Framing brand strategy as a sprint allows a business to be more agile and able to effectively flex and adapt. There is great value in condensing what normally would occur over weeks or months into a single day or series of days. A sprint structure demands that everyone really focus and give their full attention. It allows people to really dive in and not be distracted.  Even if the strategy occurs over a longer period of time and takes multiple sprints, developing a sprint mindset can help people be more dedicated, focused, and productive.

2. Flexibility

Digital disruption and the fast pace of markets today requires a brand strategy that can flow and flex with change. An agile brand can’t be thought of as a logo or image – because it isn’t. It’s a system. It’s a way of living for your business and should be felt, understood, and brought to life by every member of the team. In order to be able to intelligently and powerfully adapt and flex, the strategy must be have a clear, directed brand purpose that allows for flexibility without losing clarity.

3. Collaboration

Agile brand strategy hinges on collaboration. And this often requires a mindset shift. People have to hold confidence in the idea that working together helps create better solutions faster. It requires being open, listening to new perspectives, taking outside advice, and coming together to be more imaginative, innovative, and creative in order to help your brand and business stand out in a competitive landscape.

Fast Forward

Last year, our agency honed in on how to solve our clients’ more pressing business challenges via an agile approach. We developed the Fast Forward program to empower learning and accelerate implementation – a much better approach for high-growth companies.

We also embraced the practice of working in sprints, both strategically and creatively. We found it encouraged a higher level of collaboration with our clients and enabled us to meet the many demands of leadership teams managing high-growth companies. We believe sustainable growth depends on this type of agile brand strategy. High-growth companies looking to succeed in 2017 will have to evaluate and learn to embrace agility, or face irrelevancy.

Visit our case studies to see how we put Fast Forward to work.

Emotive Brand is a San Francisco brand strategy and design agency.