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Brand Is the Best Foundation for Growth

Emotive Brand Experts #6: Kelly Morgan

Continuing our Emotive Brand Experts series, we’re interviewing past and present Emotive Brand clients to discover what they do better than anybody else — and how that expertise can be used to embolden your brand today.

Kelly Morgan is Head of Marketing at Lyra, a startup that’s transforming behavioral healthcare. We’ve been working with Kelly to rebrand Lyra, and they just launched their new brand last week. In addition, they’ve secured their next series of funding! Kelly spoke with us to discuss key learnings from the rebranding process.

What was the catalyst for the rebrand?

When I joined the company, I was overseeing designers, communication teams, and marketing assets. It became very challenging to do all that without real brand guidelines. Of course, we had some things, but not the mature and robust set of design tools you need when you go to market. We were inventing everything from scratch. We had a core that we loved, but the look itself wasn’t that modern and it didn’t reflect what Lyra is all about.

When you think about what we’re trying to do, we’re bringing technology to a space that is somewhat tech-averse and not that sophisticated in terms of modern convenience and simplicity. We felt as though our look didn’t accurately reflect that we’re a high-tech and a visual company. As I dug in further with other stakeholders and the management team, it became clear that there was a real appetitive for this. Not just a new visual identity, but for equipping our team with the right tools – messaging, positioning, a unified elevator pitch, and a cohesive way to describe what we do as a business.

What were some early successes in the process?

I found myself a great executive sponsor. We developed a solid business case not only for “Why?” but for “Why now?” We’re a relatively young company, and before we start investing, it’s great to have a solid foundation to build on. These things are easier when you’re smaller. It’s not as disruptive or confusing to the market. The overall timing was a big part of making that case. Having an executive sponsor can help garner alignment internally when people are having a hard time seeing the bigger picture. Change is hard. It’s difficult to imagine how it’s all going to come together when you’re only seeing pieces at a time. It’s challenging to understand the impact of those decisions when you’re so comfortable with something you already have.

What would you describe as the biggest challenge of a rebrand?

I think it comes down to educating your team on what brand really is. You hear those hallway conversations of, “Oh, new logo, new colors,” but it’s so much more than that. This is something that’s going to align with your business strategy and make it easier for you to sell, to communicate, to stand out – brand is everything. That misunderstanding can manifest itself in different ways throughout the course of the project.  It could mean that someone is not investing enough time in reviewing something until it’s already live on a website. A rebrand involves soft skills — feelings, emotions, perceptions. Everyone has a different function in the organization and so it’s sometimes hard for people to see why the brand will matter to their piece of the business. A rebrand also has a fair amount of feelings and emotions, something that not everyone easily connects to in how they approach work. It took me a while to understand how important it was to get everyone aligned, but more so, how much time I needed to dedicate to education, understanding different perspectives, and gaining consensus. It could mean someone not investing enough time in reviewing something until it’s already live on a website.

A personal challenge for us was that we don’t have a team of in-house designers or Creative Directors. Representing Lyra in the rebrand discussions, I found my own limitations and wished that we had someone who had a visual design background. That’s where the value of bringing in an outside agency comes in. Contractors and freelancers can get you pretty far, but an agency has the talent and insight you’re missing. Plus, they can see the life of the brand over time and evolve and implement everything seamlessly.

To make things even more interesting, you are also in the process of changing offices during this rebrand. How is that going?

It’s true! We’re moving in June and building out a new workspace tailored to our employees. I think it will make a great impression and help employees feel even more tied to our mission and our values. To carry the brand to the employee experience, we will have vinyl decals of our mission statement, powerful testimonials from people whom we’ve helped, and wall art that showcases our creative marketing campaigns, monitors displaying business analytics and KPIs.

You only just launched your new look last week, but have you noticed any behavior change as a result?

It is early, but next week is the HLTH Future of Healthcare conference in Las Vegas, which will be the first real test of our brand. Needless to say, we’re super excited. Our new brand makes us look more polished and mature, but still has that fun, vibrant startup feeling. It brings us much more confidence in delivering our elevator pitch, as well as unifying the marketing and sales teams together around the same story.

What key advice would you give to other companies about to embark on a rebrand?

Well, the first real challenge is, “How do you evaluate an agency?” The best advice I got was that I needed to directly meet the people I would be working with. That sounds obvious, but many agencies have a great portfolio – impressive customer list and endless examples of nice looking things – but often that’s the sales team or some top-level Creative Director. You need to understand the difference between who is selling you and who you are going to be working with. You must meet the project managers, the copywriters, the people who are going to bring this thing to life for you.

The second challenge is rallying your own internal team, and that’s the part that often goes to the wayside. In that whole project planning phase, you need to carve out time to get internal feedback, but also to keep enthusiasm up throughout the entire process. We had an internal kickoff with a catered lunch, which served as a great opportunity to explain what brand really means to the company. I wanted everyone to understand what it was, why it mattered, and how they are a part of it.

This isn’t just a logo. When you’re at a cocktail party, when you send an email out, it’s all an expression of the brand. This isn’t just a marketing thing, this is about behavior. Of course, the first question anyone will ask will be about swag, but those little delighters are important, too! It takes a lot of effort and energy to do a rebrand, and the success of the whole thing can come down to enthusiasm. There is bound to be friction and bumps along the way. If management sees that their employees are excited, they will hold up their end of the bargain.

What’s next?

Having completed the brand project, the exciting thing now is how poised we are to refocus on our growth strategy. We’re in such a good position to move forward. Not only did we launch a new brand, but we launched it on a new website, on a new platform, with all sorts of robust marketing tools built in. We’re ready for whatever comes next.

To view the Lyra case study, click here.

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

What Brands Need to Do Right to Nail Their Digital Strategy

Emotive Brand Experts #5: Michael Beavers

Continuing our Emotive Brand Experts series, we’re interviewing past and present Emotive Brand clients to discover what they do better than anybody else – and how that expertise can be used to embolden your brand today.

Michael Beavers is a Silicon Valley-based digital strategist who works with leading technology enterprises, consumer brands, and startups. A veteran from both sides of the client and agency relationship, he’s worked with Google, Yahoo!, Intel, and many others.

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How do you define digital strategy?

Digital strategy describes the intersection of business strategy, insights about the human beings who interact with your company, and the systems through which they do so – then translating those insights into design and engineering implications. Your brand is represented online through a wide variety of channels. But there’s a big difference between delivering a brand message and thoughtfully delivering services and information that make the claims of a brand true. The services you create through every interaction with your customer are how your brand is perceived against the claims or characteristics of your brand.

Where do you begin as a digital strategist?

Regardless of the size of a project, I begin with inquiries about everything I can about a company. What do they do? For whom? Why?

I like to sit down with various stakeholders and examine what they do, why they do it, what digital things they depend on: websites, digital campaigns, ads, enterprise software, emails, everything. I also try to understand the company’s mix of enterprise software and IT environments that enable all of these tactics.

Often the digital goals expressed by my client need to be shaped further or altered beyond their original form. Then I shape both into something everyone can agree to before we put our goals and assumptions to the real test with customers.

How have you seen digital strategy change over time?

Gosh, what hasn’t changed? Devices are constantly changing, and not just the way we code for them. Technology is a scaffold for human behavior. What’s interesting is that human behavior changes that scaffolding, but the opposite is also true. Companies have a responsibility to make claims about their brands, back them up with great human and technology-enabled interactions that should never manipulate customers, but respect and shape how they behave with your company.

The early days of the commercial Internet were about experimentation and the organizational stuff companies have to offer. There was a middle phase where a lot of companies take a more manipulative view of consumers, which everyone sees through. I’m encouraged, however, as I see more companies view themselves as complimenting who they are and what’s great about themselves through software and services delivered through UIs across all devices. Everyone is now a software company, and some are acting like it.

What are some common missteps you see in the field?

Most of the time when a company is funding a web project with a marketing team, they think too narrowly about the user experience and what web teams rely on to inform that experience. Take any website from any global brand. Is it enough to organize the company’s information logically and push a beautiful design to production as quickly as possible? Maybe…but probably not.

What’s logical to internal stakeholders is the result of years of living inside of a company’s culture, its operations, and its organization. If that’s the basis of your user experience, you may simply be exposing your org chart and dysfunction. That’s not good enough.

A great strategy reflects the company’s goals and challenges but leans heavily on insights about customers and their worlds and contexts under which they experience your company. From a digital perspective, that’s what “brand” is.

The best way to inform your brand is through studying customers and users with minimized bias. When web teams at companies understand the value of research, the differences in customer satisfaction and brand perception is significant.

My very favorite question during strategy formation is, “How do we know?”

How do you discover that? Through personas?

Oftentimes, yes. Personas can be very helpful, but there are bad anti-personas out there, chiefly from marketers understanding personas to be assumptive bio-sketches of who they imagine their customers to be.

Personas were originally an advent for software design. But they’re useful for marketing and messaging, so it is common to place a “target segmentation” lens on personas for messaging. This has deleterious effects on how qualitative research is funded and how protocols get designed. Those outputs are rarely suitable for designing great digital experiences.

When informed with real observed data, personas are powerful informers of a digital experience. You can convey messaging in any number of ways, but above everything, you must give people something to do that is in line with their tasks and contexts.

This is the difference between marketing with digital “stuff” and marketing software or UI-led service delivery, which make brand claims real.

It is important for brands to update the axiom of customers always being right: the customer is always right to do what they do, so we should understand what it is that would help them believe in us as a company.

What are the biggest changes you’ve seen over the years?

I think the biggest change is unfolding before our eyes today in our national politics; specifically, the interdependencies of social media, ad networks, monetizing news content, and foreign operatives exploiting things that we all depend on to stay informed and go through our days.

The distribution of content and opinion through news and personal social channels has never been this intertwined. Because makers of the commercial could not foresee foreign interference, the Gutenberg press of our age has gone awry.

It breaks my heart to see but I’m also encouraged by what I see in the design and engineering community. Discussions about signaling meaning and trust, design and engineering ethics, and consumer awareness of security have never been greater. So that’s the new current situation and context for all digital strategy.

A company trying to sell more stuff to the right people has to understand how to be authentic. It must align its values to those of its customers, and make it real through trustworthy commercial interface products.

Brands must also now deal with the proliferation of the marketing technology stack. It encompasses everything: hosting, content automation, marketing automation, CRM suites, analytics, social media, and case management.

The implication is that marketers have a lot more to manage now. The complexity and scale of marketing has increased exponentially, and customers interacting with your digital experiences bring heightened skepticism and service expectation. Staying on top of those skills is really challenging. That’s why it’s often helpful to have expert outsiders, people willing to gently bust the silos and mixed contexts that hinder great customer experience.

What advice would you give to fellow digital strategists?

The best advice I can give is to stay curious and have fun with this stuff. Try to dig into as many tactics for understanding as you can but don’t over-index on any one skill. It will be different tomorrow anyway. Be at least categorically familiar with various web technologies, marketing automation, analytics, and how to read and interpret how they report insights you can use to form your strategy.

Know yourself. Are you a T-shaped professional and embrace your natural curiosities? Are you comfortable exposing your areas of ignorance to understand them better?

Do you think in both short and long-term frames? You may already be a great digital strategist, even if you don’t have an engineering or design background.

Spend time figuring out those worlds. Designers and engineers are ultimately the people who you serve through your strategy. Your communication should be an organized vessel of clear insights and objectives. Their work is what makes the brand real for customers. They need your help.

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

The Right Ad, Just When you Need It: Talking “Moment Marketing” with Randy Wootton

Randy Wootton and Moment Marketing 

Continuing our Emotive Brand expert series, we’re interviewing past and present Emotive Brand clients to discover what they do better than anybody else – and how that expertise can be used to embolden your brand today.

In this post, we speak with Randy Wootton, former CEO of Rocket Fuel, a past Emotive Brand client whose positioning project resulted in a major acquisition for the company. In this interview, we talk about the evolution of marketing and advertising today and why brands poised for success are focusing in on what Randy calls “Moment Marketing.”

Below, we discuss his book in-progress and hear what he has to say about one-to-one marketing, audience segmentation, AI, and the future of advertising. Could advertising ever be truly helpful for consumers? Even welcome? Randy says it’s possible. Read his interview below:

Tell me about your book-in-progress, Moment Marketing?

First, let me clarify what I mean by “moment”. When I use that term, people often think about big moments in their lives: the groundbreaking discovery, a wedding proposal, or solution to a difficult problem. But 99% of moments are banal. Moment marketing means you reach the right person at the right time, at the right place, in context.

Last weekend, for instance, I sat on my couch and watched the Raiders with my 11-year-old son. He played a Disney game on his phone. I checked email. It was a perfect opportunity for Disney or a similar advertiser to create a wraparound experience. If they could push an ad to me for a 20% discount on my next trip while also placing an ad in my son’s game, chances are the advertising would be a lot more effective than a Disney billboard I pass on the way to work.

If we’re targeting individuals, is that the end of audience segmentation?

I think it is. Segments can be helpful but they also limit you. Think about one of the popular segments: soccer moms. Marketers make many assumptions about this group and target based on age, gender, and location. But segments don’t capture the robustness of individuals. They don’t describe individuals; they don’t tell you that one mom has other kids who do baseball and guitar but hate soccer.

When you track individuals’ actions, interactions with brands, and purchases and then target them one-on-one, you can be much more precise. What’s even better than that, though, is engaging them at the right time, in the moment.  

You have said that consumers could eventually welcome advertising. Really?

Think about Amazon today. When you look for a book, they suggest other titles you might enjoy as well as reviews of those books. When you get this data at the right time, in context, it improves your experience. Consumers aren’t opposed to advertising, they are opposed to bad advertising!

In a world of Moment Marketing, what will stop advertisers from hounding me with ads for the pair of shoes I didn’t buy?

Online advertising today is disruptive and interruptive. Moment marketing requires companies ingest lots of data in near real time and take action in less than 20 milliseconds. That’s where AI comes in. You need insight engines to mine all of this data or you’ll get overwhelmed and drive your customers and prospects crazy. AI can help us discern the relevant data and then deliver advertising at the right time, in context.

Do you think marketers are ready for AI?

Right now, we are still in early innings of understanding the possibility of data. Think about when people first rode in cars. It probably seemed very dangerous. People named cars “horseless carriages” because the only way they could conceive of the future was through lens of the past. We are going to see computers make decisions more and more often. Marketers will have to surrender control and trust results. Otherwise, they’ll stand in the way of progress and higher conversion.

How does this affect non-digital commerce? Brick-and-mortar stores?

It will be the end of those flimsy circulars we get in the mail, for sure. I see marketers getting really good at combining offline and online. Holiday shopping, for example, will be defined by mobile. When I go Toys R Us to shop for Christmas presents, that’s when I want to know about the hottest toys and receive a discount coupon.

The opportunity to stitch online and offline together thru predictive marketing is radical. When marketers understand individuals and context, they create more meaningful experiences. Companies that successfully do this will differentiate themselves in the market and, ultimately, capture more than their fair share of revenue.

Stay tuned for what both Randy and Emotive Brand do next.

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

Want Better, Faster Design? Bring Your Creatives to Strategy Meetings

Emotive Brand Expert #4: Eve Maidenberg

Continuing our Emotive Brand Experts series, we’re interviewing past and present Emotive Brand clients to discover what they do better than anybody else – and how that expertise can be used to embolden your brand today.

In this post, we speak with Eve Maidenberg, the Creative Services Director at Stitch Fix. Before that, she was a VP of Marketing at Marqeta.

***

Left Brain vs. Right Brain

Strategists and creatives are the left and right brains of a branding agency. In every project, you need the right mix of sequencing and imagination, linear thinking and intuition, science and humanity. Simply put, an idea can’t live on half a brain.

Nonetheless, in most cases, strategy dominates a project in the early stages. Strategists are often the ones conducting the workshops, interviewing clients, and identifying brand staples like core narratives, value propositions, and positioning.

After this generative, foundational work is completed, the results are typically sent off to the creative team to bring these ideas to life. And this critical handoff is what Eve Maidenberg refers to as “the most common point of error in translation.”

Lost in Translation

At Stitch Fix, an online subscription and personal shopping service, Maidenberg acts as the liaison between the left and right brains of her company. With a varied background as a Senior Designer, Creative Director, marketer, and strategist, she’s seen it all. According to her, the quicker you can bring your creatives into the strategic process, the better.

“Creative is only as good as the strategy behind it,” says Maidenberg. “If there’s no tight strategy, it’s hard to be creative in a timely fashion. I’m a strong advocate for bringing creatives into your strategy meetings from the very beginning, if possible. It only makes the work better.”

Even the most detailed, thorough creative brief in the world pales in comparison to actually being in the room when strategy is being formed. Maybe a client makes an off-hand remark that doesn’t make it into the notes. Maybe it’s an expression a client gives or the culture of their office building. Hundreds of intangible elements shape a client’s visual identity and personality.

Break Down Silos

By the end of the project, strategists have the luxury of knowing too much about their clients. But often they don’t have the visual vocabulary to make this abundance of information useful for designers.

A strategist might be thinking, “If you only knew x, you would have never made it this way.” At the same time, a creative is thinking, “I made it this way to solve for x.” The result is more revisions, more iterations, more meetings, and higher costs.

“It’s easy for people not to talk to each other, even on small teams,” says Maidenberg. “I always try to bring people together to break down those silos before they form. Technology allows us to do amazing things, but I still believe in-person conversation is the best way to make sure we’re all on the same page.”

Treat Creative Like Strategy

Creative and strategy are deeply intertwined, but measuring and evaluating creative is not as easy. It doesn’t have those hard APIs that executives want to measure. Maidenberg suggests that if you want to bring creative and strategy even closer together, you should treat them with the same level of respect and objectivity.

“For us, we constantly share and ask for reporting on how a piece of creative performed,” she says. “When an ad does well, we’re always asking: what are the pieces? Is it the copy? The image? Is it a format that we can recreate? These questions help us understand what’s working so we can apply hard metrics to creative.”

The most successful agencies are the ones that avoid thinking about creative and strategy as two separate parts. Instead, they embrace the strengths of each group to make something that’s both analytical and artful. To see how we bridge the gap, you can view our work here.

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

Creating the Emotional Connections That Build Beneficial, Meaningful, Brand-Led Investor Relations

Emotive Brand Expert #3: Polly Pearson

Continuing our Emotive Brand Experts series, we’re interviewing past and present Emotive Brand clients to discover what they do better than anybody else – and how that expertise can be used to embolden your brand today.

In this post, Polly Pearson, a long-time friend of Emotive Brand, and an Investor Relations Consultant, speaks about helping CEOs better engage with investors. Polly has been innovating and helping companies build value with investors at leading companies for over twenty years. The secret to connecting with investors in a meaningful way? Brand.

Brand strategies play a key role in driving better investor relations. Understanding your brands rational and emotional components can help businesses build more valuable, connected, meaningful, and ultimately productive relationships with investors. A strong brand positioning and corporate narrative inform investor communications by providing clarity, vision, and meaning. Hear more from Polly about the value of building investor relationships in the right way – the brand-led way.

Investor Demands

For many founders/CEOs, dealing with investors is a necessity they do not cherish. Investors demand time, which takes executives away from running the business. Investors often ask excruciating questions – from the mundane to the punch in the gut.

Why, then, give investors any more attention than necessary? Why focus on connecting with investors on an emotional level?

Consider Emotional Connection with Investors

Investors buy based on emotion and determine how much to buy based on logic. If they like you, can see your vision, and feel your passion …  and if this dynamic foots with what they see as a compelling opportunity (to make money), they will be more inclined to step up to the plate.

Once investors see and feel that you value them and are working hard to make their job easier, they will be more inclined to value you and your company. As a result, they will be more likely to help share your brand story and your brand’s unique opportunity – building more demand for your company’s shares. They might hang on a little longer to your company shares. They might also be inclined to double down when times get tough – because they’ve been allowed to fully understand and empathize with your brand’s vision and passion for that vision. Because like you, they have the ability to see the long game. And like you, they feel invested and do not want to walk away a loser.

Investor Love: Ben & Jerry’s Peace Pops

I was on a Ben & Jerry’s factory tour in Vermont in the ‘80s and happened to select a “novelty” treat called a “Peace Pop.” (Reagan was working to make peace with the Russians back then and ultimately the cold war ended as he and Gorbachev worked to forge trust.) Beneath the ice cream section of the pop and under those last savory licks, these words were emblazoned,

“The Best Way to Befriend an Enemy is to Befriend Him.”

A riff off an Abe Lincoln quote most likely – but more succinct, in my opinion. Tying this back to human nature, we all know a friend is someone you trust. Trust is key to the capital markets. So treat your investors like you would a friend – with honesty and emotional connection – and see what happens.

Mutually Beneficial Emotional Connection

The best part of connecting with your investors in this way is the surprise you’ll experience when you see how mutually beneficial such a relationship can be. Your investors possess a wealth of information about your industry, your competitors, and your own business that can benefit your company and move your brand and business forward. Opening a dialog with your investors is one of the best things you can do for continued success.

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

Getting Executives to See the ROI of Brand Strategy

Emotive Brand Expert #2: Matt Wolfrom

Continuing our Emotive Brand Experts series, we’re interviewing past and present Emotive Brand clients to discover what they do better than anybody else – and how that expertise can be used to embolden your brand today.

In this post, we speak with Matt Wolfrom, the Vice President of Corporate Marketing & Communications at Synacor. Before that, he worked in a VP role at both PubMatic and ShareThis.

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Business Solutions vs. Branding Solutions

There are few things trickier than getting an executive to invest in brand strategy. It’s never the right time. The ROI seems hard to measure. Furthermore, most of an executive’s resources are spent looking for concrete business solutions, and most of their time is spent putting out internal fires.

What they may not know (or simply be too busy to hear) is that a strong brand strategy can solve these common problems before they even occur.

Matt Wolfrom has witnessed the power of brand strategy at multiple high-growth companies. In his opinion, it’s an essential ingredient if you truly want your organization and products to compete in the marketplace. So, why are CEOs apprehension about the investment?

Well, let’s pretend you’re the typical CEO. You’ve got board members calling you every day saying you’re not doing enough. Your talent is leaving. Your executives are warring, each one clamoring, “My way is better than his or her way.” You’re burning through cash. Two minutes before a call with a potential investor, you hear a knock on the door and someone comes up to you saying, “We need to reconsider the emotional impact of our brand.”

You’re not going to hear it. Not only is it the wrong time, it’s not even in the right language.

“In the tech industry, when executives hear the word ‘brand’ they think crayons and coloring books,” says Wolfrom. “The tech industry tends to be product driven. They say, ‘I’ve done the market research and I mathematically understand there is a product need here, I don’t need to spend money on ‘soft’ elements such as a brand strategy to drive growth.”

Metrics vs. Emotions

Executives value metrics, not emotions. And if they don’t see the value in something, they’re not going to invest the time and money into it. Wolfrom has made an entire career out of breaking through to executives, and he says that the easiest way to show the importance of brand strategy is to demonstrate its value in business terms.

“Executives will always believe success depends on driving sales, building best-of-breed solutions, and retaining the best talent in a very competitive labor market,” says Wolfrom.

Simply put, the typical executive is concerned with business solutions, not branding solutions. The thing is, the two fields are inextricably linked. Your brand is the foundation upon which your business is built. In Wolfrom’s case, his former company was starting to quickly lose talent. In an effort to slow the brain drain, his CEO reluctantly signed off on an employee branding effort.

“The campaign was incredibly successful and created a tangible, measurable difference in the company,” says Wolfrom. “For our CEO, the vague concept of ‘brand strategy’ turned into something tangible — keeping talent to help build and sell products that connect with the market and drive revenue. One he saw the proof of concept, he wanted to know how we could apply this approach to the corporate brand and positioning.”

Brand Strategy Has Real ROI

It’s not just the HR world, either. When a company has a clear strategy and distinct vision, it has a direct impact on sales. Telling Wall Street that your mission is to generate x amount of dollars by x amount of time isn’t a vision, it’s an end goal. In other words, metrics don’t mean anything without the right message. Stakeholders must understand why the company is the organization to bet on for the long term.

“When employees are engaged and know the brand story, they are going to perform better,” says Wolfrom. “That’s just a fact. Engaged employees outperform non-engaged employees by 147 percent in earnings per share, and 72 percent of purchasers make decisions based on vision.”

Especially at publicly traded companies, convincing executives to invest in brand strategy can be difficult. At the end of the day, publicly traded companies are growth minded. Hence, growth doesn’t mean spending money, it means making money and keeping costs low. The question on everyone’s tongue is, “Where are we from a spend perspective?”

But speaking from experience, Wolfrom believes the money spent on brand strategy can have truly exponential returns. “Every company wants to grow, but are you truly being valued for the business you’re building?” he asks. “The answer to that question becomes clear when you have a strong brand story guiding you.”

Trust the Numbers

According to a McKinsey & Company study, enterprise organizations now view a corporate narrative as a “central rather than marginal element of a supplier’s proposition.” The study revealed that companies with clear narratives perform 20% better than companies with weak narratives.

In addition, strong narratives influence enterprise buyers’ decisions. Decision-makers are 10% more likely to consider solutions from companies that the market understands and feels connected to. The top 10 connected companies studied demonstrated a 31% greater growth in revenue than the 10 least connected organizations.

So, next time you hear the phrase “brand strategy,” don’t think crayons – think culture, clarity, and cash.

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

Nothing Sells Itself: Why Storytelling Should Drive Demand Generation

Emotive Brand Expert #1: Greg Howard

As a brand strategy and design agency, we have the privilege of being able to visit innovative companies from a myriad of fields. From global law firms to burgeoning start-ups, we get to pull back the curtain and observe how brands are built, from the inside out.

Drawing on our ever-growing network, we’re excited to launch our Emotive Brand Experts series. In these posts, we’re interviewing past and present Emotive Brand clients to discover what they do better than anybody else – and how that expertise can be used to embolden your brand today.

In this post, we speak with Greg Howard, who is currently working on an exciting new company that’s operating in “stealth mode.” Formerly, Howard ran marketing at Kenna Security, a fast-growing cyber security company. Before that, he ran marketing at AppDynamics, where he helped the company grow to a $100 million run rate and become a Gartner Magic Quadrant Leader in only a few years’ time.

Nothing Sells Itself

Stop us if you’ve heard this one before: “I don’t care what it looks like, I just need it to work.” So often in business, especially when it comes to B2B companies, there’s a misperception that if your technology is good enough it will sell itself. After all, if you’re selling software to developers, why would you use your limited time and resources on aesthetics?

“Not only do I believe that the product sells itself is dead,” says Howard, “but I don’t believe it ever really existed in the first place.”

From Howard’s point of view, people underestimate just how much energy it takes to get someone’s attention in this crowded marketplace. Silicon Valley alone has more than 23,000 startups. By the time you finish reading this sentence, it’s quite possible someone has just created another Uber for x.

“Buyers are constantly inundated with messages, so getting your messaging and brand identity is absolutely key,” continues Howard. “There’s simply too much noise out there. If you don’t do it right, you’ll never get through.”

You’re Only as Strong as Your Story

Take it from an expert: even if your technology is running theoretical circles around your competitors, you still need a compelling brand story and visual identity to match. Technology without a story is like shopping in the canned food aisle without labels. You might have the best tasting dish out there, but the customer has no way of discerning that information. Maybe you’re delicious mulligatawny soup. Then again, maybe you’re dog food.

“If you want to be successful at demand generation,” says Howard, “it all starts with emotion. You need to dive into the mind of the buyers and figure out what they do on a daily basis.

What does their world look like? What is their pain? From there, you can craft a compelling story, and everything else – testing, campaigns, iterating – comes from that story.”

So, if story and brand strategy are so crucial to the success of a company, how come it’s often viewed as a low priority? According to Howard, it might be a matter of definition. In the B2B world, phrases like “brand strategy” and “narrative” are dirty and misunderstood.

“People tend to think of ‘the brand’ as this overarching thing – this separate, high-level, expensive endeavor,” says Howard. “The truth is, when you’re small, everything you do is brand strategy. Every interaction with a client, every email, every coffee meeting, that’s brand building.”

In Marketing and Demand Generation, Pain Points Are Starting Points

For the story-adverse, Howard suggests another way in – pain. What’s the most frustrating part of your developer’s day? What’s that thing they’re missing? When companies begin to truly understand the life of their prospect, the story will form out of their common frustrations. Your job as the storyteller, then, is to solve those problems through the vehicle of your technology, product, or service.

Even still, it can be tricky to identify or focus a brand story down to something manageable. How big should you cast your net? What if you solve multiple pain points for multiple audiences? And when you’ve been sinking 12 hours a day into a company for the last five years, how can you begin to see the forest for the trees? Based on Howard’s experience, that’s when it’s time to bring in an outside source.

“I’ve grown brands with and without outside agencies. I can say it’s always better if you can utilize another perspective,” says Howard. “The key is finding the right people who can bring something new to the table. If you can find someone who knows your brand well enough to articulate your vision but has enough distance to see the holes in your big picture, that’s the sweet spot.”

Emotive Brand is a B2B brand strategy and design agency that helps leadership teams build strong brands, drive growth, and develop compelling marketing programs that align with business goals and objectives.

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