A new brand isn’t merely visual: it challenges your entire business

“Think of your brand like a bouncer”, I said on LinkedIn this week. 

Its job is to protect and help you from letting in those you don’t want in your club. And to protect the club (your business) from being so confusing that no one knows what you stand for, so they dither and eventually don’t bother coming in. 

That’s what it does for those coming in from the outside. 

But it will also begin to change things from the inside, too. It’s not only prospects and new clients, hovering about at the doorway, who are getting wind of the changes: it’s your internal team members, too. Your systems. The apps you use. They’ll pick up on change, too. And some of it may not be entirely comfortable. 

There are fun things connected to rebrand – like getting the office walls painted and having actual values on your website and getting a team photoshoot. It’s exciting to have new colours, and create a manifesto, and redesign your website and marketing materials. 

There are also some tough questions and decisions. 

Because a new brand doesn’t simply mean picking new colours: those colours represent something. They indicate a certain perspective. A type of client you work with, or a result you deliver for them. The approach your business takes which is different from others. Your name, logo, even things like typography reflect this, too. Your new brand seems so simple (in a good way)…and yet there are complex things behind it. Deep reasoning to who you are. 

After all a brand is also aspirational. Yes, it reflects who you are: it also reflects who you want to be. Who you’re becoming. Your new brand needs to have some room for you to grow into. You’ll start to think, how well are the team actually living out these values? How much have I shared what that means? Is it possible there are team members who aren’t a fit anymore? 

This might lead you to reconsidering your hiring process. Then the actual roles you have. Then you start wondering about the services you offer. Are they right? Are they priced correctly? 

You think about where this business is going – are you going to sell it? Sell off a portion of it, perhaps a portfolio of smaller companies or individual work which doesn’t fit the new brand? Your new brand is forcing you to decide what kind of work stays in the firm, and what kind needs to go. 

You wonder, do you need two brands? Maybe even three? To cover all these different approaches, different services. 

And what’s happening is that your brand is challenging you to PICK ONE. 

Pick an audience. Pick a service you offer. Pick the most important qualities for your team members. 

Good marketing, after all, divides.

Good branding divides. 

Sometimes the division is hard. It literally feels like it’s pulling you apart, because it is. This is going to make you better. Like any clean-up job, it can feel a little worse before it gets to the ‘better’ part. You start cleaning a room, or spring cleaning the house, and at one point you look around with your hands on your hips and go, This is an utter disaster. Why did I even begin?? It’s worse now than it ever was. 

That’s often the point you’re nearly there. You’re figuring out what to keep, and what to throw away. What to pass on to someone else. What to sell. What’s broken and can be mended, and what’s beyond repair. 

This is what your new brand is doing for you – can do for you. Make sure you listen, and let it do its job. You may not always feel 100% comfortable about it during the process, but when you pay attention to what it’s pushing you to consider, you will absolutely love the outcome. 

Your new brand isn’t going to let you get away with the old ways. 

And to be honest, you don’t really want it to. 

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ON THE GRAM

Last week I had a deadline to get the full title and subtitle of my second book to the publishers.

No problem, I thought. I have so many ideas! 💡

I knew  the core title, and had a long list of potential subtitles.

Whittle them down, create a shortlist, choose one. Easy peasy.

Definitely wasn’t.

Writing many words and pages is one thing.

Editing them into a full book, more challenging.

Summarising into a ten-word subtitle? Most challenging of all. How do I get across what it took me an entire book to say?

got a draft interim cover of my new book, and started playing with the possible subtitles. I got it down from about 80 to a total of 23 potential subtitles. 

Some were good, some rubbish. But which one is best? Which would resonate most with my audience?

I got there in the end - I have a subtitle you’ll see soon. Here’s a few pointers if you, too, need to whittle down an important message:

Create the whole list, no matter how long it is.

Weed out the ones that don’t sound right straight away

Get a way to visualise it. (A draft of the website page, a draft email to show you the subject line, a draft cover of the book.)

Enter the options and see how they look

Take a break

Look again at your visuals. Cut out the ones which obviously don’t fit.

Repeat this process a few times

Get a shortlist of 3

Send those to five or ten of your absolute favourite clients. The people you want to reach with this messaging.

(You’re not doing this to reach everyone. There’s a type of person you want to reach, and their opinions matter most.)

If everyone agrees, you’ve got your wording.

If there’s still a split, you just…choose.

Marketing isn’t a science. You can gather analytics and do A/B split testing and double check, but often the biggest impact will surprise you, so you may as well just pick something. Or you’ll be there forever.

How about you? What short-messaging is proving quite challenging to choose? 

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✨ This is from my weekly Creative Headspace email. To get on the list, sign up in the link in comments. 💪
Travels from the island to the big smoke! Verrrrrry smooth journey this time so I even made it for a lovely pre DAS dinner on Sunday night. See all of you DAS attendees very soon!
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