Emotional Branding: The New Paradigm for Connecting Brands to People
352Emotional Branding: The New Paradigm for Connecting Brands to People
352eBook
Related collections and offers
Overview
Allworth Press, an imprint of Skyhorse Publishing, publishes a broad range of books on the visual and performing arts, with emphasis on the business of art. Our titles cover subjects such as graphic design, theater, branding, fine art, photography, interior design, writing, acting, film, how to start careers, business and legal forms, business practices, and more. While we don't aspire to publish a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are deeply committed to quality books that help creative professionals succeed and thrive. We often publish in areas overlooked by other publishers and welcome the author whose expertise can help our audience of readers.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781581157376 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Allworth |
Publication date: | 02/09/2010 |
Sold by: | SIMON & SCHUSTER |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 352 |
Sales rank: | 650,252 |
File size: | 9 MB |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
The Ten Commandments of Emotional Branding
Between the old concept of brand awareness and the new concept of Emotional Branding, a dialogue must take place that involves this changing of consumer reality in the decision process and brings a dimension of personalized relationship into the equation.
The following "Ten Commandments of Emotional Branding" illustrate the difference between traditional concepts of brand awareness and the emotional dimension a brand needs to express to become preferred.
1. From Consumers To People
Consumers buy, people live.
In communication circles the consumer is often approached as the "enemy" whom we must attack. It's us (meaning manufacturers, retailers, and their communications agencies) against them. Terminology like "breaking down their defenses, decoding their language, and strategizing to win the battle" is, in my day_to_day experience, still commonly used. But why employ this tactic when there is a better way to create desire in customers in a positive manner without harassing or talking down to them? This can be achieved by using a win_win, partnership approach based on a relationship of mutual respect. After all, the consumer is your best source of information.
2. From Product To Experience
Products fulfill needs, experiences fulfill desires.
Buying just for need is driven by price and convenience. A product or shopping experience, such as REI stores' rock climbing walls or the Discovery Channel stores' myriad of "sound zones" has added value and will remain in the consumer's emotional memory as a connection made on a level far beyond need. For established products to attract and retain consumer interest, it is critical that innovative retailing, advertising, and new product launches capture their imagination. The lines are drawn every day between newness and tradition, between what is expected and the excitement of change. Our curiosity and sense of adventure often wins out over the known. However, a product can be old and new at the same time, if it continues to have emotional relevance for consumers.
3. From Honesty To Trust
Honesty is expected. Trust is engaging and intimate. It needs to be earned.
Honesty is required to be in business today. The federal authorities, consumer groups, and the people in general have an increasingly rigorous standard for products and will rate very quickly what needs to be on the shelf and what doesn't. Trust is something else altogether. It is one of the most important values of a brand and it requires real effort from corporations. One of the most powerful moves toward building consumer trust was retailers' implementation of the "no questions asked" return policy some years ago. This strategy brings total comfort to customers and gives them the upper hand in their choices. A very smart decision indeed.
4. From Quality To Preference
Quality for the right price is a given today. Preference creates the sale.
Quality is a necessary offering if you want to stay in business; it is expected and had better be delivered. Preference toward a brand is the real connection to success. Levi's is a quality brand, but it has currently lost its preferential status. Victoria's Secret, a brand that has achieved an enviable and highly charged emotional connection with consumers today, is revolutionizing a new category and redefining the hosiery and beauty businesses_there is no stopping a brand when it is preferred.
5. From Notoriety To Aspiration
Being known does not mean that you are also loved!
Notoriety is what gets you known. But if you want to be desired, you must convey something that is in keeping with the customer's aspirations. Awareness is obviously not the only criterion to successful branding. Beyond awareness, what does AT&T really mean on an emotional level to consumers? And is there really a difference for people between the well_known (and some would say infamous!) brands ExxonMobil and Texaco? Nike is still a very notorious brand with great visibility, but is it as inspirational as it used to be?
6. From Identity To Personality
Identity is recognition. Personality is about character and charisma!
Identity is descriptive. It is recognition. Personality is about character and charisma. Brand identities are unique and express a point of difference vis_à_vis the competitive landscape. But this is only the first step. Brand personalities, on the other hand, are special. They have a charismatic character that provokes an emotional response. American Airlines has a strong identity, but Virgin Airlines has personality.
7. From Function To Feel
The functionality of a product is about practical or superficial qualities only. Sensorial design is about experiences.
Functionality can become trite if its appearance and usage are not also designed for the senses. Many marketers design for maximum function or visibility and not for the real experience of the consumer. Design is about human solutions, based on innovation that presents a new set of sensory experiences. Creating product identification by stressing product benefits is only relevant if product innovations are memorable and exciting to consumers. Absolut Vodka, the Apple iMac, and Gillette razors are brands that are focused on presenting fresh shapes and sensory experiences consumers appreciate.
8. From Ubiquity To Presence
Ubiquity is seen. Emotional presence is felt.
Brand presence can have quite an impact on the consumer. It can forge a sound and permanent connection with people, especially if it is strategized as a lifestyle program. There is hardly a stadium, a player uniform, a concert hall, or an urban space of size (billboards, bus stops, walls, and even the inside of bathroom doors) around the world that has not been used to promote a brand. And then, of course, there are the T_shirts, caps, mugs, and so on. But how effective is all this clutter, really? Most brand_presence strategies are based on the concept of quantity, not quality. The fear that a competitor might occupy the physical territory becomes the motivator, instead of a focus on inventive ways of making a real, lasting connection. Joe Boxer's wacky underwear vending machines which call out to passersby "Hey, do you need some new underwear?" and tell jokes is an inventive way of standing out and making a connection!
9. From Communication To Dialogue
Communication is telling. Dialogue is sharing.
Communication, as conducted by many companies, is primarily about information_and information is generally a one_way proposition. Take it and like it_hopefully. The bulk of most budgets is still spent on advertising efforts that approach consumers with the B1 bomber approach: a massive, all_encompassing blanket advance at the target audience. Not only can advertising deliver more personal, targeted messages, but other media, such as digital communications, PR, brand presence, and promotions can also stretch much further to really speak to consumers where they "live." Real dialogue implies a two_way street, a conversation with the consumer. Progress in digital media is now allowing this evolution to take place, and finally will help foster a rewarding partnership between people and corporations.
10. From Service To Relationship
Service is selling. Relationship is acknowledgment.
Service involves a basic level of efficiency in a commercial exchange. It is what allows or prevents a sale from taking place. But relationship means that the brand representatives really seek to understand and appreciate who their customers are. It is what you feel when you walk into a Quicksilver store and find that the music, the decor, and the salespeople all speak the same language_the customer's! It is the new expectation. Who does not feel special when someone in a store or restaurant welcomes you by your own name! The emotional component of a true relationship is not always targeted to our personal needs. We are still, in most cases, just a number. Sometimes a big number, but still a number. Howard Shultz, CEO of Starbucks, speaks about romancing the consumer: "If we greet customers, exchange a few extra words with them and then custom_make a drink exactly to their taste, they will be eager to come back."
Table of Contents
Foreword Sergio Zyman v
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Emotional Branding: Fuel for Success in the Twenty-first Century xvii
Section I Relationship - customer, customer, customer!
Introduction: It's the Twenty-first Century: Do You Know Who Your Customers Are? 2
Chapter 1 A Generational Gap: Targeting New Emotional Criteria 3
Chapter 2 Disconnection Alert: The U.S. Melting Pot Is Hot! 29
Chapter 3 Women: The New "Shoppers-in-Chief" 43
Chapter 4 Gay and Lesbian Consumers: Sincerity Is the Best Policy! 61
Section II Sensorial experiences - the uncharted territory of branding
Introduction: A Sense of Strategy 70
Chapter 5 Sounds that Transport 73
Chapter 6 Colors that Mesmerize / Symbols that Captivate 79
Chapter 7 Tastes that Tantalize 87
Chapter 8 Shapes that Touch 93
Chapter 9 Scents that Seduce 99
Conclusion: Soothe the Senses: Some Peace, Please! 104
Section III Imagination - innovation is a brand's best friend!
Introduction: Thinking Outside of the Box 108
Chapter 10 Sensory Design: The New Branding Power Tool 109
Chapter 11 Emotionally Charged Identities: Unforgettable Brand Personalities 125
Chapter 12 Retailing with a Passion: Sensational Stores of Tomorrow 161
Chapter 13 Brand Presence with Presence: A Fresh, New Approach 189
Chapter 14 Emotional Packaging: The Half-second Commercial 201
Chapter 15 Emotional Advertising: Expressing Real Emotions Online 223
Section IV Vision - inspiration for change: how to get there from here
Introduction: E-motions 246
Chapter 16 Branding Emotions on the Web: Social Media 249
Chapter 17Recipes for Emotional Branding Strategies 273
Chapter 18 Key Trends for the New Millennium 287
Conclusion 307
What People are Saying About This
I believe that kick ass creative is critical to the success of a brand, and no designer is better qualified to explain, creative, integrated design identity than Marc Gobé. Emotional Branding will help you understand how great brands from Stew Leonard's in rural Connecticut to multinational Coca-Colagrow their businesses and attract loyal customers. (Sergio Zyman, former Chief Marketing Officer, The Coca Cola Company, from the foreword to Emotional Branding)