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In conversation with Valeria Maltoni on Dell and building your brand

VentureOutsource.com: Company efforts geared toward building a great brand; brand recognition, and creating differentiation in a particular marketplace cannot be viewed independently when organizations are competing in hyper-competitive markets. Meanwhile, service-oriented companies such as electronics contract manufacturers or original design manufacturers (companies whose names do not appear on the products they design or manufacture) are faced with a more daunting challenge when it comes to differentiating themselves to prospective customers. What are five (5) things you feel companies can do when formulating a marketing strategy designed to help differentiate a company in its respective marketplace?

Maltoni: So that we’re clear, a great brand is a reflection of an organization, not a program or flavor of the day. Brands are living manifestations of what companies are.

The first consideration in building a great brand is discovering, or rediscovering, what makes your organization different. What is that [one] thing that, if it went away, would be missed in the marketplace? ‘Me too’ is a very slippery slope towards commoditization, especially when your product or service is not the final one that customers know and recognize. Maybe your differentiator is a process, maybe it’s the relationships you have, or perhaps it’s the research and development.

The second step needs to be internal alignment. I continue to be amazed at the opportunities companies miss when they do not become fanatics of their own products and services, internally. Companies need to hire people who are passionate about what they do. Companies also need to teach the whole organization to be passionate about being there – in that company.

Some companies have inspiring leaders at the top that in some ways embody the vision of where the organization wants to be and they remain because of this. It’s not necessary to have stars or champions at the top — it’s certainly beneficial, but it’s not required. What is required, however, is a focus on being the best at what the organization says it does (the differentiating factor). I’ve seen social media and collaboration platforms used successfully to allow every employee to see what is going on, to help the company in being transparent, and show where contributions matter.

Thirdly, consider how your ‘ingredient’ may be the secret sauce in another company’s product or service. Think, for example, how Intel created demand for its chips by building a conversation with the ultimate users. Do you check to see if a computer or notebook you’re buying has Intel inside? I know I have.

If your economic output is considered a commodity, the business imperative of supply translates into availability as the consumer sensibility. For goods, the business imperative is control and the consumer sensibility becomes cost. The whole quality movement came to be when services took hold of our economic output, with improvements, as the business imperative. One step above this is ‘the experience’. Intel has told the story of how the chip inside provides a whole new experience and consumers and end-users have began to identify systems with that ingredient as authentic. The real deal.

The fourth thing to consider is to be completely aligned in all external communications. If your lead generation campaign is promoting one thing, your ads and PR strategies should match that same message. Some organizations run these activities separately or, they have an external agency run some for them.

Make sure you have one person in house who oversees the whole plan and keeps everyone straight on what the promotional message is at any given point. Your brand is the sum total of what you call yourself, what you articulate you are, where and when your customers encounter you, why you are in business and, how you show who you are.

Finally, be fanatical about measuring outcomes according to predetermined metrics. What is your definition of a lead? Are you trying to get more customers to pick up the phone and call you? How many, how frequently? Would you want to cross sell more services? Which ones, when? Then, assign value to these metrics. Measuring will be much easier if you know what you’re shooting for.

 

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