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Big Brand Results

Big Brand Results

To achieve big-brand results for your small business, focus on three key areas: targeting your most loyal customers, finding your emotional benefit, and delivering a consistent experience. Narrow down your audience for a more personalized approach, connect emotionally beyond just functional offerings, and ensure every interaction reflects your brand's values. These steps can help elevate your business and build stronger customer relationships.

Looking for big-brand results for your small business? Of course you are. Here is some advice that Jim Joseph would give to virtually any small-business owner, distilled to three core areas as "secrets" of the big brands.

  • Target your customer. You can’t be all things to all people. A big part of being a “brand” is making hard choices about targeting your best and potentially most loyal customer base. The more focused the better so that you can create a customized experience that will make your brand indispensable in their lives. You have a much better chance of making a connection with a customer if you know specifically who they are and what they want. For example, just targeting women is probably too broad, but putting definition around what “kind” of women (like new mothers) will provide direction on how to reach them.
  • Find your emotional benefit. Functional facts and figures are only half of the story and chances are that they alone won’t differentiate from your competition. But discovering how you can make your customers feel can set you apart and become the basis for building your brand experience. A restaurant, as an example, should not just claim to satisfy their customers’ hunger, as that is merely a functional benefit. Instead, connect with your customers by offering home-cooked meals without the hassle of cleaning up and suddenly there’s an emotional benefit to leverage.
  • Create a consistent experience. Marketing is all about creating an experience that adds value to your customers’ lives. The trick is to apply that experience across every single touchpoint so that your brand is consistent at each and every interaction. Everything is a touchpoint. . . right down to your logo, your sales staff, your company website, and your sales force. Imagine, though, if your company receptionist was rude and insulting to your customers. Your entire brand could be destroyed by just that one interaction.
  • So what do you think? Give me your comments and feedback below. And, oh, by the way, don't forget to tell a friend if you like what you see! xo