The Most Expensive Word In All Of Branding

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The Most Expensive Word In All Of Branding

When speaking with potential clients about their naming and branding needs, one word in particular raises the proverbial red flag higher than any other - and it might surprise you.

By: Phillip Davis
That word is “educate.”

Yes, you read it correctly, educate, as in “We just need to educate the public that we provide xzy products and services.” In other words, it’s the silly public out there that doesn’t understand. It’s not us, or our lack of clarity, or our ambiguous and conflicted messages. It’s the public, our consumers, who “just don’t get it.” Here are a few variations on the theme…

“We’ve been here for nearly twenty years, and people still think we just sell ______.”

“We’re the best kept secret in the entire county/city/state.”

“What people really need to know is that we __________.”

The unanimous agreement after commiserating is the need to “educate” the consumer. This usually takes the form of adding on to the phone message, taking out more ads, doing more speaking engagements, adding additional tag lines, adding bullet points to existing ads and signage. Education is inherently expensive, both in time and money. It takes 13 years just to get a basic public education. Do you have 13 years to inform and educate your audience? Instead of educating, what if you spent that time on clarifying ? By clarifying, I don’t mean making your name, tag line and copy all 100% literal such as Toys R Us and Linens & Things. I mean clarifying as in creating a clear, concise and compelling message and identity that will have customers leaning in and asking for more. Ideally the name should naturally segue into a deeper conversation about the company.

A great example of this is a New York based fitness chain called Crunch. Crunch conjures up all things work out related… abdominal crunch, six pack abs, fitness, exercise, etc. and yet it doesn’t commit the brand to a physical location or set of activities.

The flip side of that is a company in Florida I worked with called The Exercise Experience. They were not a gym. They sold very high end fitness equipment to high income individuals in their 40’s and 50s. The name proved terribly misleading and our job as an ad agency back then, was to “educate” the public about who they really were. This took up about half of the commercial air time, singing a jingle, explaining the equipment was for sale, mentioning price points. Still we had people walking into the stores with gym bags in hand, asking how much for a membership. Eventually the chain went under.

That’s the high price of education.

One of the reasons I shifted to naming and branding was to help business owners get clear on their message and avoid the costly mistakes I had seen made again and again. If you find yourself wanting to correct, inform, or worse yet, educate your customers, it might be time to look at your brand image. Take an honest look at your name, logo, tag line, web site, collateral. Does it speak for itself? Does it convey the right image, feeling, attributes, and industry? Or does it take additional, in-person explanation? Are you the “best kept secret?” Then it might be time to quit spending on education and start investing in clarity.
Phil Davis is president and owner of Tungsten Branding, a naming firm specializing in brand creation, product naming, tag line development, corporate identity and comprehensive brand repositioning. Phil's client list includes PODS, TeamLogicIT and Coghead.com to name a few. His complete client list and company naming philosophy can be viewed at www.PureTungsten.com.
Phillip Davis, Branding Words Expert
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