Future-Proof Your Brand: 4 Steps To Kick-Start Your Brand Development Strategy

Rachael Bews

Read Time: 4 minutes

Whether perfecting your professional persona, boosting your business or creating a new company, strategic brand development is vital to success.

 

Future-Proof Your Brand

Brands are not static entities. They grow and expand, just like the people they serve. Successful brands not only understand this transition, they anticipate it and act on it. Take Instagram’s latest innovation IGTV. Many brands are already taking first mover advantage. The key question is – why?

We know that information technology is changing and advancing at an exponential rate. We’ve been working in this state of flux for well over two decades. Yet marketing with this change in mind is something we are still working on.

 

Marketing For Seasons

Consider marketing seasonality. Not fashion’s spring florals or Wimbledon’s summer berries. But marketing for life seasons. How do we ensure brand relevance for our audience as their tastes and our technologies alter? And perhaps the bigger question – do we even want to?

By failing to adjust the concept of our target audience, we are often discounting the value of brand loyalty. Conversely by expanding our vision, we can vastly improve customer retention. It is perhaps prudent then, that in response to audience shifts, we pause to take stock of our brand.

Of course this process of brand development also applies at the outset of brand creation – personal, social and commercial.

 

1. Identify Your Brand Goals

Start by identifying exactly what it is you want your brand to achieve. Setting out clear goals will give you clear metrics for success, as well as something quantifiable to strive for. For a personal brand, this might be the acquisition of a new client or role. Likewise for a new or established business, this may take the form of sales, diversification or expansion into new markets.

 

2. Understand Your Audience

Once you’ve outlined a clear purpose for your brand, you must spend some time getting to know your target audience. If you are targeting a new market, outlining your brand personas will help you be successful and clarify your brand’s positioning.

Alternatively you may already have brand personas. You might already know how your clients talk and where they spend time. But when was the last time you checked in with them? Regularly reviewing and refreshing your brand personas is essential to remain engaging. This might even outline key platforms and media for connecting (i.e. IGTV).

 

3. Outline Your Brand Identity

Your brand identity should encompass all of the values and features most likely to engage your target audience and their preferences. Summarising these details in a brand style guide helps to ensure consistency. This will include intangible assets such as your UVP, tone of voice, key messaging and brand storytelling – focussing on brand benefits.

Your brand will also have a number of tangible assets, including your brand name, logo, tagline, typeface, colour palette, visual style and website. It is vital to ensure your brand name is applicable to all the markets in which you intend to use it, particularly geographic markets (where brand names can have entirely different meanings!)

Read More: Brand Storytelling: Is Yours Corny or Creative?

 

4. Create Your Brand Plan

Having crafted or edited your brand’s strong existential foundations, the only way to encourage its success is to talk about it and raise brand awareness. Your content plan or editorial calendar is a fantastic way to achieve this.

It will outline the themes and topics your brand will discuss, the platforms it will share content on (both organically and via paid) and organise the year into clear campaign periods. All of this should be informed by thorough keyword research, highlighting where key opportunities exist.

Our lives are seasons, that start and end. That said, many brands can sustain the journey with their customers – if they remain relevant. Some will even pass brand preferences onto their children, for generations to come. Fusing together tradition and innovation is undoubtedly the best brand development strategy of all.

Written By: Rachael Bews

Written By: Rachael Bews

Rachael is a social media specialist and freelance contributor to The William Agency.

MORE INSIGHTS

How-To Guide: Content Pillars for Social Media
How-To Guide: Content Pillars for Social Media

Creating content for social media is crucial for your brand to stay relevant, but this content must be of consistent quality. In the long-term, it is high value content that will hook your target audience and keep them coming back for more. Understanding your target...

Data Capture Design: Are You Making These 6 Mistakes?
Data Capture Design: Are You Making These 6 Mistakes?

With the implementation of GDPR, we have to be more careful than ever with our data capture, but what’s best practice?   There are two primary ways of looking at data capture - from a UX angle and a GDPR perspective. However before we get into the nitty gritty,...

How To Create An Engaging About Us Page For Websites
How To Create An Engaging About Us Page For Websites

Commonly demoted to footer utility pages, a website’s ‘About Us’ page is often overlooked as a storytelling tool. We’re asking why.   About us company profile In our content-hungry world, and the dopamine-fuelled desire for ‘new,’ it can be easy to forget the...

Will Magazines Ever Make A Comeback?
Will Magazines Ever Make A Comeback?

We’re well aware of the print media decline, yet with our penchant for artisanal craft, might magazines make a come back?   The Print Journalism Decline   The decline of print journalism and its readership has seen many titles lost from our shelves. Our...

7 Unbelievable Marketing Clichés (And How To Avoid Them)
7 Unbelievable Marketing Clichés (And How To Avoid Them)

From ‘quick wins’ to ‘growth-hacking,’ we’ve all been guilty of using marketing clichés, but just how damaging is it to brands?   Marketing Clichés To Avoid Much like avocado toast flatlays, we all know that anything perpetuated in the extreme becomes boring at...

0 Comments

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This