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Tell Your Brand’s Story – Step 3

Surjeet Thakur - Google Adwords Expert Chandigarh India

Surjeet Thakur

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Tell Your Brand’s Story – Human-to-human connections are the heart and soul of business. At the end of the day, you’re dealing with people — your company is solving problems, alleviating pain points, and providing delightful customer experiences. Revenue is something that happens as a byproduct of a sound business model and a positive customer experience.

Storytelling is a powerful technique for building relationships. It’s an age-old concept that brings people together and keeps them engaged. It doesn’t matter where in the world you’re based or how much funding your startup has.

Good stories give big voices to small ventures. That’s why it’s mission-critical that companies take the time up front to fully develop their approaches to storytelling.

Good writing and content strategy makes products, and the marketing of those products, much better. When we do our jobs well, the things we launch are easier and more fun to use. We’ve seen how changing copy can positively impact sign-ups, engagement and sentiment.

TIFFANI JONES BROWN, Content Strategy Lead at
Pinterest via Contently

Storytelling and marketing go hand-in-hand. Just think about it. Whether you’re producing infographics, writing copy for a Facebook ad, or writing a free online guide(like this one), you need to capture your audience’s attention.

On a daily basis, consumers (yourself included) face advertising overload. Marketers are constantly competing for their prospects’ and customers’ attention. More likely than not, your brand will be buried under spammy advertising messages.

How can you make your brand stand out? Storytelling.

Chapter 3 is an all-inclusive guide that explains why your brand should prioritize storytelling and how your organization should get started. This is not fluffy stuff, either. Storytelling is a powerful and actionable marketing technique. Convinced? Let’s get to it.

BRAND STORYTELLING – WHAT IS IT, EXACTLY?

We tend to think of stories as things that might begin with “once upon a time,” present us Good Guys and Bad Guys, take us on a journey which is resolved, if we’re lucky, with a happy ending.

But how does a Powerpoint presentation fit into this scheme? Or a television spot promoting a particular product benefit? Or a marketing campaign that aims to associate your brand with a certain set of images and feelings?

TIFFANI JONES BROWN, Content Strategy Lead at Pinterest via Contently

Brand storytelling is:

  • The reason why your company came to be
  • What motivates your team to wake up and come to work everyday
  • How your product came to be
  • What types of customers find value in working with your brand and why
  • A transparent view into the people behind the company
  • A relationship-building tool
  • More subtle than you realize
  • A concept that underscores your entire web presence
  • Something that your entire team, at organizational levels, embraces
  • A look into who you are as a company
  • Direct

    Brand storytelling is NOT:

    • A long-winded, 5-paragraph essay about your company
    • A blog post
    • Something isolated
    • A fragmented view into your company
    • Something reserved for the marketing team only
    • A PR stunt
    • A viral video
    • A tool to manipulate customers and prospects
    • Boring
    • Artsy

Contrary to popular belief, brand storytelling is not about your company. It’s about your customers and the value that they get when engaging with your product or service. The most powerful brand stories are the ones that prioritize customers as the stars. Think of your company as a supporting character.

Oftentimes, marketers get hung up on this concept. They’re stressed about communicating the perfect message and confused about where this initiative should be housed within your business.

Should you hire a consultant? Should you loop in your company’s EVP of corporate communications? And what if you’re an engineer? Does that mean you’re doomed?

Don’t overthink this process. Storytelling is something that we do naturally. More often than not, we don’t even realize that we’re doing it.

Marketers have been telling brand stories for years through advertising, in-person brand experiences, and so on.

SUSAN GUNELIUS via Forbes

The problem is, online content is difficult to write. Stories become lost in translation. The human interest behind our brands will fall through the cracks.

And you feel stuck — at a loss for words to describe what you do and why you matter to your customers.

FORGET ABOUT MARKETING

This may sound counterintuitive, but it’s the key to successful marketing. Stop thinking like a marketer. Stop trying to sell your product, and instead, focus on developing human interest. Answer the question of why people should care about what your company has to say.

That means being persuasive and appealing to emotion.

Brand stories are not marketing materials. They are not ads, and they are not sales pitches. Brand stories should be told with the brand persona and the writer’s personality at center stage. Boring stories won’t attract and retain readers, but stories brimming with personality can.

SUSAN GUNELIUS via Forbes

Whatever you do, don’t be boring. Do not let the words on your page hide the personalities behind your organization.

Share more than what you sell. Share your strengths, weaknesses, and how you arrived at where you are today. One way to do this is by participating in the storytelling ecosystem. Just as you’re looking for customer testimonials and case studies, make sure to pay it forward

BE CONVERSATIONAL

Be real instead. Be human.

Pretend that you’re talking to a new friend over drinks or coffee — not giving an academic presentation in 1862. If you talk down your customers and prospects (or show any indication of lack of respect), they’re going to stop listening immediately.

Honesty and transparency are important in brand storytelling. Yes, you’re crafting ‘stories,’ but they need to be rooted in the reality of your brand, products, and industry.

SUSAN GUNELIUS via Forbes

Don’t dwell over whether or not you’re using perfect grammar. You can always hire a copywriter for that. Stop worrying about the occasional misplaced commas. Focus on developing your messaging instead.

Conversational writing also means keeping it short. Write what you want to say. Get it all on paper. Then cut it. And cut it again. Stop trapping yourself into the mentality that you need a minimum word count to convey information effectively.

Write what you feel like writing — with the exception that you can’t let your stories get too long and unwieldy. Too much writing on a blog post or webpage will make your readers feel distracted or lost. Say what you need to say in as few words as possible. There’s no need to try to sound smart. If you build a great product, your customers and prospects will perceive your company as incredibly smart.

The main culprit, in my view, is the loathsome college essay. Only in college are we forced to write a paper at a certain length. We develop strategies that balloon our paragraphs so we can fill out eight, 10, or 12 pages. You don’t need to write a lot or use big words to sound smart.

DANNY RUBIN via Lifehacker

Authenticity is crucial to copywriting. If you’re overly formal or on guard, you’ll lose trust with your audience. And that’s because consumers can sense disingenuous messaging from miles away. From awkward stock photos with fake customers to false promises, empty messaging can only hurt your brand.

CRAFT YOUR MESSAGE ARCHITECTURE

That’s right. It takes five people to get Pinterest’s public-facing messaging just right. This fact may seem surprising, given that some companies have zero resources deveoted to getting their messaging just right.

Our team’s job is to help people feel good when they use Pinterest. We try to make Pinterest-the-product feel clear and delightful, and Pinterest-the-brand feel authentic and relatable.

TIFFANI JONES BROWN, Content Strategy Lead at
Pinterest via Contently

Your company’s message architecture is far from coincidental. It takes careful strategic planning to position your strategic planning.

Brand storytelling is more subtle than what your company is saying. As we mentioned earlier, the ‘how’ matters just as much. Take a lesson from Pinterest’s lead content strategist, Tiffani Jones Brown. She and her five-person team are responsible for the voice, tone, user interface copy, grammar conventions, and pinner education on the site.

Brand strategists leverage a technique called a card sorting exercise.

  1. CREATE A LIST OF KEYWORDS THAT ARE RELEVANT TO YOUR BRAND. THESE COULD BE KEYWORDS THAT YOUR CUSTOMERS HAVE SAID ABOUT YOUR COMPANY AS WELL AS DESCRIPTIONS CHOSEN BY YOUR OWN EMPLOYEES.
    TRANSCRIBE THESE KEYWORDS ONTO NOTE CARDS.
  2. AS A GROUP, SORT THROUGH THE NOTE CARDS TO DETERMINE WHICH WORDS ARE MOST APPLICABLE TO YOUR BRAND. SEPARATE THESE WORDS FROM THE WORDS THAT CAN’T RELEVANT TO YOUR BRAND.
  3. GO THROUGH WHAT’S LEFT AND RANK THE KEYWORDS IN ORDER OF PRIORITY TO YOUR BRAND. WHICH ARE MOST RELEVANT, AND WHICH AREN’T? BECAUSE YOU’RE WORKING WITH NOTE CARDS, YOU CAN ORGANIZE THESE WORDS VISUALLY.
  4. ASSEMBLE THESE WORDS INTO SENTENCES THAT DESCRIBE YOUR BRAND.

And finally

  1. PIECE TOGETHER YOUR MESSAGE ARCHITECTURE.

Is possible, try to get your customers involved in this process. One way is to interview them for customer case studies. What words and expressions are they using to describe your brand? The more interviews and service reviews you conduct, the more patterns you’ll start to see.

Let your customers determine your brand messaging. Let them define the voice behind your company.

UNIFY YOUR ON-SITE AND OFF-SITE PRESENCE

Your company’s story, message architecture, and brand identity should follow your team members everywhere from on-site blog posts to PR opportunities in major media channels. You need to keep your company’s identity as unified and consistent as possible. As we mentioned earlier, the image you share with the world should be a genuine, authentic, and transparent view into your organization.

CHOOSE YOUR WORDS WISELY

How do you know what this should be and what words you should choose?

Jump back to chapter 1, where we walk through the art meets science of knowing your audience.

If you’re speaking to an audience of millennials, for instance, they tend to embrace a casual, conversational tone and style — more so than an audience of baby boomers would.

Again, unless you were a college English major (like Ritika was), the concepts of voice, tone, and style are really vague. How the heck do you put it all on paper?

What you need is a styleguide to provide instructions for all of your on-site and off-site brand communications. Get started by completing the following template:

EXAMPLE BRAND STYLEGUIDE

  1. Goal of website section:

    Jot some notes about what your website visitors should hope to accomplish when visiting your website.

  2. Audience:

    Who do you expect to be engaging with these specific website sections?

  3. Core concepts to be reinforced:

    What do you want your audiences to feel after visiting this section of your website or piece of writing?

  4. Tone:

    What emotions should come across after somebody reads this story or section of your website?

  5. Perspective:

    Do you want your writers to communicate in the first, second, or third person? Who is telling the story?

  6. Voice

    Should the language be conversational, formal, or somewhere in between?

Your brand styleguide and message architecture can be custom-tailored to any form of multimedia, beyond writing. Whether you’re producing infographics, brand videos, e-books, or blog posts, your plans will ensure that your messaging is consistent across mediums. Writing is only one form of online communication. Make sure that you invest the time in energy in creating structure behind everything that you produce online.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Human-to-human connections are the heart of marketing. Brand storytelling is a technique that can reinforce these bonds.
  • Stories can give your brand a powerful voice, regardless of whether you’re running an enterprise organization, small business, or startup.
  • Storytelling is medium-agnostic. Tell your story through blog posts, customer help centers, about pages, videos, or infographics.
  • You need to formalize your brand story to build connections both on and off your site, especially if your company is actively building a PR strategy.
  • Storytelling is more than what you say explicitly. It’s how you communicate your message and how you connect with your target audiences.
  • Storytelling concepts are vague, abstract, and tough to plan. Rely on card sorting exercises, message architecture maps, and brand styleguides to articulate your strategy and scale it across teams.
  • Brand stories are cross-functional commitments that should guide your entire organization. Your sales team, engineers, product managers, executives, and entry-level professionals should all have a hand in articulating your brand’s messaging.
  • Who defines your brand? Your customers. Study and truly understand what they’re saying about you. Identify patterns, and hold these concepts as close to your heart as possible.

What you say is just as important as how you say it. Make sure you’re using the tone, voice, and communication style that your audiences value most.

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