We value your privacy

We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience, serve personalized ads or content, and analyze our traffic. By clicking "Accept All", you consent to our use of cookies.

Customize Consent Preferences

We use cookies to help you navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. You will find detailed information about all cookies under each consent category below.

The cookies that are categorized as "Necessary" are stored on your browser as they are essential for enabling the basic functionalities of the site. ... 

Always Active

Necessary cookies are required to enable the basic features of this site, such as providing secure log-in or adjusting your consent preferences. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable data.

No cookies to display.

Functional cookies help perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collecting feedback, and other third-party features.

No cookies to display.

Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics such as the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.

No cookies to display.

Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.

No cookies to display.

Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with customized advertisements based on the pages you visited previously and to analyze the effectiveness of the ad campaigns.

No cookies to display.

My Account
  • Advertisers
  • Publishers
  • Inventory
  • Bonus
  • Blog
  • Help
Get Started
  • Advertisers
  • Publishers
  • Inventory
  • Bonus
  • Blog
  • Help
Get Started
  • Advertisers
  • Publishers
  • Inventory
  • Bonus
  • Blog
  • Help
  • Advertisers
  • Publishers
  • Inventory
  • Bonus
  • Blog
  • Help
Marketing Blog
Blogging

Why your brand plan is more important than your business plan

February 28, 2018

If people don’t know who you are and what you represent, they won’t do business with you.

Why should you care about branding? Because these days, everyone will Google you before they visit your restaurant, buy your products, hire you to perform a service, loan money to you or invest capital in your new or existing venture. Any time you interact with people — online or off — your brand will matter.

We used to live in simpler times. The only brands most of us knew about were managed by big corporations: IBM, Coca-Cola, BMW. If you wanted to build a business, you wrote a comprehensive business plan that focused on the numbers: cash flow, revenue, expenses and profit. In most circumstances, that plan would include a substantial line item for traditional print and maybe radio and television advertisement. Branding wasn’t on the radar for most companies.

If that sounds like a better world to you, you’re mistaken. The advantages available to us in the last decade are so much greater than anything that’s ever been possible, the two worlds can’t even be compared. Never before have you had the chance to build a brand like you can today, then leverage it to expand your business, increase your sales, and enhance your credibility and your bottom line. Despite these tremendous opportunities for entrepreneurs, many are oblivious to them and cling to a by-gone era where time-honored business plans and approaches to promoting a business focused on advertising and not engagement.

Those customary plans may have been adequate for those “simpler times.” But, for today’s internet and social media driven world, a business misses the mark without a sophisticated “brand plan” that specifically conveys what it represents, the value it brings to its customers and strategies about how to keep a conversation going, otherwise known as engagement, with thousands of strangers online.

What goes into a brand plan

Specifically, a well-written brand plan focuses an organization’s brain-trust, resources and tactics in the direction they need to go in order for a brand to achieve its goals. The brand plan acts as an umbrella under which functions such as marketing, sales and product development are united, detailing what each group needs to do for the brand to be successful, while setting objectives that operations and finance need to support.

A successful brand plan starts with a vision — ideas about what the brand should represent or symbolize. The plan should also include a mission — a specific plan-of-attack that helps launch the brand.

Next are goals, things you want the brand to achieve, followed by strategies that provide a road map on how to get there. A successful brand plan must identify consumer targets, the demographic a business needs to support its brand. To entice these consumers to buy the product, a brand must have a main message, which explains why the company and its products can do things that others cannot. Lastly, a brand plan should include strategies for promotion that gets its targeted consumers to take action.

Most importantly, branding is about emotions and how your customers and clients feel about you and your products. Marketing is about numbers. Both are important, but in today’s climate, how you make people feel can make or break your business.

Lessons from Elon Musk’s expert branding

One person today who understands the emotional aspect of branding better than most is Elon Musk. With his Tesla Motors, Space X rockets and Solar City energy company, Musk — it’s been said — doesn’t have customers, he has followers.

Known as a maverick and creative genius, Musk has successfully branded himself as a globe-trotting entrepreneur who’s out to save the world by inventing brilliant products and machines that are environmentally friendly. Thus, Musk’s customers not only admire his creativity and business acumen, but also his ideology. For many of his followers, Tesla automobiles are a seamless extension of the man, himself — cool looking vehicles that simultaneously combat global warming.

What’s also attractive to consumers is that Musk takes personal responsibility for his brand. In 2013, when the company was hit with a wave of bad publicity after several Tesla automobiles caught on fire, Musk personally authored a blog post that made a strong defense of Tesla’s product and consequently of his own brand identity. Consumers rewarded Musk for his honesty and sincerity by making the company’s Model S the world’s bestselling plug-in electric car in 2015 and 2016.

As Musk has shown, a business’ success depends on authenticity, transparency and sincere actions. A positive brand that ignites enthusiasm and drives millions in profits isn’t something you leave to chance or expect to create without much consideration and planning. Why leave it to chance? The more time, effort and resources you spend on your brand plan, the more likely you are to create a sustainable positive brand that resonates with your customer base, grows your influence and impacts your bottom line.

___
by Areva Martin
source: Entrepreneur

advertising brand plan business plan marketing social media
1424 Views
3 things you can do to get your customers gabbingPrev3 things you can do to get your customers gabbingFebruary 21, 2018
Digital advertising still growing a market for dataMarch 9, 2018Digital advertising still growing a market for dataNext
Categories
  • Agile Marketing 1
  • Blogging 52
  • Content Marketing 47
  • Digital Marketing 63
  • E-Commerce 26
  • E-mail Marketing 26
  • Influencer Marketing 15
  • Marketing Industry 102
  • Mobile Marketing 44
  • Native Advertising 19
  • Programmatic 21
  • Push Notifications 92
  • SEO Optimization 62
  • Social Media 61
  • Video Marketing 15
  • Webmaster's Tools 11
Recent Posts
  • Clicks Are Great — But What About The Conversions?
    Clicks Are Great — But What About The Conversions?
    May 2, 2025
  • Unlocking Brand Growth: Strategies For D2C And E-commerce Marketers
    Unlocking Brand Growth: Strategies For D2C And E-commerce Marketers
    April 25, 2025
  • Why Native Digital Advertising is the Future of Online Marketing
    Why Native Digital Advertising is the Future of Online Marketing
    February 6, 2025
Advertisers
  • Advertising Platform
  • Traffic Inventory
  • Free Ad Credits
  • New Account
Publishers
  • Traffic Monetization
  • Payout Methods
Ad Formats
  • Push Notification
  • Pop-under
  • Display
  • Native
Resources
  • Knowledge Base
  • Marketing Blog
  • DailyClicks API
  • Help Center
Company
  • About DailyClicks
  • Service Status
  • Technology
  • Contact
Download App App Store Google Play
Follow Us Facebook Twitter YouTube
© 2025 DailyClicks. All rights reserved.
Money Back Guarantee|Privacy Policy|Terms of Service