Showing posts with label Brand Strategy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brand Strategy. Show all posts

Sunday, June 1, 2025

YOUR Brand Storytelling and How to do it?

 

Brand storytelling: What it is and how to do it

Brand storytelling can be why customers choose your brand or why people want to work with you. But what is it and how do you start telling your brand story?

Related Article: 4 Steps To YOUR Social Media Brand?



"Once upon a time…" Those four little words make you lean in a little closer and pay attention because they promise something magical: a story.

You're unlikely to start every piece of marketing content or sales presentation that way — if any. But you shouldn't discount the power of storytelling for your business. It's easier to connect with your audience with stories rather than plain facts and figures.

Brand storytelling is a tool to help people connect with your company. It can be why customers pick you over the competition or why your job ads get 10x the applicants compared to other companies in your space.

Related Article: Instagram Tips For YOUR Small Business?



What Is Brand Storytelling?

Brand storytelling is the process of using narrative techniques to connect with an audience, and shape and clarify a brand’s identity. “It’s everything you do, big and small,” explained Frontify’s Chief Storyteller, Karl Wikström.

As an example, your brand story is expressed in your marketing, the product you deliver, the stories you share on social media,” he added. “It’s the experience you create for your customers, but also for your employees as well.”

A strong brand story comes from a combination of discovery and invention.

The discovery element comes from uncovering customer stories and team experiences within your organization. It’s essential for bringing authenticity to your story. Look for the consistent data points, ideas, and values that run through customer feedback and employee experiences — these are the core elements of your brand story.

Related Article: Photogenic Social Media Marketing For Businesses?



Brand Storytelling: What It Is And How To Do It 

Brand storytelling can be why customers choose your brand or why people want to work with you. But what is it and how do you start telling your brand story?

"
Once upon a time…" Those four little words make you lean in a little closer and pay attention because they promise something magical: a story.

You're unlikely to start every piece of marketing content or sales presentation that way — if any. But you shouldn't discount the power of storytelling for your business. It's easier to connect with your audience with stories rather than plain facts and figures.

Brand storytelling is a tool to help people connect with your company. It can be why customers pick you over the competition or why your job ads get 10x the applicants compared to other companies in your space.

Related Article: Kevin Hart Social Media Branding?



What Is Brand Storytelling? Brand storytelling is the process of using narrative techniques to connect with an audience, and shape and clarify a brand’s identity. “It’s everything you do, big and small,” explained Frontify’s Chief Storyteller, Karl Wikström.

“As an example, your brand story is expressed in your marketing, the product you deliver, the stories you share on social media,” he added. “It’s the experience you create for your customers, but also for your employees as well.”

A strong brand story comes from a combination of discovery and invention.

The discovery element comes from uncovering customer stories and team experiences within your organization. It’s essential for bringing authenticity to your story. Look for the consistent data points, ideas, and values that run through customer feedback and employee experiences — these are the core elements of your brand story.

Then the invention element is the aspirational side of your brand story. Take those day-to-day experiences and turn them into a narrative that helps people connect with your brand and understand your brand’s purpose.

Related Article: YOUR Video Content Is King?



The Business Benefits of Brand Storytelling The concept of a brand story may seem a little vague to some team members. But knowing who you are, what you stand for, and being able to communicate that at all levels brings concrete benefits to your company.

Greater clarity in the business A defined brand story can provide clarity within the company because the whole team has a shared understanding of what your brand means and what it stands for. Karl explained, "You have a very clear shared idea of why your brand exists, who you're for, and what you want to do better than anyone else. It's the foundation for making yourself relevant to your customers."

That shared understanding helps guide decision-making because everyone's working towards the same outcome. It also helps create internal alignment around how you present to the market, because all departments can share the same narrative.

Related Article: 7 Gary Vaynerchuk Social Media Tips?



Helps you identify business opportunities and risks

Your brand story can help you identify opportunities that will strengthen your brand, or risks that could weaken it.

For example, you can use your brand story to help make decisions around things like changes to your production process, marketing campaigns, or partners to work with. For each one, consider: does this fit with the established narrative for our brand? Does it feel authentic, or will it feel like we’re departing from our brand’s ethos and purpose?

Karl explained, “One way your brand story can really help is when you’re thinking about collaborating with other companies — maybe in a marketing partnership, for example. You can spot if they’re a bad fit for your brand and if partnering with them will risk angering your customers by going against your brand values.”




Helps you attract potential customers and employees Your brand story helps people feel connected to your brand based on shared values and belief in your company’s purpose.

This can help you attract good-fit customers — Accenture found that 64% of consumers feel that “companies that actively communicate their purpose are more appealing than those that do not.” Customers connect with your brand through its narrative. That emotional connection can make them more likely to become loyal, long-term customers than if they were only attracted by your product offering.

How to tell an effective brand story Your brand story can set your company apart from its competitors. But before you start seeing the benefits, you first need to develop, refine, and practice your brand story.

Related Article: The Future of YOUR Social Media Platform?



Follow The 7 Principles of Brand Storytelling There are lots of ways you can think about constructing your brand story. We use these principles as our starting point.

1. Purpose — Why does your brand exist? What’s your brand mission? To use a well-known example, Nike’s purpose is to “bring inspiration and innovation to every athlete in the world.”

2. People — Who are you for? Who are the talent and customers you want to attract?

3. Problem — What is the core problem you are solving for those people? This will become the foundation for your marketing and sales messages, so you need to dig into this principle.

4. Promise — What is the unique value you deliver? You don't need to offer something completely unique, like a product feature or service — your competitors can easily replicate those. Instead, focus on the value you bring or the values that guide you.




5. Personality — How do you do things differently in a relevant, noticeable way?

6. Paradox — What tension, contradiction, or conflict are you resolving? Having something you stand against can be just as helpful as knowing what you stand for. For example, in the early years, HubSpot built its brand story by positioning itself against traditional marketing tactics used in outbound marketing.

7. Protagonist — Who’s the “main character” of your brand story? Is it your brand or your customers? What makes your brand heroic? Or how does it make your customer the hero?

These seven principles aren't unique — they come from many different storytelling techniques and approaches. But used together, we've found they help you start to shape and understand your brand's story.

Related Article: Social Media For YOUR Local Business?



Start with Why — This was one of the first books to bring wide attention to the importance of purpose to branding. In our opinion it’s best used in conjunction with other frameworks to be practically useful.

Building a Story Brand — This book by Donald Miller gives you a framework to help identify the hero, conflict, and resolution that will be a big part of your brand’s story. Working through the framework can help you clarify the core elements of your brand story and understand how to work them into your company narrative.

The most important part of telling your brand story is clarity. So going through the process of putting your brand's values, purpose, and narrative into different frameworks and approaches can help you think clearly about each part of your brand. Applying these frameworks or templates can help you clarify your narrative or uncover new insights.

Guest Authored By Karl Wikström. Karl's the Chief Storyteller
at Frontify, and Father of many bulldogs, and his daughter 
Eja. Follow Karl on X.





Bring Your Brand Story to Life
Your brand story is more than just a slide in a presentation or page on your website.
It’s expressed through your actions every week, month, and year. You bring it to life with every customer interaction, marketing activity, and internal meeting. So when it comes to successful brand storytelling, the most important thing is to remember to practice what you preach.


  • Post Crafted By:
    Fred Hansen Brand Alchemist at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Scottsdale, AZ. where I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)
  • Saturday, March 29, 2025

    Grow And Maintain YOUR Social Media Brand?


    A simple guide for growing and maintaining your brand on social media..

    Social media is a major part of everyone’s daily life. Despite the shifting popularity and recent worries about the security of various platforms, business leaders use these platforms to create networks of followers for communicating their work and inspiring people around the world.



    Leaders can -- and should -- use these tools to raise awareness of their organizations, boost their personal brands and share important victories.

    Over the years, I have personally grown a loyal and dedicated following on various social media channels -- one that I truly cherish, appreciate and value. Over the last 10 years, I have used social media to help advance and grow professional relationships that have resulted in hundreds of thousands of dollars in nonprofit revenue and in-kind services and have garnered tens of millions of impressions and views on content from our group, Beneath the Waves. And I've done it all without hiring a formal PR team.

    I’ve also seen people, especially emerging leaders, use these tools improperly with disastrous personal and professional consequences. Thus, I was inspired to create a short guide to help leaders of organizations of all shapes and sizes grow their brands on social media.



    Focus On High Value

    Share your victories, and celebrate them on social media. You and your team deserve it. However, be picky and use good judgment to share wins with the highest value.

    Paring down what to post can be hard for aspiration doers and productive individuals who may have multiple high-value pieces to share each week. Major news stories, press and key outputs are items I would consider high value.

    The majority of your posts should be high value since they communicate a sense of forward momentum and progress.



    You Are Not A God

    Over-posting personal wins can come off as self-important and potentially aggravate people. Humble-bragging is real and driven only by personal ego. I've committed this crime in the past, and a family member actually called me out on it.

    By sharing every story you are quoted or mentioned in, you are diluting your value and can come off as self-important. People can also see through disingenuous posts.

    I can think of at least a few people in the conservation space who start almost every post with the tired and now meaningless, “I’m humbled and honored...” Don’t be that person.



    Diversity Always Wins

    Diversify your content. Sharing social media posts is like running a restaurant. Some people will come for the same thing over and over again, so you need to be really good at serving and retaining them. But the key is to keep bringing in new customers (or followers). A great way to do that is with exciting new items and offerings, so mix it up.

    However, there is value in specializing -- doing one thing really well and serving that up over and over (superfans will love it). But in my opinion, the most effective leaders are always looking for ways to innovate their platforms and brand vision. I believe that if you don't evolve and innovate, you become noise and will die a slow marketing death while the next person in line takes your place. I think this ethic should be applied to social media.



    Complaining Is Ugly

    Complaining is a surefire way to lose support. Whereas airing your issues out to dry might feel good in the short-term and appease a small portion of your followers, talking smack about other groups or people really just looks bad.

    Ask yourself, "If my greatest mentor or dream partner saw this, what would they think about me?" I have dealt with haters and detractors over the years but have always resisted the urge to complain about them. The greats don't complain, and neither should you. Resist your own ego, and take the high road. It will serve you well!

    Share The Love

    You are likely passionate and love what you do -- it's why you’ve gotten to where you are professionally. Treat social media as a way to communicate your passion and motivation to move forward and make the world a better place. In the end, this is what most people connect with, and it will help your social media presence reflect your own trajectory and drive to succeed.



    Final Thoughts

    If done right, social media can be your biggest asset as a leader. Diverse, thoughtful and engaging content can lead to tangible quantitative outcomes, such as funding and partnerships, while adding numerous intangibles to your digital brand (awareness, always being on people's radar and new friendships).

    Most weeks, I try to share one to two pieces of high-value content from my professional world early in the week and sprinkle one lighter, more lifestyle-type post toward the end of the week.

    Guest Authored By Austin Gallagher. Austin is the CEO of Beneath the Waves, a leading environmental non-profit linking ocean conservation with brands and influencers. Follow Austin on Twitter.





    Does it work? Here are two ways to tell:

    1) People recall what you've been up to when you see them at a cocktail party. This is proof that your strategy is connecting with people.

    2) people you haven't spoken to in months or years come out of the social media shadows to reconnect with you and engage. In addition to expanding your social network, you never know what great things could come from interactions like these. In the end, you can run your social platforms however you like, but I think these points can truly help business leaders grow their brands.


      • Post Crafted By:
        Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at GetMoreHere.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Scottsdale, Arizona, where I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

      Thursday, March 27, 2025

      YOUR Tangible Social Media Marketing ROI?


      3 Reasons you're not seeing tangible ROI with your social media efforts..



      Not telling your brand story, posting inconsistently and missing out on paid advertising opportunities could sink your brand.

      Today, according to Statista, some 22 percent of the world's population is on Facebook, and a whopping 93 percent of Pinterest users are reaching for their credit cards to make online purchases.

      When people hear these numbers, they don't wait long before they too dive in head-long, eager to have their own slice of the huge pie.

      Typically, they open one social media account after another, in the hopes that one or two platforms will somehow convert and compensate for their overall investment of time and money.



      But is "the more the merrier" approach delivering the desired social media returns?

      Social media success has little to do with the number of profiles you have, the photos you like or the people you follow -- just as the success of your dating life isn't based on how many Tinder profiles you swipe right on.

      With so much content out there and just so much time in the day, the mind-share of the consumer is becoming more and more competitive among brands.

      It is no longer just a numbers game. Quality over quantity will win every time, which all comes down to your content and how you make it resonate with your target audience. So, create content you know your audience wants to see on their feeds. It's not about you or your company; it's about them.



      How an Online Product Could be the Focus of a "Share-Able" Joke

      Just as happens in real life in our efforts to meet that special someone, most of us also go on a blind date with social media: We settle for the "one-night stand" of a few likes and reciprocated follows, then hope to find true love with great returns.

      But true social media success stories are not developed over a night. They are built with strong foundations and strategies in place for sustainable, value-adding content creation that engages with target audiences. Imagine how much more successful you could be on those blind dates if you had your date's entire life history pulled up in front of you to stir conversation, instead of awkwardly sitting there for half the night twiddling your thumbs.

      In today's world, you don't step into the batter's box hoping to hit a home run, you step in with a strategy based on the limitless data at your fingertips, expecting to hit one. Successful content opportunities don't just pop out of thin air into your lap, they are facilitated. If you take the time to understand not only who your target audience members are, but their correlated interests and passions, you'll be on your way to effectively preparing a unique content-creation strategy that will lead you to those returns on social everyone is buzzing about.

      So, if you're not seeing enough returns on your social media efforts, here are three possible reasons why:



      1. Not Telling Your Brand Story

      Stories are powerful, because they engage the mind. If well-scripted, they can attract visitors to your product or service, engage their emotions and get them doing exactly what you want -- without being salesy or downright "in your face."

      If you sell umbrellas, for instance, you could post a picture of your product and say, "Buy this umbrella now." But no one would like that post. However, what if you took a picture of a man opening an umbrella for his date and helping her out of her car? You'd be telling a story that aligns with your product in a way the consumer can relate to: "This month's forecast calls for rain, and lots of it ... and as our fathers used to say, "Always keep protection handy in your car;" you never know when you might need to use it, but she'll appreciate it.'"

      Without directly asking people to buy your umbrella, the picture you paint with words generates the feeling of desire for the umbrella. If you're targeting single men, they'll chuckle at the witty spin on sexual protection and put themselves in the situation most have been in when their date asks, "Do you have an umbrella?" And because the answer is typically "no," next thing, they'll be clicking "Purchase" and sharing the joke with friends.

      Related Article: YOUR Video Content Is King?


      The message? Compelling, brand-optimized stories that your target audience can relate to are key.

      A brand that does this well: Warby Parker doesn't sell just glasses, but fashionable glasses that don't break the bank, especially for the millennial generation. To do this, Warby Parker turns every post on social media into a story, and allows customers to relate and "see" themselves in the product, illustrated by this recent Instagram post showcasing the brand with kids.

      A brand that's missing the mark: Lincoln Motors sorely misses the mark on its marketing, especially in telling stories. Lincoln is not always top of mind in many car-buyers' decision process, in contrast to its parent company, Ford. If class and high-end appeal are Lincoln's goals, storytelling will be how the brand reminds the market it still exists -- and let itself be a consumer's "second thought." In contrast, Ford dominates, because of how its creative team connects with consumers through social strategy efforts.



      2. Not Engaging Consistently

      Consider the expression "Out of sight, out of mind." In that context, any business with a "when I can" approach to engaging online customers will eventually see its brand buried. The reason is that even more crucial than crafting persuasive content is consistent content.

      In the fast-paced social media space, you must consistently push out compelling content (by developing a content marketing strategy and sticking to it).

      The message? If you post content today, then skip several days or weeks before posting the next one, your overall online engagement efforts will fail to deliver desired returns.

      A brand that engages its audience consistently: Look at Wendy's Twitter feed to see how consistent the brand is in engaging with fans. These tweets are the humorous go-to source for laughs, and often get into play "fights" with other brands. All eyes are on Wendy's because it "gets" engaging consistently.



      A brand that's missing the mark: American Airlines had an automatic responder go out on Twitter to all that mentioned the company. But this was a big error because many tweets looked out of place and responded to offensive messages. The automatic responder wasn't doing any favors for the brand, which clearly needed to have a real person engaging the audience.

      3. Missing Out on Paid Advertising Opportunities

      Captivating copy + consistent posting = successful engagement, but are you engaging the right online audience? Facebook, alone, has an impressive 2.2 billion active users daily, but that's just traffic if you're not targeting and generating the right leads (those more likely to buy from you).

      Paid advertising offers a great opportunity to target your ads. For as little as $1 a day, you can advertise effectively and affordably on a platform of choice like Facebook. But 62 percent of small businesses still fail with Facebook Ads. This is because (a) the target audience isn't spending time on Facebook; (b) The business doesn't understand its audience; or (c) The business doesn't have the right hook.



      Again, businesses must tell a story that gets into the heart of the audience, and tell it strategically and consistently.

      To do this, they should take advantage of paid ads on social media. This can result in impressive returns on ad efforts almost immediately.

      The message? If you aren't continually testing new content ideas behind your ads, you will lose to a competitor who is.

      A brand that does a great job with Facebook ads: One of our own advertising success stories centers around the product Gorilla Bow. With creative content, the mix of perfect targeting offered by our Facebook advertising manager together with a team making sure the product was stocked and ready to resulted in a 3.5x return on ad spend, a 350 percent increase in total sales and a 450 percent decrease in cost-per-click.



      A brand missing the mark: This would be any brand on Facebook now that doesn't have an advertising budget. With Facebook's limits on your business page's reach, businesses are left with no "air space" on the Facebook feed. If you have a product or service worth sharing, then paid advertising on Facebook is a must.

      Guest Authored By Colton Bollinger. Colton is the CEO of Jumper Media, which he founded in 2016 to help small businesses tell amazing brand stories on social media -- all day, every day. He brought on two other business-savvy leaders (also long-time friends) after seeing how most small businesses struggle to attract, engage and convert their audiences effectively on social. Today, using cutting-edge social tools and resources, Jumper Media helps over 3,000 businesses (of all shapes and sizes) connect with their target customers predictably and consistently. Follow Colton on Twitter.





      Not telling your brand story, posting inconsistently and missing out on paid advertising opportunities could sink your brand..


        • Post Crafted By:
          Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at GetMoreHere.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, CO. where I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)