7 Ways To Get More Brand Awareness Right Now
Building a brand has three important stages: being recognized, remembered, and revered. This article is going to cover the first of the three stages.
When your brand is recognized it means you’ve done a great job of creating a shortcut in people’s brains That shortcut is called brand awareness, and it’s what drives clients right to your door when they have a problem you can solve.
Brand awareness side-steps the need to explain your brand values or mission; your branding is so effective that people are already familiar with you and how you stand apart from your competitors. Potential clients know what you do and how you can help as soon as they see your logo, hear your company name, or see your brand colors.
Brand awareness can always be increased with a few simple yet effective strategies. Here are my 7 trusted methods for building brand awareness:
Number 1: Partner with Other Brands. It's beneficial to establish partnerships with other brands, especially when you're starting out. It’s mutually beneficial to expose your audiences to each other’s work, and you're both growing your audience.
Mature brands partner too, and for the same reason: it adds value to customers’ lives. Some examples of this are Red Bull and GoPro, Apple and Mastercard, Pottery Barn and Williams Sonoma, and Spotify and Starbucks.
“Partnerships are definitely very important,” says Adidas Originals’ global director of digital and retail marketing, Swave Szymczyk. “As long as they are not only strategic but also reflect who we are as a brand and what we believe in, it really drives authenticity.
“You can talk about who you are as a brand all day long but having those partnerships to authenticate that message is really critical for every brand.” ‘(marketingweek.com)
You can partner with other like-minded brands to co-publish blog posts or articles, create videos or do podcast interviews. Share space in a trade show booth, or at a special event to add value to each others’ audience. Great partnerships add rocket fuel to your brand recognition and create terrific allies for your growth.
Number 2: Guest Post. While most people think big and want to pen an article for Huffington post right away, that probably won’t happen. But if you start small and build credibility over time, you will get the chance to write for larger and larger publications. Start by researching brands that have similar audiences and then create some outlines for original, juicy content you know the publication’s audience will love.
Pitch your content via email - your pitches will go easily if you’ve done your research well. Include a sample headline of the type of content you would write or links to previous content that you've written for other brands or for your blog. Keep your pitch brief and be very clear. Because editors get dozens of pitch emails a day and make decisions in a matter of seconds, you need to put your best foot forward.
Number 3: Social Heft. Create brand recognition like a social media ninja. This is done by frequently developing shareable content like:
Graphics
Infographics(see #4)
Quotes
Memes
Videos
Guides
Lists
According to vennage.com, original graphics are far more engaging than stock photos, memes, videos, and charts, so create your own visuals as often as you can.
Focus on hot topics in the industry and always ask people to share your content - they won't share unless you ask. There are other well-known triggers to getting people to share your content, and you should explore them all to see which works best for your brand.
“See” your audience and engage with them. Once you’ve got the hot content, links, and shares, you have to engage by answering comments, asking questions, celebrating their good news, and giving advice if needed.
Number 4: Infographics. They are so powerful, I had to reserve a spot only for them. Everyone loves infographics. They are easy to digest and you don’t need to be an expert in the field to get value from them. 90% of the information that's transmitted to the human brain is transmitted visually, and we process images 60,000 times faster than we process text (news.mit.edu). Visual representations of information are easier and faster to internalize. The added plus is, they’re also entertaining.
You can repurpose articles, blogs, statistics, processes, strategies, and plans into infographics. Anyone can do it. Free services that make it easy to create infographics are Visme, Venngage, Canva, and Piktochart.
Your infographics should promote the type of work that you do, showcase your innovative ideas and display the resources and data that would be helpful to your potential customers. Push it out to the category of business that you help.
Be sure to brand all your infographics. A common mistake is to omit your branding, which means you won’t get credit for your brilliant content. Include your logo, URL and contact information to increase brand awareness.
Number 5: Publish or Perish. Publishing content is probably one of the best ways to increase brand awareness because it's shareable and evergreen. Be sure that you get the most out of your hard work and repurpose your content across a range of platforms. For example, by writing an article and turning it into a podcast or a video, you can leverage the different ways people prefer to consume content
Publishing also increases your credibility, establishes you as a thought leader, and promotes your industry expertise. Publishing gives you a platform to champion trends and innovations, and allows you to easily share valuable resources like apps, services, and tutorials.
Number 6: Leverage Friend Referrals. People are much more apt to follow recommendations from a friend than they would from any kind of brand advertising. My good friend and founder of Youpreneur.com, Chris Ducker, calls this P2P, or people-to-people marketing.
There's a geometric progression of growth in asking for friend referrals. For instance, if you have a tribe of 10 people and you ask them to share the good word about your work with four of their friends, suddenly, you've turned that into 40 brand impressions. That’s a fantastic way to land very trusting, yet inexpensive leads.
P2P marketing needs to be done in a very open and honest way that makes it easy for people to refer you. Create valuable content like a “How-To” guide or “Top 5 Features of Top-Performing Websites,” for your friends to share with their friends and colleagues.
Dropbox used P2P when they were starting out. They offered free disk space to anybody who recommended them to a friend. They gave 500 megabytes of disk space, capping it at 16 gigabytes. While that’s a huge giveaway, their referrals grew by 60% and they doubled their users every three months for some time.
Some irresistible incentives you can try include:
Downloadable resource lists
Checklist
Guides
Common mistake list (don’t forget the fixes!)
You can even use your lead magnet as an incentive.
When asking for referrals, be brave and go beyond close friends. Ask your audience to share your incentive with a network connection and see how much exponential growth you can create for your brand awareness. A bold move here could pay off handsomely.
Number 7: Use consistent visual and verbal branding. Consistency is probably the most important thing you can do to increase brand awareness. Logo, colors, fonts, imagery, layout, photography style, and thumbnails need to be aligned. It helps you with the 3 R’s: being recognized, remembered and revered.
Brand equity is achieved in steps and it all begins with awareness. You must be recognized before you can be remembered. Once you're remembered, and you deliver real value with your brand over time you're on your way to being revered. And being revered is the gold standard of any brand.