Daily Archives: Tuesday 11 December 2007

Brand Britain

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On Radio 4 a couple of weeks ago Alan Johnson, our Secretary of State for Education rather stumbled through an explanation of Britishness, the new subject that Sir Keith Ajegbo is recommending we add to the school curriculum, but what he is really talking about, of course, is “Brand Britain”.

There are strong ones and weak ones, but all countries are brands and I have been talking about this for years in my Brand Discovery and Full Effect Marketing seminars and workshops. Australia and the US stand out as being particularly strong examples. The people of both relate closely to the image of the country, support it, and are proud and excited to be a member of and contributor to their national community and that’s exactly what brand communities are all about.

These countries invested years in internal marketing to achieve their current advantage and a key feature of my Full Effect Marketing is the suggestion that businesses should do the same.

Internal marketing is probably the most under funded, unappreciated and badly executed area of marketing, but there are two kinds of businesses these days – the quick and the dead and if you don’t want to be the latter you have to be constantly raising the bar. You are simply not going to do this unless you employees are committed and equipped to play their role in delivering your promise. And that’s what internal marketing will give you.

Keith Ajegbo seems to have a vision of his “Britishness” classes helping youngsters to understand what the community is all about and encouraging their buy-in. Most of all these lessons should help them to understand what they have to do to play their part in making Britain what we want it to be. I’m not sure who decided what it is that Britain should be, in my Brand Discovery programme that’s a decision everyone contributes to and ultimately I guess the citizens of Community Britain will do the same, but I’m with Ajegbo all the way if he has recognised that everyone has to understand the brand promise and have a clear view of what they have to do to make it real.

Because I spend many days each year helping organisations tackle exactly this issue, I know that the boards of a commercial enterprises rarely have a consistent and clear view of what their organisation’s promise is, but when they do the next job is always to make sure that their stakeholders understand it and are equipped and keen to deliver it. My advice to all my clients is reduce your investment in making promises to consumers and invest some instead in a well thought out campaign that will ensure you are able to deliver the goods because failure to deliver the brand promise costs an organisation much more than most people realise as I think we are beginning to recognise with Brand Britain.

Making Optimisation work

datawarehouseedit.jpgThere’s not a business in existence that wouldn’t claim to be working to improve efficiency.  After all, it’s been many years since the last penny dropped in the final boardroom and every one accepted that business success is measured in degrees of efficiency.

However, the one area of business where attempts to improve efficiency have been late coming is marketing.  The reasons for this are far too many to go into here, but I’m happy to discuss them at another time.  The point however is that because marketing is now the biggest element of pretty much any business model it’s a situation that can’t be allowed to continue.

Recognising this, organisations everywhere are introducing measures to increase their marketing efficiency.  We have fortunes being invested in market modelling, similar sums dedicated to brand development and communications spends sliding quickly below the line where cause and effect are more readily measured, but we are still not seeing the kind of efficiency we’re going to need as we move through the twenty-first century.

The reason for this is straightforward enough and although nobody would say it was a simple matter to put it right, fix it we must.  The fact is that marketing optimisation can’t be addressed solely at the marketing communications end of the marketing process. This may be where most organisations focus their attempts, but at best it’s papering over the cracks.  Optimisation requires that a number of organisational and cultural issues, marketing communications (both message and medium) being just one of them, are addressed at once and for most organisations that has been just a bridge too far – until now that is.

With the tools and resources at our disposal we can piece together an end-to-end, all-embracing marketing solution that any organisation can buy into and which will deliver the ROI that we always knew was possible, but were never able to realise. What’s more we can combine that with a process that fixes the internal issues and improves front line performance at the same time, so it’s a faster and more meaningful solution.

This is the principle of optimisation working on a tangible level.