We were discussing business cards.
Our particular brand as a real estate team in PA that we are developing is to be known for our results i.e. sale in 59 days at 100% of listing price – based on our skill at research and internet marketing.
Our business cards needed to reflect a solid, professional image to back up the bold guarantees we were making. But, since I try to follow the advice of people hired by Fortune 500 companies, guerilla marketers, and crazy internet marketing types all who stress the importance of taking every opportunity to get people to take a desired action – I said we should put a “call to action” on the front of the card.
Silly me. Thinking that we should use every possible opportunity to get people to our website so we can communicate with them in multiple ways. Well that was a little too outside the box for the conventional thinkers. (I’ve had this problem before with mid-level marketing professionals at corporations who rarely have any unique talent.)
Stupid me. I then said something about how most agents do not communicate how or why they are better, nor brand themselves for any particular niche market and snorted something about how creating a logo that includes themselves sitting on a tractor if they were selling farm land would be better then the generic crap I usually see.
Well, you would have thought I had two heads.
Now, our team is mucking through the same kinds of issues – which really have to do with a sketchy process forced by lack of resources to hire real talent – and I thought tonight of something I’d read with the first design firm I’d ever worked with on a corporate identity project.
MiresBall design is a nationally known firm that does work for top USA companies…Qualcomm, Pebble Beach Tour, Southern Comfort, etc…
They do it right. Big Picture Thinking. Strategy. Story Telling. These inform design.
Anyway, this is what they wrote about a Brand’s “personality” and what jumped out at me in regards to the Real Estate industry.
———————-
Amplify the brand鈥檚 personality
A positioning statement (by definition, a single, defendable statement that defines your brand relative to the marketplace) is the keystone of the brand, but don鈥檛 underestimate the importance of personality.
A well-defined personality helps communicate your company鈥檚 distinct and memorable qualities.
If you鈥檙e in a particularly crowded or commoditized space, personality plays an even larger role in differentiating the brand. Start by answering the questions: What are the hallmarks of your corporate culture?
What personality traits are common across employees?
What personality traits do target audiences use to describe the brand?
Once you nail down your organization鈥檚 key personality traits, develop a strategy to manifest them in marketing communications and during interaction with the brand.
————————————–
Now that’s all a little too big for most single real estate agent’s business – but the scoffing at the same meeting about agent’s using “cartoon’ish” versions of themselves, a wrapped Hummer, or some other creative branding technique seems pretty narrow minded to me.
And, I don’t mean narrow minded as in an ability to think outside the box. I mean narrow minded in not thinking clearly about what makes real estate agents memorable, definable, and even likable to a niche market – which is important to earning more money, more easily.
]]>
“Word-of-mouth marketing has always been important. Today, it’s more important than ever because of the power of the Internet.”
JOE PULIZZI & NEWT BARRETT
AUTHORS OF GET CONTENT GET CUSTOMERS
“In a way, the Web is like your Hollywood agent: It speaks for you whenever you’re not around to comment.”
CHRIS BROGAN & JULIEN SMITH
AUTHORS OF TRUST AGENTS
“Understand the key factors in the math behind viral marketing, and use those to figure out what it takes to get viral growth.”
DAVID SKOK
GENERAL PARTNER
MATRIX PARTNERS
“The right people start video blogging are those with a passion to tell a story.”
STEVE GARFIELD
VIDEOGRAPHER AND VIDEO BLOGGER
AUTHOR OF GET SEEN
“You’ve probably got a device on you that can shoot decent video, so what’s stopping you?
Capture and Share some moment.”
STEVE GARFIELD
VIDEO BLOGGER
AUTHOR OF GET SEEN
“Video is just one part of a marketing plan. It fits certain messages & people better than others.”
STEVE GARFIELD
VIDEOGRAPHER AND VIDEO BLOGGER
AUTHOR GET SEEN
“The biggest mistake we see companies make when they first hit Twitter is to think about it as a channel to push out information.”
TIM O’REILLY & SARAH MILSTEIN
CO-AUTHORS OF THE TWITTER BOOK
“Twitter is not a technology. It’s a conversation. And it’s happening with or without you.”
CHARLENE LI
CO-AUTHOR OF GROUNDSWELL
“No matter your sector, chances are that people are already twittering about your products, your brand, your company or at least your industry.”
TIM O’REILLY & SARAH MILSTEN
CO-AUTHORS OF THE TWITTER BLOCK