What is the hardest thing about brand strategy?
Brand strategy calls on you to choose what to focus on. Choosing requires leadership courage.
As with any choice of strategy, brand strategy includes closing doors. It necessitates choosing what you are not going to focus on. By choosing what falls inside your brand purpose, you are also choosing what falls outside of it. This focus empowers success. Focus is how you win.
Denny Post is CEO of Red Robin Gourmet Burgers and Brews. While sharing with me her views of brand, she said, “Ultimately, what a customer is buying is your promise, and your brand is your promise. Defining what your customer is buying is the toughest strategic work you will do, and the most important decision you will make as a leader.”
Doing the Tough Strategic Work
Do muster the effort to undertake this heavy-lifting strategic work. Do choose to stand for something – one thing. Your brand is what you stand for. Your brand strategy is the choosing of what you stand for. It is your choice of purpose. In choosing your “yes,” you necessarily choose many “no’s.” Shining the light on one thing darkens what lies outside that beam.
Tarang Amin, Chairman and CEO of e.l.f. Cosmetics, shared with me, “Strategy in general is about the choices you’ll make as a leader, what you’ll prioritize. What are you going to do, and what are you not going to do?” Brand strategy is “the choices of what you’ll stand for and not stand for. It encompasses the benefits you’ll prioritize, and the character that will bring it to life. Again, these are choices. When you choose to be one thing, you are choosing not to be something else. When you choose to prioritize a given benefit, you are deprioritizing others. Otherwise it is not a strategy.”
Focus is Scary, Until It’s Not
Now, let’s acknowledge something here. Choosing focus may make you nervous, because your fear tells you to keep doors open, not closed. But as Clayton Christenson wrote, “Focus is scary – until you realize that it only means turning your back on markets you could never have anyway.”
The thing that makes brand strategy scary – choosing focus – is also the very heart of its power. The more you hedge, the more power you relinquish.
Compounding the fear of choosing might be the knowledge that once you do choose your focus and make it explicit for others, there is nowhere to hide. You have turned on the North Star so bright that your equivocating is more visible. This clarity is of course brand’s very power. After all, if you were a customer or employee, wouldn’t you more likely connect with a business that goes to the trouble to get clear on why it exists?
How do you spark your leadership courage?
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Tough Choices Pay Off
Ultimately, defining brand strategy is an exercise in building self-awareness. It is an exercise of looking in the mirror unflinchingly, identifying the specific and customer-meaningful thing you bring, and then defining it so that you can remember it and use it as your filter for every decision you make. By knowing your purpose and embracing it, you contribute meaning to why you are here.
About Lindsay
Ironclad Brand Strategy owner Lindsay Pedersen is a brand strategist whose clients include Zulily, Starbucks, T-Mobile, Coinstar and IMDb. Her brand strategies are tested in the crucible of her proprietary Ironclad Method. Lindsay arms leaders with an empowering understanding of brand, and an ironclad brand strategy so they can grow their business with intention, clarity and focus.
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Originally published at ironcladbrandstrategy.com/ask-lindsay
Bravo! Love this. Thanks for the insights.
Building brands and solving data puzzles
2yGreat read. Brand strategy continues to be a double-sided steep mountain climb struggle. One side of the hill is getting executives to slow down and reign in the brand focus, and the other is convincing people a brand strategy is more than a logo. On the top is a magical and mystical (it seems) place of clarity, consistency, and design execution worthy of attracting fans of the brand.
reformed CEO, co-founder at Find Difference, author
2yGreat piece - thanks! As you say, great strategy requires clear choice - it's the art of sacrifice. Sacrifice takes nerve. Great strategy is born of difference. Being and doing different takes nerve. Great strategy requires focused strength, which may require weakness somewhere else. Weakness takes nerve. Net: Great strategy (of any kind) takes nerve!
Marketing and Brand Strategist | Ideator | Communicator | Behavioral Science Nerd | #InnatelyCurious | Creatively Driven | Profound Thinker | Connecting people, technology, and ideas 💡 🌀
2yLindsay Pedersen with focus, you make tough choices, but you also build momentum faster than sitting on the fence!