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Apple Brand Strategy Leaked in Microsoft Slide!

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Apple Brand StrategyHours ago, CNET and other tech sites featured a purported leaked Windows 8 document. It looks real. Especially convincing is the sad "How Apple does it: A Virtuous Cycle” slide. (image above from leaked document above)

The Virtuous Cycle:

  1. A strong brand promises "That it will just work"
  2. It does "just work" and so
  3. The brand gets stronger.

There's nothing funny about the content. Just that Microsoft with Windows, still so typical of most companies, can't help but complicate, rather than distill.

It is easy to bash Microsoft, but their Windows brand represents the typical vicious cycle:

  1. A weak promise leads to
  2. Forgettable or frustrating experience, and so
  3. The brand gets weaker.

Few and far-between are the teams that...

  • Know that brand is a customer experience, not a logo or design.
  • Have a clear brand promise shared by everyone on the team.
  • Have an authentic promise that fuses team passion with customer need.
  • Deliver on the promise first and foremost.
  • Put the customer first in everything they do and every problem they solve.

Is your brand in a vicious or virtuous cycle? Let us know on twitter or right below.

 

 

 

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Brand Scammed! Branding Agencies Exposed

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By Axle Davids, CEO & Brand Technologist, Distility Branding

Brand Technologist - Axle Davids

I hate that I love branding.

Branding is so loveable when it fuses a team's passion with a customer's need. When it separates that team from the pack. When it imbues everything they do with an authentic sense of personality. When it helps good companies and good causes win the day.

But I hate the bad side of branding with a passion!
When it is practiced as black-art voodoo or absurdly complex pseudo-science. When it is all fast talk followed by slow-motion. When it it is ruined from the inside by politics, conformists and brandwashers.

(Calm down Axle. Deep breath.)

I'll admit, in my career I have even unwittingly contributed to a scam of two. Now you know my secret shame. One that I hope will be absolved with the release of Brand Scammed! How to Avoid Buying the Wrong Branding Solution. Now companies and causes have a chance at hiring or buying a better brand.

So please help us here at Distility to save your peers, friends, and connections from the brand scammers. Together we can save someone's career. Together we can save a deserving brand from an unfortunate future. Together we can help companies and causes succeed where they would otherwise fail.

Please click below to share this on your social network, or contact us if you want to talk share more about brand scams and branding technologies with your network.

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The Diffuse Brand Strategy - What Went Wrong?

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This post is one in a series on our biggest brand strategy secret here at Distility: That most bad brands can be traced back to a failure of exploration, a failure of commitment, or both.

This diagram sums up the way most brands go wrong, and what it takes to get to the holy grail of the authentic brand.

Brand Strategy Explored

The Fragmented Brand and Diffuse Brand share a common lack of team commitment. But the diffuse brand also lacks exploration. This is the brand we find with our most R&D focused clients. Hard core science - not marketing - is their life blood. Given the right facilitator and workflow they are great at inventing brands. But left unattended, brand is absent from their brilliant minds.

There is a certain kind of business apathy to a Diffuse Brand. No time has been taken to explore possibilities, and no one is willing to commit to any one brand strategy. While exploration may have seemed like a waste of time, not taking the time can mean no one ever knows who you are, even inside your very own company! That seems a bigger waste. Even if people do know about you, with ambiguous and undefined positioning at the helm your team may find it difficult to confidently sell the brand convincingly to the right people.
 
You don't want to be this brand. There isn't enough energy behind this brand to even bother with good marketing, so why should any client want to bother considering it?

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The Conformist Brand Strategy

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Brand Strategy - Conformist
This post is one in a series
on our biggest brand strategy secret here at Distility: That most bad brands can be traced back to a failure of exploration, a failure of commitment, or both.


This diagram sums up the way most brands go wrong, and what it takes to get to the holy grail of the authentic brand.


Brand Strategy Matrix

 
The Conformist Brand Identity is the result of authoritarian leadership refusing to explore and commit to an authentic brand.

 

The firm with a Conformist Brand may have dabbled in the exploration of brand promise, position, and personality, only to be stopped short by an overriding pressure to commit. Or, the brand may have simply been dictated to the group by an authoritarian leader. Regardless, there's typically little concern as to whether or not you have the story right. The story itself is likely not authentic to the team or offer, but rather an imitation of another brand that worked, or simply the opinion of a higher-up. This puts your brand at risk of being positioned as unappealing, or simply another face in the crowd. Without an authentic, differentiated voice to tell your brand story, your audience or stakeholders may struggle to consider or buy into your brand.

You don't want to be this brand. In fact, you probably don't even want to be part of this team.

To make a difference, your brand needs to blaze a new trail and engage truly like-minded people in taking that path. To Distility that's an Authentic brand.

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The Authentic Brand Strategy

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Authentic Brand Strategy This post is one in a series on our biggest brand strategy secret here at Distility: That most bad brands can be traced back to a failure of exploration, a failure of commitment, or both.

This diagram sums up the way most brands go wrong, and what it takes to get to the holy grail of the authentic brand.

Brand Strategy Matrix

The objective of a successful branding exercise is to find a balance that gets you to your brand essence - a balance between those ideas that have become a part of how your team sees your offer and those that will truly resonate with your audience. It is only when you understand the core of your brand (what we call the Brand Promise) that you can clearly communicate it to others - and live up to it day to day. This requires exploration without the fear of bad ideas yet without too many unproductive tangents, and commitment not to the first good idea for the sake of time, but to the ideas that are most true to you.

You don't only want to be this brand, this brand reflects who you truly are.

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Brand Strategy = Exploration & Commitment

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Brand Exploration In our last post, we introduced Distility's big brand strategy secret: At the heart of our approach lies a deep cultivation of the way a team explores and commits to their brand.

Based on the quality of the team's exploration and commitment, they can arrive at four distinct brand strategies:
  1. Fragmented
  2. Diffuse
  3. Conformist
  4. Authentic

Brand  Strategies Matrix

To make better sense of these strategies, let's put business aside for a moment, and see how this works with people.

Authentic
Take a teenager for example. It is natural, at some point, for teenagers to explore their "brand". Rocker. Punk. Tough. Sweet. Shy. Risk taking. The list goes on. This is considered healthy human identity development... so long as at some point the exploration slows and the person commits to a defining personality. The identity theorists call this "Achieved Identity". We call the business equivalent, done right, an "Authentic Brand."
 
Fragmented
If the person, or brand, never stops exploring - never commits - then they are "Fragmented". At the extreme, in a person, this would be psychiatrically diagnosed as Dissociative identity disorder, where one body shares multiple personalities. As far as branding is concerned, this is at best, the team that is full of ideas but can never agree on the best one. At the worst, it is the sickness of a firm that is making contrary promises every which way to Sunday.
 
Conformist
Of course, there are a great many people who are not allowed this healthy kind of exploration. The culprit is usually cultural, making it against the rules to explore and enforcing commitment. The teenager must conform to a way of dressing, behaving, even thinking. In people, this results in what the Identity Theorists call the "Conformist Personality." Obviously, the same inability to explore and enforcement to commit result in "Conformist Brands".
 
Diffuse
Finally, there are brands and individuals that never explore, nor commit. It is not in their DNA, not in their culture. There is no drive for identity. The outcome is a "Diffuse" personality or brand. From a business perspective, this translates to the inability to get even the most reptilian form of strategy in play.
 
Don't be diffuse, fragmented, or conformist
Far too many brand strategy failures can be traced back to pathologies in the decision making process. A failure in exploring ideas and/or a failure to commit to the best brand idea can result in a diffuse brand, conformist brand, or fragmented brand. The authentic brand is the end goal of  branding and the key to presenting a clear, consistent, and compelling image to your customers.
 
- Wait, that's not all. There are other posts tagged "xploration & Commitment."

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