brand strategy consultants

category: Brand Naming

Whisper | A Brand Demonstration

We are often asked of the origin of our name.

Whisper is our brand name, the name of our company, a reflection of our brand promise and a demonstration of effective branding.

The story behind the creation of our own brand demonstrates how we think of brand opportunities faced by most any organization and more importantly how, by turning to us, an organization may solve them.

Whisper was created to assist and guide companies through what are often complex issues of brand evaluation, brand creation and brand deployment.

In addition to the usual struggles of getting the positioning pitch perfect—the marketing industry is so large and the lines between advertising, public relations, graphic design, and branding are so often blurred, we knew finding a “between-the-eyes” audience connection would be vexing.

We relied upon storytelling.

The 5-Second Story

The key was to develop an entry point into the minds of those we seek to attract and influence—an effective 5-second story—to prompt a mental stop allowing further engagement in a real conversation about their needs and how we would address them.

Our 5-second story had to instantly induce our audience to pause and internalize the story, prompting a desire to “pay” to hear more—literally “paying” when they pay attention, paying with their time and mental effort.

Whatever our 5-second story might be, it had to offer something new and authentic, a never heard before narrative. Ours had to offer the equivalent of electric shock therapy to snap preconceptions about the discipline of branding, providing a now we’re paying attention moment for our firm to frame itself. Because such preconceptions are strong and not easily brushed aside, the audience needs to come away questioning their assumptions, their stereotypes, as if to say, “THIS is branding? Wow, I had no idea.”

Playing By The Rules

Our story had to demonstrate how to successfully play by the rules.

World class brand strategy honors certain inalienable rules. These rules, or Laws of Branding, cannot be ignored or dismissed IF a brand creation exercise is to be successful.

Ignore the Laws of Branding, and any so-called “branding effort” devolves into a far more expensive advertising campaign of little long term effect.

It is one thing to advocate certain laws, and not follow them. Our brand had to demonstrate how an adherence to the rules, through an effective process discipline, creates a successful brand.

Positioning, Positioning, Positioning

Whether creating a new brand or rebranding an established one, a branding project is really a positioning project—first develop the brand positioning, then name that positioning. Since branding is about demonstrating ideas and advertising is about explaining them, we needed a market position that demonstrated rather than explained the Why of our firm. The brand name also had to work on a multinational, cross-cultural basis.

The best means of engaging a consumer is through a one-on-one communication. It’s intimate. It’s personal.

Getting inside the head of your consumer is the objective. This personalized intimacy is far more credible and effective than any mass media in building a long-term relationship.

To drive this engagement, great brand positioning results in a tip-of-the-spear name and often tagline, the crucial first point of audience contact for any organization, product, or place.

Smarter than Advertising

Our business objective was to develop a brand position leading to a name and tagline driving awareness—without the support of advertising dollars. We were, after all, a start-up business. As with any entrepreneurial venture, we had to make every dollar count.

Our brand had to open a window into the minds of organization decision-makers we seek to influence, who when finding us on the Internet or by word-of-mouth are moved to ask for more about us and how we work.

A brand position demonstrating an intuitive reason to learn more about us would tap into stories and layers of imagery existing within the human mind.

Branding Is Competitive Sport

We developed a competitive analysis, necessary to understand the competitive context of any brand. What names and key messages are owned by competitors, and how effective are they?

While many firms say they offer branding services, their brand names and key messages do not demonstrate storytelling expertise.

For example, consider firms with names such as Wolff Olins, Landor, Prophet, MarketShare Partners, Brandtrust, GSD&M, Interbrand, or FutureBrand. What do those names convey? Is it:

    • A law firm?
    • Cigarette?
    • Venture capital group?
    • Alphabet soup?
    • Trucking company?
    • An indefinite time forever unreachable, a promise forever unfulfilled?

Each name misses the tip-of-the-spear opportunity to demonstrate competitive difference, and must be explained before understanding the “why” of the organization the name represents.

None map back into the fundamental basis for the existence of the branding discipline—communication.

Naming Narcissism

There is another, often counterintuitive, consideration. A brand name should turn the focus away from the organization or product it represents, and instead serve as an introduction to the benefit a customer may receive.

Rather than a chest thumping brand name blaring “Me, Me, Me”—for example, a founder’s last name, or a presumptively self-flattering capability such as Prophet—a name should intuitively tap into a benefit of significance to the intended audience.

The principle is basic to human behavior and response. For example, at a social gathering one creates far more goodwill by speaking in terms of interest to others, rather than the tiresome bore who speaks constantly of himself.

Building the Customer Relationship

As our competitive analysis revealed, no brand consultancy had yet developed a self-propelling evocative brand name. This result pointed to our market opportunity, further defined as assisting clients in thinking of brand as an asset rather than expense, and brand development as a powerful and cost-efficient customer relationship tool.

Like many others in our business, the intellectually lazy way out of naming ourselves would have been to use the last names of our founding partners — Cranford, Manning & Jurisch — or by an acronym such as CMJ. However, founder-based brand names are chosen primarily to stroke the egos of the founders, and demonstrate a complete lack of strategic thought.

We might also have chosen a functional name such as BusinessBrand, invented name such BrandFly, non-English name such as Sermo (Latin for conversation), or an experiential name such as CompetitiveAdvantage Partners. However, whether a functional, invented or experiential brand name, none offer the self-propelling emotional imagery and narrative creating natural, and inevitable, human engagement.

When the human mind discovers an instinctive solution properly labeled, the discovery serves as a prompt for the mind to stop, lean forward, examine closely, and seek more information. Accomplish this, and a brand name shows up daily and goes to work without advertising.

Breakthrough

Rather than positioning our brand with a built-in need to explain our relevancy, we zeroed in on this thought, “The key to any effective marketing or branding effort is to change and take ownership of the conversation.”

Marketing today is often little more than the equivalent of shouting on a street corner, with the shouters believing the loudest win. When you shout, people tune you out.

In a culture saturated with messages being screamed at consumers from every direction, employing superlatives like “best”, “number one”, “leading”, “favorite”, “great”, “unique”, and so on, it’s no wonder that people have evolved highly sensitive and effective BS indicators.

When you whisper, on the other hand, people are forced to pay attention, to lean forward, to become engaged. To whisper is to exchange valuable, privileged information, to communicate intimately, emotionally and strategically, and to make yourself heard as human rather than as a product, all without yelling yourself hoarse.

Competitive Separation

Branding must create long-term competitive advantage to increase market share. Otherwise, what’s the point?

Our process pointed to a brand position that could get us inside the mind of our target audience and keep us there. This position would demonstrate a different mindset and approach, and tap into a wealth of existing imagery. It would penetrate the human mind by successfully navigating the white noise of marketing industry self-promotion, and frame the answer to “Why we exist” as one of personal one-on-one immediacy.

Following the same process we use with clients, we had no choice but to name our company Whisper. The name moves across borders easily, creating engagement whether in the United Arab Emirates, or the United States. And because our positioning is all about looking at branding as balance sheet asset creation, by changing and taking ownership of the market conversation to grow market share, it became obvious our tagline should be Own The Conversation.

One of the most important accomplishments of the best brands is being thought of as greater than the functional goods and services offered. “Nike - Just Do It” helps the company rise above selling sneakers. “Apple - Think Different” taps into far more than computers. “Las Vegas - What Happens Here, Stays Here” is bigger than a vacation destination.

These breakthroughs lead to a transactional narrative where the organization, product, or place speaks for itself.

As for Whisper, we don’t think there’s a better name out there demonstrating branding thought leadership.

And that’s our story.

It’s a strategy validated many times since by, among others, this futurist and author.

Turning To You

You should always have the highest expectations for your brand, and the story you share.

When looking for a partner to assist in developing your own brand, and the best means to attract the audience you seek to engage, ask yourself:

How did the firm I am considering brand themselves?

The insight gained from the answer will prove invaluable, IF you are unwilling to settle for incrementalism for building the reputation of your organization, and if you seek the fullest development of your brand assets and the opportunity to grow market share.

Let’s talk about your story, and how to own the conversation within your industry.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]

Havaianas: A Demonstration of Successful Rebranding

Guest blogged by Monica Sabino of Brandgame.

When traveling abroad and sharing with others you are Brazilian, there is immediate association with samba, soccer and the iconic soccer star, Pelé. In the last few years, one more word was added to this list – Havaianas (pronounced ah-vai-YAH-nas).

HavaianasLogoIt is particularly interesting that this brand has been added to the collection of positive words that describe Brazil, because when I was a child, in São Paulo, one of the worst things that could happen to you in terms of popularity was to be seen in Havaianas. Wearing Havaianas was a sign your family was a victim of the recession or the mass layoffs happening in the industry at that time – you were officially typecast as “poor.” Only financially challenged children would use these 5-dollar flip-flops launched in 1962, that yes, were extremely comfortable, but also completely un-cool.

In 1994, however, Havaianas started a journey towards granting every Brazilian consumer permission to wear them — “affordable” could be turned into “democratic and informal.” Havaianas offered a very clean design, a simplicity that was almost sexy. Why not put it on the feet of all Brazilians, those walking on the street but dreaming of the beach? Creating an instant vacation.

HavaianasDesignWhat seemed at first aspirational became the Havaianas brand strategy. A brand for all. Comfortable meeting cool. An instant benefit by haloing the wearer as upscale and chic. And, according to the company’s U.S. site, the name Havaianas itself, Portuguese for Hawaiians, was a tribute to America’s glamorous holiday destination.

Product was redesigned. The original two-colored version received a line extension called Havaianas Top, with a single color distributed in new channels, to reach new audiences. Product display was changed; the bowls where the brand had been found in the past in retail locations were substituted by nice displays where each of the different colors could be seen.

In the years that followed the brand moved relentlessly towards the new strategy, at every contact point and with consistent execution. Colors, design, distribution, communication, everything was about fun, relaxation, and simplicity.

Different celebrities were photographed in their Havaianas, caught in relaxed moments. And although, according to the company, advertising spends remained the same, this shift in brand strategy brought the brand to unprecedented levels of success and to substantial imports as the brand carries all colorful qualities of Brazil.

What was unimaginable 13 years ago has become reality; the low-end commodity footwear has become a must-have fashion accessory. Havaianas now offers product for daily wear, and chic designs that are worn for an evening out.

Today wearing Havaianas is actually desirable. What was once a cheap flip-flop product have instead became shoes for those moments when you don’t need and don’t want to worry.

The commodity has been transformed to a brand.

As a Brazilian, it is nice to be associated with beautiful beaches, samba, good soccer… and a brand such as Havaianas!

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Retail Branding]

Tru New Year

truTVlogoTo launch the New Year, watch as cable network Court TV flips the switch to truTV.

The new name is a creation from the laboratory of our sister brand naming group, Igor, who helped the owners of Court TV to get over the hump.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]

Marketing is the Tax You Pay for an Ineffective Brand

Robert Stephens, founder and chief inspector of The Geek Squad, contends “Marketing is a tax you pay for being unremarkable.”

We agree.

We take it a step further — Advertising and other forms of marketing is the tax you pay for an ineffective brand.

For organization leaders who rush to an advertising or PR campaign without an understanding of the value of branding — including the brand name and narrative — the price they pay is steep.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Branding Definitions]

Alibaba - The Story of a Brand Name

Alibaba LogoThe Los Angeles Times reports on the success of Alibaba:

Alibaba.com was founded in June 1999 by Jack Ma, who saw an opportunity to play matchmaker for small and medium-size Chinese manufacturers, which lacked access to global markets for products as varied as bamboo toothpicks, bath towels and machine tools. Likewise, international buyers interested in goods from manufacturers in China lacked the communications channels to find them.

Ma established two websites to address those markets: one in English to facilitate international trades (alibaba.com) and one in simplified Chinese for domestic business (china.alibaba.com), from which the company derives more than 70% of its revenue.

Alibaba.com Ltd. shares began trading on the Hong Kong exchange Tuesday and tripled in value by end of the day.

There is, however, an interesting backstory to Alibaba, and that is how the company acquired its name. Our sister naming group, Igor, offers the story on the brand name, Alibaba.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]

Would You Hire a Branding Company Unable to Brand Itself?

Unfortunately, many organizations do. Those making the agency hiring decision often overlook a common sense test of a branding company’s branding skills raised by this question:

“Tell us, how did you brand yourself, and how does your own name and branding demonstrate your ability to help us with ours?”

The latest branding company to fail in rebranding themselves is the topic of this story in Advertising Age.

BrandUnion logo2The agency? Formerly Enterprise IG, now The Brand Union, positioning themselves as full of brand mastery with this new logo.

The new brand name and positioning becomes instantly anonymous among other branding companies with these blindingly similar names:

Brand-DNA (.com)
Brand-DNA (.net)
DNA Brand Mechanics
Brand 2.0
BrandActive
Brand Doctors
Brand Equity
Brand Evolve
Brand Fidelity
Brand Institute
Brand Mechanics
BrandForward
Brandico
Brandjuice Consulting
BrandLadder
BrandLink
BrandLogic
BrandMaverick
BrandPeople
Brandscope
Brandslinger
BrandSolutions
Brandtrust

And these:

Absolute Brand
Building Brands
Core Brand
Futurebrand
Independent Branding
Interbrand
Not Just Any Branding
Real Branding
Spherical Branding
The Branding Iron
The Brand Consultancy
The BrandRanch
The Brand Union
TradingBrands
The Better Branding Company

There is an easy tip-off of why the new “The Brand Union” name and position are failures before they begin. If the word brand is used in the name and positioning of a so-called branding company, the company demonstrates an unwillingness to differentiate itself from brand company competitors. If undifferentiated from the competition, a brand devolves into little more than an anonymous commodity — the worst possible outcome for any brand.

One executive with The Brand Union explains the change this way:

“It suggested strength through the organization and common goals. It was a clear identifier — especially coming from Enterprise IG, where there was a lot of ‘What do they do?’”

An executive with The Brand Union’s parent offers a revealing look into how this branding company thinks:

The relaunch will help the company be more competitive in the marketplace, where his research suggests that potential clients turned to rivals such as FutureBrand and Interbrand due to their more-appropriate corporate names.

There is a lesson in this beyond poking fun at a competitor. The message to potential corporate clients anywhere is if you want what seems safe, yet is bland and instantly forgettable, hire The Brand Union or any of the homogeneous branding companies identified above.

However, if unafraid to explore what works in creating a game changing company or product name, check out this from our sister naming group, Igor, and give us a call.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]

Do You Understand the Importance of Brand Naming?

Buried deep within this report from Australia’s Dynamic Business magazine is this gem of a statement on brand naming:

[S]electing a name is the most important element of branding.

We agree. No one component of brand development offers a greater opportunity to attract the desired audience than the name of a product or organization. As shared at this link:

A brand name, often tagline, key messaging and visual identity, combine to form the tip of any brand, with the brand name the most powerful of these components. Without the spear tip, no brand secures the opportunity to create for its owner the sustainable competitive advantage every business craves.

Unless this spear tip quickly and precisely connects with imagery, thoughts, and feelings present within the mind of your market, there is little chance of engaging your audience in real conversation about who you are and what you do. The reason is that you have all of five seconds to make an impression, to create a mental stop prompting the listener/viewer to pay attention by paying with their time, as your message competes in a contemporary culture suffering from message overload.

As an example of how this works in the real world, it’s why respected brands have been created around names such as Apple and Flatbread.

And, its why we created our tip-of-the-spear around the brand name Whisper.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]

Law of the Unexpected

In storytelling, the surprise ending is remembered over the predictable finish.

In movie making, the surprise beginning engages the viewer to watch a two-hour film.

In brand strategy, the unexpected wins out over the expected when an audience is exposed to a brand name and brand narrative.

UnexpectedRoadUse of the unexpected creates attraction, a door opener, through which real conversation may begin with an audience any brand seeks to attract and convert. Understanding our Law of the Unexpected and putting it to use works to ensure a brand name or narrative is not forgotten among the 3,500 advertising messages individuals are exposed to daily.

The New York Times reported on the work of Barbara Kahn of the Wharton School and Elizabeth Gelfand Miller of Boston College, and the effect names of colors and flavors have on consumers:

…[U]nusual names were more popular…the unexpected won out when subjects were given the opportunity to think about it, as a shopper at a cosmetics counter generally does… [T]he key seemed to be unexpectedness itself, which essentially engages the consumer in an attempt to solve the puzzle of the name. This rapid, essentially unconscious cognitive process, Kahn and Miller wrote recently in The Journal of Consumer Research, ‘’results in additional (positive) attributions about the product and thus, a more favorable response.'’ This seems to affect not only whether a person chooses to buy something but also, oddly, how much she enjoys it.

People will mentally stop and invest their time to fill-in-the-blanks when they see an unexpected name or message for a product. Again, from the New York Times:

Kahn and Miller cite two theories of mental processing that may be at work. In the case of ‘’unexpected descriptive'’ names, we may be able to solve the puzzle to our satisfaction. With the more logic-defying names, we essentially conclude that there must be some reason for it, and given the circumstances (it’s a product for sale in a market society), the reason must be positive.

As our sister brand naming group Igor describes it:

It comes down to making sure the puzzle we create is not too easy nor too difficult to solve. It’s about making the gap wide enough for your audience to lean forward and make the leap, but not so wide they have nowhere to land. If it is too short a jump it’s not interesting, too long and no one will even attempt the journey. And it is all about making sure that puzzle is multi-layered and contextual.

The Law of the Unexpected is about creating a brief mystery in product name or brand narrative to create attraction. Consumers will often stop and invest their time and mental effort to hear a thought expressed in an unexpected way.

Famous examples of organizations relying upon the Law of the Unexpected in naming themselves and later, in their brand narratives, include Apple and Virgin.

Use of the Law of the Unexpected also led to the unique and memorable name of a professional services firm engaged on behalf of brands internationally. This one.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]

Restaurant Branding: Flatbread

Okay, we admit it. We like pizza. But then, who doesn’t?

On the lookout for a great pizza wherever we go, from New York to Newport Beach, from Indianapolis to Italy, it is rare to find a restaurant that redefines the pizza category through an effective brand name. FlatbreadSignageSuch was the case this past week, while in Portland, Maine, where we were introduced to the joys of Flatbread, located on Commercial Street across from the Casco Bay Ferry Terminal. Flatbread not only has a brand name that changes the conversation to a basis they can win, they back it up with a unique product—no sauce pizza, err, flatbread. Founded in 1998, the Flatbread concept has grown to multiple New England locations with a unique brand strategy demonstrated at key consumer touchpoints through the product, the employee and customer experience, all without advertising. This own the conversation® strategy builds the brand organically through endorsement and word of mouth. Sounds familiar.

Stop by any of the Flatbread restaurant locations, and tell us what you think about the brand…and the Flatbread product.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Restaurant Branding]

The Brand Becomes The Habit

The title of “best burger” is personal to most. Everyone has their favorite, and awarding the title is like finding good art for many who know it when they see it or, in this example, taste it. For example, in Southern California In-N-Out Burger owns a cult following.

TheHabitOur staff discovered a formidable burger contender last week in Santa Barbara. Well, really our burger experience took place in Goleta, just down the road and next door to the University of California, Santa Barbara.

The Habit, as it is called, is a 20 restaurant operation in Southern California. Never having heard of The Habit previously, we were first struck by the brand name [we are in the branding business after all], which drew us to the closest location we could find, where we noticed a standing-into-the-street queueing line, prompting us to stop and embrace temptation.

The Habit relies upon little advertising in building their brand [when a company speaks of advertising expense in basis points instead of a whole number percentage, that is no advertising]. Instead The Habit focuses upon the product, the employee and the customer experience through an own the conversation strategy, building the brand organically through endorsement and WOM. Sounds familiar.

We like the brand name, the brand strategy, and the burger. Thought you should know.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Restaurant Branding]

Brand Technology and Science

SandpaperCoverThe Birla Institute of Technology & Science, otherwise known as BITS Pilani, is among the most highly respected engineering schools in Asia. A recent article in the university alumni magazine, at page 71, identifies this website as among three for recommended brand reading, alongside other authors and sources such as Harvard Business Review and McKinsey Quarterly.

As a demonstration of good brand naming, a big thumbs up to the name of the magazine. What better name for a publication associated with an institute of technology and science than that of the BITS Pilani alumni magazine, Sandpaper.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about University Branding]

Brand Naming As Chemical Reaction

Cocaine Energy DrinkThis from our friends at Wordlab, about the short-lived energy drink Cocaine, soon to be re-launched under the brand name Censored, a name far more effective in connecting with a target audience than the inane BlaK.

Read more here.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]

Brand Naming Claptrap

Statements such as this one in a column from Indian Express Group give the brand naming profession a bad name:

A brand name is a composition of individual sounds called phonemes, which represent attributes. If these attributes are desired by consumers, they would want to try it instantly. And if the brand delivers the attributes, there could be a repeat purchase. The research done by several experts show that the phonemes, vowels and consonants convey different attributes. For example, the sound ‘b’ connotes slowness and also reliability. The consonants ‘f’, ‘v’,’s’ and ‘z’ connote speed. ‘Z’ is the fastest of them all. It’s also considered the most powerful.

Rather than be snookered by advice such as this claptrap, from a Mumbai-based agency with a core competency in advertising rather than branding, look to a naming group that knows naming. We happen to know one.

Download this Naming Guide from our sister brand naming group Igor, for brand naming that makes sense.

Without the claptrap.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]

Company Name Etymologies

A handy reference for those you wondering about the origin of company brand names. Check it out in combination with this additional etymology reference, discussed here.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]

Claiming A Global Brand Name

Developing a brand name for a company or product with a global footprint is both an art, and a science, as discussed in this story from the New York Times via our friends at Wordlab.

[More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More posts about | More blogs about Brand Naming]


« Home | Brand Naming