Skip to main content

How Brands Can Stay Relevant With Agile Branding

Brands are in an on-going battle to stay relevant. While staying consistent and adhering to core values remain important for brand integrity, brands must also be agile and adaptive to succeed in today’s digital landscape.
Modern, digital platforms allow for high-speed information sharing and for consumers, this has become the norm. So modern organizations require an agile brand strategy to keep momentum and respond to the zeitgeist in real-time. An agile brand strategy gives brands the opportunity to join conversations while they are still relevant, all while keeping messaging on-brand and aligned with their core values.
In the same way that technology drives the need for agile branding, it also supplies the strategy with the data necessary in order to be effective. Consumers are constantly connected and expect their favorite brands to connect alongside them by offering increasingly personalized and relevant experiences. The majority of connection happens on highly interactive social media platforms, which are treasure troves of customer data and facilitate real-time brand communication. In our highly connected culture, insight into what consumers think and feel about your brand is key to staying agile.
Traditionally, branding strategy was relegated entirely to messaging and collateral that the branding team could plan out and create months in advance. In fact, before Social Media and Cloud technology revolutionized customer interaction and digital workplaces, reacting at the moment was extremely difficult and often too expensive for brands to even consider. Technology now allows users to connect freely, and without it, agile branding is nearly impossible.

Using Your Brand Story to Connect Reactively

Agile branding gives brand teams the chance to get creative and react to cultural trends or events in a variety of different ways — both serious and playful.
IKEA is a great example of how making a playful agile branding move can reinforce core brand principles that have been in place for over 70 years. In 2017, fashion brand Balenciaga unveiled a new item: a bright blue, $2,000 tote bag. At first glance, the item is nondescript. But upon further inspection, social media users noticed the bag was extremely similar to IKEA’s iconic 99 cent shopping bag. Nudged by their agency partner, Acne, IKEA’s in-house brand team moved quickly and pushed out a playful ad the next day.
IKEA revealed an ad for “The Original” blue bag in the same style as Balenciaga’s ad. There was no real competition involved, and social media users applauded IKEA for their quick wit. By quickly reacting and inserting themselves into the narrative with branded material, IKEA stayed relevant in the news and reinforced their products’ iconic status and brand values of delivering style and affordability hand in hand.
For other brands, agility has always been an intrinsic part of their strategy. Swedish Vodka brand Absolut holds the title for the longest-running print ad. Their success is based on a proprietary agile ad formula that they have used since 1981: Absolut bottle outline + brand logo + clever copy.
Absolut has applied this tried-and-true formula to over 1,500 ad variations and has stayed relevant to their market for over three decades, mastering the art of consistency and agility. Absolut has brought in artists like Andy Warhol and Annie Leibovitz and solicited the help of creatives from around the world to submit their designs for future ads.

Technology Delivers Agile Branding Organization-Wide

Amid the talk of digital channels and customer conversations, it’s easy to forget the important role that employees can play in an agile branding strategy. An organization that unites employees with up-to-date brand values and visual assets leads to improved employee experience. Employees are more engaged with your brand if they see the most recent brand updates flowing into the work they do day-to-day.
To keep employees up-to-speed and included in the latest brand changes requires leadership trust, timely communication and great deployment technologies to keep the entire organization relevant at all times. While this looks different for every brand, tools like enterprise content management platforms and email signature management technologies allow leaders to immediately deploy new brand assets across the organization.
A strong, stand-out brand identity is the best kickoff point for a brand, but to stay relevant long into the future requires a strategy of adaptive and relevant messaging and a team that’s equipped to deliver it to customers and company-wide. In an era where digital information moves at an unprecedented pace, a brand strategy that can keep up is essential to staying afloat.
Source: MarTechSeries

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why Your Digital Marketing Strategy Needs Instagram

Do you use Instagram for business? To me, answering that question should be the same as if someone were to ask: Do you have a  Digital Marketing  strategy? Both should receive an unequivocal yes. But you’d be surprised how many people bypass Instagram for their brand and miss out on what could be one of the best Visual Marketing tools out there. What makes it so great? Glad you asked. Here are five reasons  Instagram Marketing  should be part of your brand’s Digital Marketing strategy. 1. Direct Access to Your Target Audience Think hard on this one…do you know anyone who doesn’t have a personal  Instagram  account? Your grandma and the librarian don’t count. Let’s face it, with multiple sources concluding that over  1 billion people use Instagram every month , you can rest assured that at least some part of that population fits the description of your target audience. This access, combined with the personal nature of Social Media Marketing, results in a sure-fire way to

What Is Programmatic Advertising & Media Buying?

Maybe you are new to programmatic advertising, or maybe you’ve been working in media and ad buying for years, but still can’t find a way to explain it in a way your parents could understand. Here we take an Intro 101 approach to programmatic advertising as part of our  MarTech Landscape Series . One problem with the term “programmatic” is it’s come to encompass many things, and, like most things in ad tech, it’s bogged down in jargon. Fundamentally, programmatic is just software-driven technology to automate all or parts of the ad buying process. There are really two main drivers for the growth of programmatic in recent years: Ad Buying Efficiency: Programmatic uses software and technology to automate the ad buying and selling process with the speed and scale that humans can’t achieve manually. Ad Targeting Relevancy: Programmatic offers advertisers the ability to incorporate large amounts of data, sometimes from multiple sources, to serve users with ads that are more likely

Indian government proposes upto Rs 50 lakh fine and 5 years imprison for ads promoting skin fairness

The government has proposed to amend the Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable Advertisements) Act, 1954. As per the draft bill prepared by the government, it could slap a fine of up to Rs 50 lakh and imprisonment up to five years for advertisements promoting pharmaceutical products for fairness of skin, deafness, improvement of height, hair loss or greying, obesity, among others. Under the new  draft of the Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable Advertisements) (Amendment) Bill, 2020 , a fine of up to Rs 10 lakh and up to two years’ imprisonment has been proposed in the case of the first offense. In the case of a subsequent conviction, imprisonment may extend to five years and the fine, up to Rs 50 lakh. In the current law, the first offense subjects to imprisonment up to six months, with or without a fine, and up to one year for a second-time conviction. The present law identifies ‘magic remedy’ in the form of a talisman, mantra, kavacha, and any other charm of