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Your Brand Assets

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Your Brand Assets

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A short article that looks at how retail companies sometimes forget that their customer facing employees can be their best brand assets. Written as part of the Luckie & Company newsletter series.

A short article that looks at how retail companies sometimes forget that their customer facing employees can be their best brand assets. Written as part of the Luckie & Company newsletter series.

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Your Brand Assets

  1. 1. BY: DAVID STUTTS, DIRECTOR OF BRAND PLANNING TAPPING THE EQUITY OF YOUR TWO-LEGGED BRAND ASSETS (AIN’T AS EASY AS YOU THINK) Podcasting, DVR, blogging, vlogging, mash-ups, widgets, wiki, tagging and anything else that allows consumer brand interaction/involvement seem to be the current hot marketing tools of choice for creating a more intimate brand experience. But if you think about the most interactive of all brand experiences, it is already in place and has been for a long, long time. It is your customer-facing employees. Whether you are a retailer, a service provider or a distributor, your employees who interact with customers can make or break your brand each and every time they engage one of your customers. While all of these other marketing forms are swirling around in an increasingly crowded and complex communication universe, customer-facing employees remain a solid constant. They are always in place, and the majority of your customers are going to interact with them at some point in their involvement with your brand. A recent AdAge.com story pointed to a statistic that some brands plan to shift up to 90 percent of their annual marketing budgets in-store. Hopefully this means that in addition to store design/layout, signage and other experiential elements, there will be a lot of time and effort spent on properly training employees to be good brand ambassadors. Brands that seem to “get” that their employees are an integral part of the brand experience include Starbucks, Nordstrom, Cold Stone Creamery and Southwest Airlines. You can see it in the eyes of these employees. They are all brand believers, truly understanding what the brand is about and what it is trying to do to enhance the customer experience and create loyalty. They know how to act and what to say to customers to ensure the brand experience is properly executed each and every time they interact with a customer. So what is the best way to use your living, breathing brand assets? Here are some basic guidelines to help start shaping your employees into strong brand ambassadors. This is not something that happens overnight. You must be committed to these types of ideas for the long term if you ultimately want to see success.
  2. 2. BY: DAVID STUTTS, DIRECTOR OF BRAND PLANNING 1. Not all employee training should be the same. Study and recognize which employees spend the most time or the most relevant time with customers and develop training that addresses these interactions. Register employees may need different training than counter or department sales associates. Stockers may not be on the floor as much, but they still need to know how to properly represent the brand when interacting with customers. Call center employees don’t have face-to-face contact, but for service industries, they may be the critical, only link a brand has with its customers. 2. Develop backroom/breakroom posters and videos that keep employees up-to-date on current marketing, advertising and PR-related programs, along with the overall brand image and customer promise. Provide meaningful insight into these programs by offering tips and talking points for interaction with customers. 3. Hire people for how they think and act, not what they have done. You can always teach someone to work a cash register or help them learn the product attributes of what they are selling. You can’t teach personality, passion and enthusiasm. Take the time to find the people who want to work for you and in the long run will be strong brand ambassadors while they are on your floor. 4. Create an atmosphere of fun and excitement. Tap into pop culture to understand what is important in the lives of your employees and use that to keep them motivated and understand how you might be able to incorporate pop culture into your brand’s personality. 5. Understand how interior design will affect not only your customer’s experience, but also your employees. Use design to create a “cool” factor that inspires a sense of belonging and desire to work for your brand. Don’t give up on the ever-growing and expanding universe of new media tools; they are an important piece of your marketing arsenal and should be used when appropriate. Just remember that no matter how those new media tools evolve, your customer-facing employees will always shape your brand experience. Will it be for the better or for worse?

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