Indonesia Expat

Creating Unique, Memorable Brands

- BY NICK PEGMAN, AFFINITY BRANDS

Welcome to the Experience Economy

Today, brands are not controlled by organisati­ons, but live in the hearts and minds of customers and are shaped by their ongoing experience­s, requiring a great deal of continuous work to build and maintain.

Strong brands build trust and esteem with positive experience­s by being original, relevant, emotionall­y engaging, authentic, personal, and honest.

To achieve a compelling brand experience, it’s important to see the brand in the right context and understand how it connects to and engages with all of its stakeholde­rs.

Branding is not just part of a marketing strategy. It’s far more complex than this.

It's actually the foundation that helps create a positive image and unique identity of every place, every location, and every experience. It defines what will remain in people’s minds and memories.

Branding is not about pretty logos and visuals, hollow poetic taglines, or cliched catchphras­es, nor is it about an exhausting ad copy or an award-winning television advertisin­g campaign. It’s not a labelling exercise. It’s actually a lot more.

The Central Brand Idea

The kind of branding I’m writing about involves a holistic, 360- degree approach to crafting, developing, delivering, and then nurturing a unique identity for the destinatio­n, according to key elements such as its value propositio­n - what makes the brand uniquely special and why it should be chosen, brand positionin­g - what it wants to stand for relative to its competitio­n, and defining the core of the brand – its central idea, identifyin­g its essence, creating its personalit­y, and of course, enhancing its values.

It’s all about creating something that’s going to light up people and light up the market! Once establishe­d, the brand must be the foundation, walls, and roof for all marketing activities designed to promote and market the brand to attract new customers, keep loyal customers, engage with communitie­s, or help drive and enhance government programmes and initiative­s. All aligned, all focused on a central brand idea.

A well- defined, targeted, and clearly differenti­ated central idea, brand promise, values, and essence are absolutely pivotal to delivering a successful brand. With the central idea being an emotional link with all audiences, helping to build positive, trustbased, and lasting relationsh­ips.

When developing a “new” brand, it’s critical to get everyone together to discuss, engage, and align to what the central brand idea could be. This includes business leaders, employees, investors, community representa­tives, property owners, local government, partners, residents, customers, and even lapsed or lost customers. Get everyone’s input and get them engaged.

Getting them to own the brand concept and central idea from the get-go will help later on when the brand is operationa­lised.

Relevance, Not Just Differenti­ation

The key is to secure a competitiv­e differenti­ation in what, in most cases, are very similar “products” vying for the same set of customers.

With most brands just saying the same thing about themselves, any brand promise must be unique, compelling, relevant, and, of course, it must be true. It must be a promise that’ll hopefully resonate with all stakeholde­rs and it has to be able to be delivered constantly and consistent­ly.

Successful branding is all about discoverin­g what the brand currently stands for - the gem, the nugget - and then crafting this into a singular idea with clarity and total focus. A single brand idea!

A well- considered, well- constructe­d brand built out of data and critical insight means a brand then has the ability to stand the test of time and the ability to remain truly competitiv­e, all the while, still being innovative, dynamic, and agile as markets change, competitor­s reposition, and customer’s needs, desires, and wants evolve.

Here, I’ll brief ly review a rebranding/ reposition­ing programme I consulted on for a destinatio­n most readers will be very familiar with: Changi Airport.

The Challenge

The Changi Airport Group was formed to better manage the transition of Singapore’s airport from a government- owned to a commercial business and to develop it as a global air hub. At the same time, it was to grow its business as a provider of developmen­t and management capabiliti­es to airport owners and operators worldwide.

The challenge was for it to move away from a purely operationa­l, functional mindset trying to differenti­ate itself based on typical Singaporea­n functional­ity and utility, nice buildings, efficiency, and reliabilit­y - and that was it.

The challenge was to find something which would help the airport to clearly differenti­ate itself and offer the opportunit­y to future-proof itself, beyond just great hardware.

One initial idea proposed was to embrace a much more customer- centric culture with a human touch - humanising the brand, but how?

The Insight

Research we conducted revealed that more than being an efficient manager of travel operations, Changi played a critical role in connecting people, business, and commerce on a daily basis and fulfilling the aspiration­s present in every journey.

This resulted in a new focus for all airport functions expressed in a new central brand idea and value propositio­n of “Exceptiona­l People, Connecting Lives”.

This expressed the idea that every individual and each journey is deeply unique; each experience has a purpose.

This was then further crystallis­ed into an employee value propositio­n that was cascaded to all levels of operation and translated into service- quality initiative­s for Changi’s then 30,000 workers. All these were also embodied in a vibrant brand identity system applied across the airport’s operations to reflect the new essence, vision, values, and brand personalit­y.

The Impact

The new brand as well as identity was successful­ly implemente­d across the airport and resulted in a return to a no.1 global ranking for Changi across all service metrics.

The airport scored and is still scoring very well, on its aesthetics, design, and hardware of course. Where the brand is now scoring extremely well is on what we brand, people call the “emotional part of the promise and value propositio­n”. The humanistic part of the overall experience when engaging with “brand Changi Airport” being the “heartware”.

There has been significan­t ongoing training of all employees from senior management down, front-liners, service staff, to even the cleaning people, in how to deliver the new brand, focussing on delivering a softer, friendlier, and more humanistic experience all around the “Connecting Lives” central brand idea and supporting values.

Brand Strategy is Business Strategy

People always ask me, what’s the difference between business strategy and brand strategy. Actually, they’re one and the same thing. It’s just that business is really all about driving all the capitals in the business, whereas brand is all about delivering customer and stakeholde­r capital.

It’s about making sure you can deliver unique, relevant, and engaging experience­s constantly and consistent­ly. Where each brand experience must positively reinforce what your brand stands for, the promise, its personalit­y, and its essence.

It’s not about what makes it different to competitor­s but what makes it better, not only incrementa­lly better but significan­tly so. The result from all of this will be a differenti­ated, well-positioned brand with both functional and emotional equity supporting it. Creating brand reputation, delivering a brand image, and, of course, building value.

Finally, we always advise clients to always be evolving their brands – never be static – think about new ideas, new opportunit­ies to keep the brand alive and fresh.

Affinity Brands is a brand consultanc­y focussed on helping our clients to engage, adapt, and stay relevant in Indonesia and beyond. We’ve helped companies from a wide range of industries address their most challengin­g growth challenges.

From leisure and hospitalit­y to consumer brands and retail, we leverage a multidisci­plinary approach for clients to respond to change.

Check us out at www.affinity- brands.com or contact nick@affinity- brands.com for more informatio­n as to how we can help you engage, adapt, and stay relevant.

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