You’ve got a great idea for a product or service. You truly believe your ware is a must-have for nearly everyone and anyone. You’ve gone through the legal hoops of setting up your business, filing paperwork, and establishing a name and tax ID number. You’re all set. Now you just need some business to come through the door. There’s one problem: not many people beyond your friends and family have heard about your company or product.
As ideas for promotions, events, collateral, etc. run through your head, it’s important to keep things simple at the beginning. Experienced marketers contend that understanding the landscape and developing messaging that includes a solid value proposition is the foundation that anchors all branding and marketing efforts.
Startups can make a crucial mistake when they fail to develop their messaging strategy before creating tactics, which can lead to inconsistent deliverables, attracting the wrong customers, and wasting valuable marketing resources.
If you’re a startup, before you publish your first social media post or ad, make sure you’ve defined who you are and have created your brand promise. Here are some tips to get you on your way.
Define Your Personality
Every startup must know why you exist. This core reason determines how you’re going to change the world, better than anyone else. You need to define your mission, core problem you intend to solve, and how you’re different from existing competitors.
For messaging, a startup must define what its story is and should highlight your key values. Determine what your personality is and what you want your customers to know. For instance, some brands are laid back while others are more relaxed and fun. Some are price driven while others are technology focused.
Once this is defined, commission the creation of a logo. It should be timeless and look good on different channels of communications including business cards, websites, etc. When I started my company, I wanted my logo to have several aspects to it that made the person looking at it find the hidden meanings. Everyone is different and this can be a subjective exercise but have fun with it and let it define who you are.
Choose the Market and Understand Your Customer
It is impossible to target everyone with a single offering. A startup must be clear on who they want to purchase their solution and what keeps their customers up at night. You need to determine the market size and understand your direct and indirect competitors. Once you have this information, you should develop a value proposition that is convincing enough to have an impact on your target market.
As a startup, you need to be clear on the metrics for success. Is it revenue, sign-ups, market share, or some other measurable? The metric must be tangible and will help you determine if the marketing strategy was successful. For instance, if the goal is sign-ups, you need to have an offer where people can try out a service for free for a short period. If the goal is market share, the marketing campaign might focus on the differences between the startup and existing competition.
An important aspect of brand definition is determining the channels of engagement with clientele. Many startups make the mistake of trying to master all social media channels because competitors are using them as well. Instead, focus on one or two channels and ensure that you have a strategy behind the frequency of posts, the timing, and the nature of messages. Visual content tends to get more attention nowadays. The target market also informs what kind of social influencers the startup might decide to work with, if any.
Build Your Brand
While the results may not be immediate, a proper and consistent brand strategy can yield results that short-term advertising cannot. First, branding improves recognition. A brand logo, its colors, fonts, tag lines, and other elements that encompass the branding and messaging process slowly become easily recognizable in the minds of people. When done correctly, these visual elements spark positive thoughts and emotions in the minds of customers, which are key in their purchasing decisions.
Consistency in brand messaging creates trust in customers. Some customers may take years to start using your products but when they eventually will start doing so in their own time. A good example would be banks. Minors may not have bank accounts but when they eventually need such services, they are likely to go for brands they started seeing years before. The same goes for such things as cars.
Startups must realize the difference between branding and advertising. While the latter is a pitch to sell a specific product, branding is more about storytelling. However, good branding makes advertising much easier because of the trust the company slowly builds with its customers. Branding also builds financial value for the company, which is crucial for startups that might want to be acquired. We have seen young companies being purchased for multiple times the value of their assets because of having a clear path regarding who they are, their core values, and their journey.
With regards to must-have deliverables for startups:
Establish a Website
While not essential at the very beginning of marketing your startup, it helps ground your marketing plan in a tangible product. It doesn’t have to be fancy or have everything on it right now. Approach your website plan in the same manner as your marketing plan. This will likely require some research:
- Develop a framework for your site and determine what content you want to include
- Register a domain name and determine your platform (there are free services and paid services you can design yourself, or you can partner with a web developer for an advanced customized approached)
- Configure your site for search engines so people can find you
An online presence provides a physical place for people to go to learn more about your company. This will serve as an anchor for the majority of your content that you’ll include in emails, on social media, in your newsletter and more.
Send Emails
According to digitalagency.com, more than 80 percent of small businesses depend on email marketing to gain new customers. This is a relatively easy and inexpensive step and is an essential part of the foundation to attract customers for your startup that:
- Reinforces brand recognition
- Builds online reputation
- Has a broad reach
- Drives traffic to your website or online content
- Leads to increased sales and revenue
Focus on: 1) your current support base; and 2) growing your email list. Start getting the word out about your company and services—with links to your website—via email to people already in your network. Ask people you trust to help you grow and share your information with their networks. Word of mouth, personal recommendations and testimonials are powerful marketing tactics to increase awareness with new customers. This not only diversifies your contacts, but by reaching out to each new person and asking for their email address, you’re also building a subscriber list.
Create a Blog
Now that you’re growing your email list, the next step is to create valuable click-worthy content to keep your followers coming back and engage new ones. Everyone is looking for a solution to a problem, a better way of doing things, information that makes life a little more interesting and/or easier. A simple place to begin is with a blog as part of your website. Write a piece on a regular basis that provides valuable information for which your customers don’t have dig. I’ll be talking more specifically about blog writing later this year. For now:
- Outline goals you want to accomplish with your blog
- Determine who you want to talk to and why (this is known as your target audience)
- Define topic ideas
- Create a content calendar for a consistent cadence of information
- Blog away (and rework based on feedback)
Get the Word Out
Share your content on social media channels. According to statista 4.2 billion people globally are currently active on social media. This number is predicted to climb to about 3.4 billion monthly users by 2023. That’s a big pool from which to draw followers. Do your homework to determine the best platform for you and your business. Research shows Facebook is the number one social media channel, but it may not be best for your target audience. Make sure you know where your target audience resides.
You now have a following and people love your content. They can’t wait to read your next blog, attend your next event and are looking for the next big thing you’re going to create. You’ve hooked your audience on your idea and knowledge, bring home with a product or service announcement packaged with your valuable and interesting blogs.
Conclusion
As seen, before setting up a website, hiring an agency to do ads, or even the first social media post, a startup needs to be clear about its brand strategy. This strategy informs all marketing and messaging efforts. A brand strategy document helps to craft messages in the right tone and consistently so. The result is attraction of the right clientele, recognition, trust, and multiplication of the financial value of the startup. It’s a painful and arduous process but totally worth it for any startup.
If you need help developing your brand or deliverables once your brand has been defined, contact Gray Matter Marketing for help to move you to the next step in your startup journey.
https://digitalagencynetwork.com/top-6-email-marketing-strategies-for-startups/
https://www.statista.com/topics/1164/social-networks