Five Ways to Promote Your Unique Business Identity
by Brett Krkosska



Where's the Beef?

These words became a national catch phrase in the mid 1980's and 
catapulted the Wendy's hamburger chain into the limelight as a 
major player in fast food sales.

Wendy's credits the "Where's the Beef" ad campaign with a 31% 
jump in sales and a 24% boost in year-end profits.

Not bad for a campaign built on a three-word ad slogan.

Granted, you may not have the budget to build a brand awareness 
campaign as Wendy's did, but you certainly should practice 
advertising strategies that are built around your own unique 
business identity.

Identify Your Uniqueness

If you haven't yet put a finger on the distinct quality that 
sets your business apart from your competition, then you need 
to get busy. You only need one quality. Just one. 

This unique quality that sets you apart from the herd is your 
brand. It is the essence - the fabric - that runs through your 
operation. It speaks to consumers instantly about the nature of 
your service or product, your reputation, your commitment, your 
uniqueness.

Once identified, you must be able to clearly communicate your 
brand to consumers. There are two easily recognizable ways to do 
this: with your logo and tagline.

A branded business has a memorable logo. A straight-forward 
example is Ford's blue oval, while a more abstract example is 
the Nike checkmark. Your logo is the visual component of your 
brand. 

The next component is a written or verbal one. It is referred 
to as your tagline, and it reflects the exact position you are 
assuming in relation to your customer, your product, and your 
competitors. Specifically, it clearly defines the quality which 
differentiates your business from competitors while extolling 
the benefit your customer will enjoy.

Coca Cola's statement of being 'The Real Thing' is a classic 
example of positioning in relation to a competitor. Clearly, if 
they're the real thing - the original - then the other guy isn't. 
But does this mean anything to consumers? The benefit to the 
customer is kind of murky.

For the small business owner it's better to go with a more
narrowly defined tagline that clearly denotes uniqueness. The 
sandwich shop Quizno's exemplifies this with their tagline 
'Oven Toasted Tastes Better'.

Five Ways to Promote Your Unique Identity

Your logo and tagline are valuable property. Make them a visible 
thread that runs through all your promotions. Here are five great 
ways to get your brand name out there in front of consumers:

1. Give Away Something People Will Expose To Others

Instead of just giving away a freebie that has a one-time use, 
provide a valuable service or product that will get used or 
seen by other people. I use this strategy by providing free 
newsletter templates. At the bottom of the templates you'll find 
my brand. It's great exposure and a wonderful traffic-generating 
tool.

Free eBooks, free email, free websites, free pens, free t-shirts, 
free baseball caps... all these are great examples of things 
people use and expose to others. Take a good look at your own 
products and services. What can you give away?

2. Encourage Interactivity 

We are social creatures. Everyone likes to be included - to have 
the opportunity to put in their 2 cents worth. Encourage people 
to get involved with your business. Invite questions, ask for 
feedback, run a contest, sponsor teleclasses or chat sessions, 
or moderate a discussion board. For every person you make a 
connection with, you have created the opportunity to ignite a 
word-of-mouth campaign that stretches through everyone they know.

Take a peek at Pepsi.com for a look at brand marketing through 
interactivity. On their home page they are actively recruiting 
every carbonated beverage drinker on the planet to "make a 
difference" and become a Pepsi Advisor. 

Strawberry/Kiwi Pepsi. What do you think? Pssst... tell your 
friends!

3. Brand Your Digital and Print Communications

If you type it, write it, or touch it... brand it. If 
you're within breathing distance of it - try to brand it. 
Leave evidence of your unique business identity everywhere 
you can. Your website, all your outgoing postal mail, and all 
electronic mail should include your business name or logo, your 
tagline, email address, website URL, phone number, and mailing 
address. And a handy supply of business cards is a must any time 
you leave the office. 

4. Give Away Your Knowledge

Writing articles and making them available for reprint is an 
especially powerful method of spreading your name. Published 
articles often remain in the public eye for years. I have dozens 
of articles on numerous sites, all of them tirelessly promoting 
my business without any effort on my part. One article in 
particular that was published in Success Digest over 3 years ago 
still brings in traffic to this day. 

5. Make it Easy For Others To Toot Your Horn

Word-of-mouth referrals are the best kind of exposure you can 
get. There's nothing more powerful than a personal endorsement 
from a satisfied customer. Make it easy for people to tell their 
friends and family about your product or service. Rarely a day 
goes by on my site that someone hasn't emailed a friend using my 
handy online referral form. This is a branding tool that every 
business should employ.

In the end, the name of the game is repeatedly exposing 
consumers to your unique business identity - your brand. 
The above strategies are viral marketing tools in that they
are far-reaching and long-lasting, and that's a great
combination for long term business success.

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Brett Krkosska is a freelance writer and syndicated columnist. 
He is the owner and founder of http://HomeBizTools.com, an
idea center for small/home-based business owners. Free 
subscription to his ezine, Straight Talk, available at:
mailto:enews@homebiztools.com
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