What Should You Do? Experience the Brand or Brand the Experience ?
Life is all about change. And business life is no different. In the beginning we had CRM which was all about extracting profits by managing customers. As business got smarter, it came to relaise that customers expected something more in return for their hard-earned cash. They expected decent products, at fair prices and the heart of the matter, they expected support over the end-to-end ownership experience. So Customer Experience Management (CEM) was born. And almost inevitably, a whole host of business books about CEM too.
Read through the books on CEM and you will find two different camps. The first, populated mostly by branding types, says that the customer experience should allow customers to experience the brand. That the brand comes first and that the customer experience should revolve around it. The other, populated by customer service and consulting types, says that the experience should be continuously improved so that it becomes a real brand in its own right. A brand fit for real customers. That the customer comes first and the customer experience should revolve around them.
Which one is the best approach? Experiencing the Brand? Or Branding the Experience?
To answer that question, let's step back to look at what a brand actually is. Contrary to the opinion of the mighty marketing industry, a brand is not a company's marketing communications. They may help create category need, awareness, even interest in a product, but that is not the same as a brand. The iconic marketer Tom Asacker has what is perhaps the best definition of a brand in his book A Clear Eye for Branding . He says , that a brand is "an expectation of something or someone delivering a certain feeling by way of an experience". In other words, brands are the results of experiences that you have. They exist primarily in the hearts and minds of customers. Not in the communications of marketers. This is what CEM is really all about. The customer experience is the brand. The real brand. The one that evokes strong feelings in the customer. The brand is not the experience.
Some marketers have finally got the message. People like P&G's CEO AG Lafley who stunned the October 2006 meeting of the Association of National Advertisers by imploring marketers to Just Let Go of brands and let customers take charge. This was quickly followed by Time Magazine declaring YOU, the customer as person of the year and by Advertising Age declaring the Consumer as agency of the year. If P&G, Time Magazine and Advertising Age recognise that the customer is in charge and that their experience with their products is the brand, isn’t it time that you did too?
What do you think? Should you experience the brand? Or should you brand the real experience?
Post a comment and get the conversation going.
Graham Hill
Independent CRM Consultant
Interim CRM Manager
PS. Here are the best books on CEM and the consultancies that sit behind them These are the ones I use in my own CEM consulting and interim work with clients:
Bernd Schmitt
1. Experiential Marketing
2. Customer Experience Management
The Ex Group
Colin Shaw
1. Building Great Customer Experiences
2. Revolutionise Youe Customer Experience
3. The DNA of Customer Experience
Beyond Philosophy
Lou Carbone
Clued In: How to Keep Customers Coming Back Again and Again
Experience Engineering
Carbone also works with IBM too.
Shaun Smith & Joe Wheeler
1. Uncommon Practice
2. Managing the Customer Experience
3. See. Feel. Think. Do.
(Smith) Shaun Smith + Co
(Wheeler) The Forum Corporation
Michael Dunn
Building the Brand-Driven Business
Prophet
There are other, newer books too, but they either just repeat the same stuff less well, or are simply confused. These books are by far and away the best.
9 comments »
Vandana Ahuja
Brand the experience as per customer taste
An interesting anecdote here from "Customer Centred Brand Management" at Harvard Business Online....
A case of Branding to meet customer expectations- i understand this as a case of Branding the experience to suit the customer tastes....
"
Let’s take an example from the entertainment world, courtesy of songwriter and performer George Clinton. Known as one of the founders of funk, Clinton in the 1970s sought the attention of two different segments of record buyers—mainstream listeners, who liked vocal soul music with horns, and progressive listeners, who liked harder-edged funk. Clinton knew that his band was accomplished enough to play both kinds of music, but he realized that alternating between the styles would muddy the band’s image and serve neither audience well. The solution was simple. The same group of musicians, essentially, recorded and performed under two different band names: Parliament, when the music was aimed at popular tastes, and Funkadelic, when it was edgier. Both bands were very successful, even though some Parliament fans would never listen to Funkadelic and vice versa. The point is that Clinton did not try to make his original brand a big tent by stretching it to accommodate the tastes of very different markets. His branding reflected his customers’ identities instead of his band members’. "
Daryl Choy
Experience the eXperience
Brand is the totality of experience across every touchpoint.
It does not matter whether the firm brands the experience for the customer to experience, or the firm helps the customer experience the brand.
What matters most is both the firm and the customer should experience the experience together in order to deliver a win-win experience, just like love.
Daryl Choy, the founder of Touchpoint eXperience Management, helps firms make a difference at every touchpoint. Choy can be reached at wisdomboom.blogspot.com.
Daryl Choy
Of the Customer, By the Customer, For the Customer
Graham
But then if the brand is of the customer, by the customer, and for the customer in the first place, building the experience around the brand is the same as around the customer.
Daryl Choy, the founder of Touchpoint eXperience Management, helps firms make a difference at every touchpoint. Choy can be reached at wisdomboom.blogspot.com.
Daryl Choy
That's Why
Graham
You've said it right. It's because most brands are for companies which really shouldn't be, that's why they need to be constantly reminded that brand should be of the customer, by the customer, and for the customer.
If every firm got it right, then there needn't have any books on branding.
Daryl Choy, the founder of Touchpoint eXperience Management, helps firms make a difference at every touchpoint. Choy can be reached at wisdomboom.blogspot.com.
Daryl Choy
More Good Books on Experience
Antonella Caru and Bernard Cova
Consuming Experience
Routledge
Max Lenderman
Experience the Message: How Experiential Marketing is Changing The Brand World
Carroll & Graf
Daryl Choy, the founder of Touchpoint eXperience Management, helps firms make a difference at every touchpoint. Choy can be reached at wisdomboom.blogspot.com.
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