After struggling a great deal with direction for where we want to go and what we want to accomplish with this blog, I think where I really want to dig in is two areas: conversations and branding. Logic suggests that it would be best to start with branding, since it’s hard to have a conversation about your business if you don’t really know what business you’re in – right?
So, today we will kick off with branding for small business and we are going to start from the beginning, because if your small business has been around for a while, it probably needs a brand refresh for the digital age. There are enormous advantages out there to small businesses that re-align their brand to who they really are and how customers/clients can expect to be treated, and those advantages shine their brightest when it comes to marketing your brand through social media.
Before we can market, we need to know what product/service we are selling. So, where do we start?
What Business are You in?
What do you do? What benefit do your customers receive from your company?
I read an article recently that quoted Theodore Levitt (Marketing Myopia) which discussed that in the 20th century, railroads lost out to air travel because they thought they were in the railroad business when instead they were actually in the transportation business of moving people and goods from point A to point B. Frankly, you see this all time. You can see it happening right now in the movie industry, which is myopically focusing on the idea that they are in the DVD distribution industry when they are actually in the entertainment industry. When your company focuses on the wrong parts of what you do, customers notice because attention to the real business slacks.
Knowing what business you are in is the #1 element to branding. What do you really do for your customers?
- Get their car running again?
- Prepare meals for them?
- Provide them with tools?
What you ultimately do is solve a problem for them. Your customer needs lunch; your food service business provides it for them. A guy needs a new tire and you solve his transportation problem and get him back on the road. When you realize what business you are really in, it opens up all kinds of opportunities for solving your customers’ problems.
What problem does your business solve?
What benefits does your business provide to the customer?
One of our clients in the beauty industry recently realized that he isn’t in the Beauty Industry, he’s in the business of making people feel better about themselves. When you change up your direction like that, now you’ve got something to market. Market the benefit to the customer – because that’s really what the customer is interested in.
The benefit you provide is the business you are in.

