Posts Tagged ‘differentiate’

The Importance of Packaging to the Brand Experience

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

When you think about shopping at your favorite retailer, what things move you about the experience? Is it the way the staff treats you? The products they sell? What about the way your purchases are packaged?

In writing a new On Hold Marketing script for a client who specializes in retail packaging, appropriately named Packaging Specialties, it struck me that packaging is an essential component of the brand’s value and an intrinsic part of a shopper’s experience.

Take Tiffany & Co. for example. It doesn’t matter what’s in that light aqua colored box tied with the white satin-faced ribbon. You know instantly that it came from Tiffany & Co. and that it will be special. But what if their packaging was a plain white cotton-filled box? There’s no magic in that presentation.

Think now about the purchases you’ve made recently. Have you purchased groceries? Clothing? Jewlery?

Your groceries were probably packaged in a generic two-handled plastic bag printed with the store’s logo and/or slogan, just like every other big-box store. There’s no magic in that generic plastic bag.

My favorite neighborhood grocer offers paper bags, and I don’t even recall if the bags feature the store’s logo.  ButI love those paper bags because they remind me of grocery shopping with my mom in the days before plastic became the popular, if not the only, option. Those simple brown bags reinforce the notion that Churchill’s is a simple neighborhood grocer– a place where you might not be able to get exotic spices, but where the cashier knows your name and remembers that you like apples. 

When you’re planning your packaging program, think about the nature of your business and the types of products you sell. Focus on how you want your customers to feel.

For luxe clothing boutiques, structured boxes, coordinating tissue and shiny Euro-totes with ribbon handles fit the packaging bill. Natural fiber bags printed with soy inks perfect for organic beauty stores.

These days, if you can think of it, someone can put your logo on it, so be thoughtful. Choose packaging that will make an impact and help your customers remember why they choose your store.

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You’re Unbelievable!

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

It was a great song in the early 90’s, and it could be a nice compliment, but it’s the last thing you want someone to say about your marketing message.

Marcia Yudkin agrees. In this morning’s “The Marketing Minute, ” she expresses her disbelief over an advertiser’s magazine ad copy.

“Oh, come on!”

That was my reaction on reading this, in the second paragraph of a full-page magazine ad: “[Company name] is virtually the only franchise brand committed to providing genuinely nutritious and delicious products.”

This couldn’t be true, I thought.

When you make a preposterous claim, it taints everything else you say. Am I willing to let that statement pass and believe that this company’s food is low-calorie, gluten-free and full of probiotics? No.

In marketing, it can be worse to say something unbelievable than something untrue.

If you have a claim that’s hard to believe, simply saying it doesn’t convince. You must either explain how it’s true, provide third-party proof or back-pedal it to a more believable statement.

Don’t expect weasel words like “virtually” to bail you out with a skeptical reader.

To check my instinctive response, before writing this piece I searched Google for “healthy food franchise.” As I’d suspected, dozens of companies show up in that category.

“One of America’s fastest growing new brands” (so they say) is rapidly shooting itself in the foot.

For starters, who places an ad with 2 paragraphs of copy? Very few people are going to read that. And by very few, I mean only people whose flights have been sitting on the tarmac for 3 hours. After they’ve run out of things to read and their cell phones have died.

Marcia’s right. When you say something that while true, may be hard to believe, you have to do more than say it. You have to PROVE it. State facts and verifiable truths and you will position your business as a trustworthy, reliable company. And instead of pigeon-holing yourself into the same category as your competitors, focus on a unique aspect of your business, and build your brand and marketing messages around that. It’s the best way to differentiate yourself.

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