
How To Building Your Brand
Date: Saturday, March 15 @ 00:00:00 PDT Topic: Business
Whether it’s your product, service or your own name, you’ve
got to build a brand and stay on a consistent message. Eventually, your brand
will come to represent everything you stand for, and stand behind, and could
mean your success or your kiss of death.
So, you get up in the morning and think to yourself about
those “giants” in your field and wonder how in the world you are going to make
an impact with your brand. The recipe is simple and most of the time, should
work well if you use lots of elbow grease, donkeywork, persistence, and
quality. Let me give you the example again of my fledgling company in 1991.
At the time of its founding, no one knew the name Victoria
Paper nor had any inkling that the company was established. Many knew me personally, through the years of having worked for
industry leaders and delivering the best and most reliable information as well
as the most interesting and innovative products. I had built a brand around my
name, despite the fact that I worked for businesses that had been anchors in
the paper field. Think about this, if you do not have your own establishment,
because brand building is not mutually exclusive with business ownership.
That tradition of excellence in service and product sourcing
followed me in my new venture, and allowed me to knock on prestigious doors to
ask for the order. Though Aimée Kligman was the brand at the very time, I was
trying to establish the Victoria Paper name in
the hope that the loyalty I had built with my customer base would be a fairly
easy transition.
Stick your Nose Out a
Little Further
In the process of building your brand, you will have to go
beyond the safe boundaries set by your particular industry paradigms. You will
also have to solicit business from those who may have their loyalties elsewhere. This is the hard part, but if you can
persuade one in five, you are doing well. Remember that an essential part of
building the brand is having your name, or your company’s name on people’s lips
when the subject of your merchandise and/or service is on the table. As an
example, I was particularly good at finding “off-the-wall” products, even
though they represented a fraction of my business. However, build and play up
an unusual feature of your offering that will differentiate you from the “next
guy”.
Believe in the “Six
Degrees of Separation” mantra
More often than not, I found this scenario repeating itself
ad infinitum in our 16 years in business. Even if you think that “X” will never
be a customer, or an aficionado of your brand, “X” eventually turns out to be
one of your customer’s uncles, gurus, or gym buddies. Presenting the brand to “X” may take some
time and effort that you may deem a waste of time, and it may very well turn
out to be that way, however, too often it turns out that in a matter of months,
“X” suddenly moves from # 500 on your list to the top 10.
If you think branding yourself is difficult, just think about this: 10
years ago, if anyone said "google" you'd probably giggle, right?
About The Author
Aimée
Kligman, née Dassa, is owner of Victoria Paper Company and is living
and working in Queens, New York. She has been her industry's expert on
the subject of handmade papers for the last thirty years. She has
served with publicly traded companies as a consultant in helping them
launch new paper lines and has developed paper websites for her company
as well as her customers. She has a daughter who practices law in New
York as well. She is the creator of Women's Lens, a very popular blog with Jewish readers. She is an avid traveler and a linguist.
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