Marketing Notes for Entrepreneurs
Your brand doesn't have to sound identical everywhere to be consistent. When it does, it usually stops connecting. The most consistent brands aren't the ones with a locked-down tone guide. They're the ones that know exactly what's allowed to change. This episode uses a single extended analogy, a family Italian restaurant three generations deep, to show how the same brand can sound completely different depending on who's talking, who they're talking to, and what room they're in. The uncle drawing in the neighborhood crowd sounds nothing like the cousin pulling in his friends. But both are protecting the same recipe. The distinction between what has to stay constant and what's allowed to flex is the difference between a brand that connects everywhere and one that struggles to be visible. Topics covered: * Why brand voice consistency is applied at the wrong level in most businesses * The difference between the recipe and the delivery, and why confusing them breaks every channel at once * What the uncle and the cousin can teach you about multichannel marketing voice * How Mailchimp ran three completely different rooms for two decades, and what Intuit actually paid $12 billion for * Three diagnostic questions to tell whether your recipe is working across every room your business shows up in If you can answer those three questions honestly, you'll know whether your brand is protecting the right thing, or whether the rooms have drifted so far from the kitchen that nobody can recognize the aromas anymore. Resources mentioned: * Brand Therapy diagnostic: greyleafmedia.com/diagnostic [https://greyleafmedia.com/diagnostic]
19 episodes
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