Friday, May 23, 2008

Your business in one sentence or less

Marketing folks and advertising salespeople will both tell you that you need to deliver your message to your customer a minimum of five times before the customer will act on your offer. What sometimes is missed in this discussion is that it needs to be the same message five times.

So, without boring your audience to tears with the repetition, how do you get space in the frontal lobe of their brain?

That's where a great tagline fits in.

A great tagline defines your business in one sentence or less. A great tagline is also arguably the most difficult part of developing your marketing strategy.

A great tagline has rhythm. It defines your business in a way your target customer can relate to. It also doesn't try to be all things to all people. And a great tagline immediately tells your customers "what's it in for me".

Burger King has one of the great taglines - Have it your way. If there was ever something that spoke to "what's in it for me", it's this one. (Pity they can't get their act together on their strategies...even a great tagline can't save you if you flip flop all over the place with your strategies.)

The value of a great tagline is in its ability to be on everything you do to market your business. It should be on your business cards, brochures, print ads, signage and...well, you get the idea. If your tagline is well done, then all these "hits" on your customer will help you develop space in their brain.

How do you get a great tagline and how do you know when it's great?

You can, of course, hire a professional. Writing great taglines is a serious skill. When you think about how many business owners can't describe their business in 30 seconds or less, you can imagine how hard it is to actually come up with something in one sentence or less.

Another option, and one of my favourites, is to have a tagline party. Silly? Yes, maybe. But I have found wonderful taglines evolve from many brains bouncing ideas around. Get some friends, customers or staff together and throw all ideas into play. No idea is too silly. From silly ideas come great taglines. After a couple hours of eating, drinking and making merry, pick two ideas and massage them into final examples. Then test each of them to find which one relates well with your customers.

I'm not saying a tagline party will work for everyone. And you should bounce your final ideas off a professional to make sure they are all the things you think they are. A professional can help you polish your tagline into a bright shining example of clever marketing.

Many business owners think that a tagline is only for the "big guys" but a great tagline is a lifeline for new and small businesses.

2 comments:

Sweet Crystal said...

Thanks for sharing. Is tagline same as company slogan?

Katherine Song
www.katherinesong.com

Wendy Moore-MacQueen said...

Thanks for your question Katherine!

In some cases, yes... tagline is the same as the company slogan. But in others, not so much.

The challenge is to develop the "your business in one sentence or less" with a definite 'what's in it for me' as opposed to many company slogans that are burdened by the internal mission and vision statements.

If your company 'slogan' is designed to define your company and its products in terms that will mean something to your customer and speaks to the uniqueness of your company and product - then you are probably on the right track.

Wendy