2. Why the Revisit?
When we first published the Distributed Marketing Leadership Series guidebookâExploding
Brand Value at the Local Level,âwe had no expectation that it would quickly move to be one
of the all-time most downloaded content pieces from the Saepio library and sustain that
position for the next three years. But we probably shouldnât have been surprised.
Exploding brand value at the local level is the objective of every distributed marketer. And
itâs not an easy task.
In this DMLS Guidebook series, we both revisit and expand on the concepts laid out in the
first guidebook and the subsequent industry-specific versions of this popular paper. In this
revisit, we find that much has changed since our first publication date. However, we are
frustrated by how much remains the same.
In particular, we are frustrated by the fact that while expansive, innovative distributed
marketing platform solutions are now fully market-tested and proven, many corporate and
local marketers are still struggling with basic relationships.
Thus, we have chosen to provide an expanded take on the Five (now Six) Câs of the win-win
brand marketing strategy. Thereâs nothing inherently profound about these six Câs. Yet, they
so often remain overlooked or minimized and a less-than-optimal brand value results. We
trust this expanded view will provide valuable insights that will help you build the effectives
of your distributed marketing efforts and truly explode brand value for your organization at
the local level.
Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited 1
3. Introduction
Brand marketers invest billions of dollars every year to create an emotional connection
between their brand and the prospective customers of their branded products and services.
With media now fragmented and mobile connectivity, smart phone and tablet use now
mainstream, customers increasingly engage with the brand in ways outside the direct
control of the corporate marketer. Control of brand positioning, messaging and the building
of emotional connections with consumers is more challenging than it was just three years
ago. When a distributed marketing network is involved, even more challenges arise. But
alongside those challenges is a huge opportunity.
Unlike the marketer who has little or no help with brand messaging at the point of customer
engagement, the marketer with a distributed network has an army of brand warriors ready,
willing and able to help deliver and manage marketing messages. When trained, organized
and mobilized, this army of local marketers can explode brand value at the local level,
creating exponential value for the corporate investments in brand creation, positioning and
messaging.
Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited 2
4. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
Chapter One
Power of Brand in Local Buying Decisions
Brand matters more at the local market level than at the national or international level but it
is a symbiotic relationship. Itâs at the local level that brand messages become actions taken
by the customer or prospect. Actions in the form of product or service chosen. In money
spent. In loyalty sustained or lost.
Brand value must also often be shared at the local level. For some brands, such as a quick
service restaurant, the brand message is consistently and singularly delivered throughout
the interaction process.
For many marketers, the environment is less controlled. Take an organization that sells
through an authorized dealer network where the product or service brand must be shared
with the name of the store or service provider. Instead ofâYork Heating & Air Conditioningâ
as the primary brand, itâsâDaveâs Heating & Coolingââ which sells the York brand as part of
its business. Dave needs York and York needs Dave; the brands must synergistically support
each other. Both brands matter because many local purchase decisions are made on trust
and the relationship to the brand.
Still others, such as a consumer packaged goods manufacturer, must share brand preference
with a separate branded conduit such as a retail or grocery chain. In such cases, the
consumerâs correct presumption that the manufacturerâs branded product is available or the
ability to search for a local retail outlet is key.
These same scenarios can be told a hundred different ways for a hundred different products
or services. In any local buying decision, two things matter:
1) The brand of the product or service
2) The relationship to the branded provider of the product or service
When these two entities work together, brand value can absolutely explode at the local
level. Even when the brand of the product or service and the brand of the local provider is
the same, the important interaction of the two elements still applies.
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5. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
ChapterTwo
How Connected Community Changes the Brand at the Local Level
In the first version ofâExploding Brand Value at the Local Level,âwe titled this chapterâHow
Community Changes the Brand at the Local Level.â Today, we see it as being more about
connectivity than community. Why? First, socialâcommunityâis now a real-time term. And
second, local search has become much more prevalent.
Certainly, community remains highly impactful. Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Pinterest,
LinkedIn, blogs and other online communities continue to connect people in more unique
ways than ever before. On top of those, one-and-done communications such as SnapChat
and Instagram keep people connected.
Theseâcommunitiesâprovide the environment for outstanding brand endorsement. Most
marketers intuitively know this, but the Word of Mouth Marketing Association (WOMMA)
validates that 72 percent of consumers note that family members and friends provide a
great deal or fair amount of influence on a decision to use a company, brand or product.
Plus, 92 percent note they trust friends and family members more than any form of
advertising.
In the first release of this paper, we shared what was then an innovative story about how a
Facebook thread influenced a product purchase decision. Such stories obviously still exist,
but they are now the norm, not innovative. A social community that is always connected
through smart phones and other mobile devices simply provides a non-stop venue for
word-of-mouth brand messaging. Thatâs why community alone is too limiting of a term to
describe the explosive impact
Concurrently, community is no longer as pure as it once was. In-line advertising, corporate
social accounts, contextual advertising and local search, all create a blend paid content into
the word of mouth community stream. Wary consumers are adapting, and as with other
mediums before, are learning to tune ad messages out.
It is within this environment that successful branding must learn to thrive. And, both
corporate and local roles are key.
For years brand marketers have sought to create cults of dedicated followers who connect
their personal identity with a sense of belonging to a brand. As an example, look at motor-
cycle brands. Harley Davidson has absolutely created a persona, as has BMW an entirely
different one. Ever try to get a Harley guy to ride a Honda Gold Wing? Or a BMW guy to
switch to a Harley? Good luck with that. Itâs not just the product. Itâs the identity they want.
Some brands have also been able to develop an identity community around their brand at
a national or global level. Starbucks is an excellent example. Everyone knows someone who
will drive five miles past 15 coffee shops to get to a Starbucks. Part of the reason may be the
coffee, but most of it is the desire to be part of the Starbucksâidentity and community.
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6. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
In a third scenario, a corporate brand plays a credibility role and seeks an endorsement in
return. Take York, for example. It is unlikely that York could gain a mass following of brand
converts. On the other hand, as an authorized York dealer, Daveâs Heating & Cooling could.
The consumer can relate to Dave as the person who rushes over for an emergency and
shows up on time to service heating and cooling systems. Maybe Dave even provides value-
added advice on how to lower costs. York, however, does not surrender full control to Dave.
York must work through Dave so that his customers know that the unit that is keeping them
warm or cool with absolutely no problems at all is a York system. The social conversation
sought when a friend expresses HVAC issues of Facebook isâwe use Daveâs and he put in a
York system that just runs and runs and runs with no problems at all.â
Local is also critical in each of these scenarios:
âą A local dealership provides the bikes, introduces the riders and provides the
resources for a customer to sustain the personal cult identity.
âą Without Starbucks locations that present the aura and aroma of aâsuperior level of
coffee consumption,âeveryone returns to brewing at home.
âą WithoutâDaveâsâ, no one can buy, appreciate or promote York.
Finally, customers see and discuss just one brand. While their primary affiliations may be
different â with Daveâs over York, with Starbucks over the coffee shop location, and with
the personal identity of riding a Harley over any dealership â local or corporate ownership
of the consumer is primarily a concept in the marketersâminds. Messaging in any manner
other than a joint voice only serves to confuse the customer, who just may be the most
important marketer of all.
In a connected world, anyone who has a brand preference is part of a brand community.
Whether the relationship is active or passive, positive or negative, if itâs constant, then the
individual is part of the brand community. And by becoming part of the brand community
in todayâs environment, the person becomes part of the brand identity; like it or not, the
corporate marketer just added a team member.
With always-on connectivity, in the three short years since we first wroteâExploding Brand
Value at the Local Levelâ,âsocialâhas ceased to be a novel marketing opportunity and has
become part of everyday marketing life. As we stated earlier, itâs just old-fashioned word-
of-mouth marketing on steroids. But now the corporate manager of a distributed market-
ing network can work in tandem with local marketers to enable and grow brand identity
communities in ways never before imagined by simply creating brand identity communities
where they naturally exist â among users. This has really raised the stakes for all parties.
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7. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
1. For the corporate marketer whose business model results in control of the brand
experience from start to finish, brand community should primarily be at the national
brand level with limited support at the local level. Quick-service restaurants (QSRs)
are a good example of this. Most customers likely donât care which Sonic location
they visit, as long as they can get the cherry limeade they are craving. It would be
frustrating if the only connection to that limeade was through the closest Sonic.
2. For the corporate marketer who shares brand identity, like the York dealer example,
how the brand identity community should be engaged depends on a couple of key
factors:
âą First, the stronger the emotional connection with the brand, the more
direct involvement the corporate marketer should have. Harley Davidson
wants to engage the consumer directly because of the consumerâs strong
connection to the brand.
âą Second, corporate marketers need to recognize when the local dealer has
the stronger emotional connection. The York dealer is an example of this. In
these instances, York will be most successful in their efforts if they focus
on making it easy for Daveâs Heating & Cooling to become a community
resource. Support from the corporate level makes it easier for Dave to
succeed.
3. Finally, there are many cases where both corporate and local marketers will want
engage the consumer. Starbucks provides a good example of this scenario. While
Starbucks wants customers to stay connected to ensure repeat purchases, the local
Starbucks wants to be sure that purchase happens within their community.
Simply stated, developing and sustaining these local communities is critical to exploding
brand value at the local level.
Now, a word about local search marketingâŠ
In the early days of social communities (meaning three years ago!), fostering a strong social
presence and becoming part of the word of mouth community was a fairly singular goal.
With an always on, always connected customer community, however, proactive marketing
messaging must also be part of the mix. Nowhere is this more important than with local
search.
While this is discussed in more detail in a later piece in this series, always-on connectivity has
doubled the proverbialâfirst moments of truthâandâsecond moments of truthâto include
aâzero moment of truthâand aâlocal moment of truth.âAs a preview, there is little room for
marketing error today when a consumer is looking to make a purchase. With always on
connectivity, the window of time and the location at which a decision is made or influenced
is minutely small.
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8. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
When a consumer searches for a product or service, a corporate brand and a local represen-
tative of that brand MUST be instantly visible. This is the Moment of Truth for that purchase
decision and making a brand decision easy and a local ability to act on the brand preference
is an opportunity not to be missed. Content to guide the individual to a purchase and a map
to guide them to the purchase location are essential.
Additionally, through fostering a strong brand preference, corporate and local marketers
must do everything in their power to ensure that a customer NEVER engages search when
seeking their product or service. Too much is at stake and too many competitors are looking
for such opportunities.
Again, creating a brand community that messages your brand is more important than ever.
So to is being visible when an always-connected community takes action.
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9. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
ChapterThree
Whoâs in the Driverâs Seat?
A long-standing challenge for any manager of a distributed marketing network is who is in
the driverâs seat. The brand may own the consumerâs mind, but the local marketer owns the
customer. In reality, both have a pretty firm grip on the steering wheel. Yet to maximize the
brand impact in the local market, itâs important that both parties have a good understanding
of the roles they should play to optimize effectiveness.
Often, the termâlocal marketingâhas been used to group a lot of activities into a single
collection. On closer examination, though, consumer interactions vary widely at different
local marketing organizations and shouldnât all be considered the same. At Saepio, weâve
observed that similar characteristics exist between organizations, which are not necessarily
based on the industry they are in, whether they sell a service or product or other traditional
classifications. Rather, the similarities between organizations are based on how they engage
customers.
Take food service as an example. Two Saepio clients within this industry vertical are
McDonaldâs and Great Harvest Bread Company. Both seek to gain a share of their customersâ
dining or food budgets but each approaches marketing very differently. A local McDonaldâs
leans heavily on national branding and advertising as well as location to drive business.
Great Harvest, on the other hand, seeks to create a loyal local customer community without
the benefit of heavy corporate brand advertising.
While one could no doubt slice segmentations even further, thorough review of client-use
patterns confirm that seven unique market segments exist within local or distributed
marketing scenarios.
âą Loyalty Frequent â where frequent purchases occur and loyalty is key
âą Loyalty Infrequent â where infrequent but high dollar purchases occur
âą Convenient Location â where the brand experience is the same at all locations
âą Retail Assist â where the corporate brand lives inside another entityâs brand location
âą Community Development â where mobilizing consistent communication is the key
need
âą Sales Assist â where sales professionals primarily control the conversation
âą Controlled Communications â where regulatory control of communication is paramount
As a result, very different interactions between corporate and local marketers are needed.
For brand value to explode at the local level, understanding and building a blended corpo-
rate and local marketing strategy through the perspective of the correct role is important.
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10. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
Chapter Four
The Six Câs of aWin-Win Brand Strategy
Managers of distributed marketing networks have long been challenged with keeping
corporate and local marketing messages aligned and working together. At the root of the
challenge is the fact that there are often legitimate reasons for a disconnect.
Corporate marketers are very brand focused. Local marketers are all about driving traffic
and making sales. These two perspectives can easily collide, with the result being less-than-
effective marketing. But it doesnât have to be that way. Employing sixâCâsâto the distributed
marketing process can go a long way towards making a brand explode at the local level.
Common Objectives
While it may seem logical that one would begin any marketing effort with common objec-
tives already established, Saepio client service managers too often observe the opposite.
Corporate marketers and local marketers simply think differently, each protecting their own
turf. They do so for a good reason. The corporate marketer who manages the distributed
marketing network is the keeper of the brand and brand messages for that network.
S/he must constantly focus on corporate brand objectives and deliver those to â and then
through â the local marketer. The local marketer is often not on that same page. Store traffic
and a ringing register is paramount and, if the marketing message isnât perceived as focused
solely on generating sales, the local individual likely isnât interested. They like the support
but insist that it be relevant to their operation.
These different perspectives, however, in no way preclude the formation of common objec-
tives. They just require the corporate marketer to, as Stephen Covey would say in his best-
selling book,âseek first to understand and then to be understood.âListening to the needs
of the local marketer and gleaning knowledge from the school of practical application via
those on the front lines, enables the corporate marketer to identify common objectives and
create campaigns that truly support them.
Consistent Messages
Understanding the importance of delivering consistent messages across the entire
distributed marketing network is easy for many marketers. Doing so is more challenging.
Consistent messaging to consumers begins with effective resources for local marketers.
While a local marketer will often want to localize a national message, s/he also frequently
wants to leverage the power of the national brand for local benefit by somehow altering
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11. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
the corporate message to make it more applicable for his or her local environment. It is key
for the corporate marketer to provide resources that ensure consistent messaging but allow
some local flexibility. Distributed marketing management systems that include marketing
asset management technology are an excellent starting point. These solutions provide all
of the marketing resources the local marketer needs in one, easy-to-access location. As long
as the corporate marketer is diligent in keeping the library of resources current, messages
across the distributed marketing network will stay consistent.
Tip: When evaluating such systems, make sure to consider systems that allow for auto
updating of marketing messages that are contained in materials previously created by local
marketers.
Coordinated Message Delivery
Just as consistent messaging is important, coordinated timing of delivery is also critical.
When a local marketerâs messages are timed to coordinate with national messages,
investments in marketing can be optimized.
At the heart of successful coordination is successful communication. And that means
two-way communication. Often coordinated message delivery is dependent upon one way
communication and a great deal of hope. In this scenario, corporate develops a merchandis-
ing kit containing marketing materials and sends it to the local market with the hope that it
will be used properly, if at all.
Local marketers want to be successful and want the benefits of the resources the corporate
marketer provides, but their worlds donât revolve around what corporate marketing is doing.
They are focused on what they can do to drive traffic and view their corporate partners as a
helpful ingredient of that plan. When the marketing kit arrives for a coordinated campaign,
it may or may not receive the priority the corporate marketer seeks. What happens is depen-
dent upon how effective communication has been up to that point.
While it takes more work, engaging communication between corporate and local market-
ers is vital to coordinated message delivery. When local marketers know which message is
recommended and why; whatâs in it for them; and what is expected as part of a campaign,
coordinated messaging naturally follows.
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13. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
âą Communicate whatâs important to your brand by first listening to how itâs important
to your local marketer.
âą Communicate what you need them to do by first listening to what they need you to
do.
âą Communicate what resources youâve made available to them by listening to what
they need those resources to be.
There they are. The Six Câs for Making Your Brand Explode at the Local Level. Thereâs nothing
magical about them, but they are so important; so much so that Saepio has dedicated a
booklet to each of them as weâve revisitedâExploding Brand Value at the Local Level.â
Weâd love to call them profound, but theyâre simply applications of common sense. Yet too
few apply them well, and as a result, too few see their brand really explode at the local level.
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14. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
Taking Action - Synergy that Explodes BrandValue
A lot of factors combine to create an organization where brand value explodes at the local
level. Many programs have been tried through the years. Carrots to entice compliance.
Sticks to enforce it. These approaches seldom work.
The programs that do work are those developed by individuals who truly understand and
foster a meaningful partnership between corporate and local marketers. A partnership
where goals and messages align, where programs are logical and where each side fully
participates in design and execution.
Distributed Marketing Management systems that enable these processes are the corner-
stone to success. Often called Marketing Asset Management or Local Marketing Manage-
ment technology, these platforms help organize and execute every aspect of a local market-
ing program. While it is possible to run a program that maximizes brand value without such
a system, it is highly unlikely, exponentially more difficult and normally much more
expensive. Look for a system that delivers much more than just ad builder functionality.
Seek instead a comprehensive platform such as Saepioâs MarketPort platform that helps
create a strong, logical synergy between you and your local marketers.
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15. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
EquallyYoked
Perhaps the best illustration for the optimal relationship for corporate and local marketers
comes from the world of pre-machinery agriculture. When oxen were used to plow the soil
or pull a wagon, it was important to choose two beasts of similar strength. Too much pull
from one versus the other and keeping a straight plow line was close to impossible.
Saepio encourages corporate and local marketers to seek a similar relationship to ensure
peak performance. Too much corporate and the local marketer tunes out. Too much local
and the corporate brand message is diluted. Donât give up until you find the perfect balance
for your organization.
Exploding brand value at the local level isnât necessarily easy but it is absolutely possible.
Saepio hopes this document series will provide insight to help your organization join those
whose local marketing programs are humming along.
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16. Exploding BrandValue at the Local Level Revisited
About Saepio
Saepio makes it easy for corporate and local marketers to build and run effective and
engaging all-channel marketing campaigns. Saepioâs powerful MarketPort marketing
platform starts with easy âŠ
âą Easy to Build and Run Cross-Channel Campaigns because everything â email,
landing pages, social, mobile, digital banner ads, signage, print ads, direct mail, and
much more â are all managed in a single, integrated digital marketing platform.
âą Easy to Maximize Brand Value at the Local Level because local and corporate
marketers share a single platform but experience the same platform differently based
on their roles. Brand control, speed to market, and content localization is all easily
accomplished whether messages are for local, national or global audiences and
corporate marketers can easily assign campaign tasks to local marketers.
âą Easy to Engage Customers with personalized, relevant messages because corporate
intelligence gleaned from CRM data, customer analytics, consumer actions and more
can determine what content is served when, where and how.
âą Easy to Automate Marketing Fulfillment because robust workflow enables every
cross channel customer touch point to happen automatically whether launched by
corporate marketing, initiated by a local marketer or triggered by a customerâs action.
This robust yet simplified approach to todayâs complex marketing challenges is in use at
hundreds of leading companies and organizations, including many of the worldâs most
powerful brands. It is transforming the way corporations focus and manage their marketing
efforts in a world that introduces new channels, new competitors, new regulations and new
opportunities at every turn.
Visit Saepio.com, email sales@saepio.com or call 877-468-7613 to learn more.
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