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Beyond The Marketing Message

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This week someone asked me the question: 'How does an Audio Logo
differ from a meme, from a sizzler, from a tagline?' Here's my
definition of these terms.


Additional Article Information:
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1173 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-05-17 10:00:00

Written By:     Robert Middleton
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Beyond The Marketing Message
Copyright (c) 2007 Robert Middleton
Action Plan Marketing
http://www.ActionPlan.com



This week someone asked me the question: "How does an Audio Logo
differ from a meme, from a sizzler, from a tagline?"

Here's my definition of these terms.

Audio Logo

An Audio Logo is a problem-oriented, attention-getting statement
that you use when someone asks you what you do.

"I work with harried HR managers who have too many demands put
on them by upper management." An Audio Logo does not contain a
solution. It's about the problem. And it clearly targets its
audience. The purpose of an Audio Logo is to "hit a nerve" and
get a "that's for me" response. You follow it up with an
Ultimate Outcome (see below).

Meme

A meme is  any idea that can be expressed simply and communicated
easily. A meme is instanly understood. So an audio logo can be
expressed as a meme. It's a core idea, something that is so
clear that people get it right away. Read about memes in Geoff
Ayling's remarkable book "Rapid Response Advertising."

Sizzler

That's a budget steakhouse. I don't use this term in marketing
myself.

Tagline

The way I use this is as an addendum to a business name. Unlike
an Audio Logo, taglines usually work better if they are expressed
in a positive way:

 * Action Plan Marketing - Helping Independent Professionals
Attract More Clients. 

 * HR Solutions - Making HR Work 

 * Nike - Just Do It

A good tagline is a meme. A bad tagline is not a meme. Also an
important term I use:

Ultimate Outcome

This is what a client actually gets as a result of using your
service. It's the mirror image of the Audio Logo and it's very
close to the tagline, only even more results-oriented. It's the
answer to the question: "If I work with you, what will I really
get?"

And the answer had better be a bottom-line result they really
want, or you've missed the mark: "We help you attract all the
clients you'll ever need." "We help HR managers get the
recognition and resources they need to do a brilliant job."

With all of these, the key is making sure the idea connects with
your potential client. They all need to answer the question:
"What's in it for me?"

Great ones are very compelling. A Tagline, Audio Logo, Ultimate
Outcome, etc. all express the heart of your marketing message.

They are not just clever throwaway lines, They really mean what
you stand for. They are what you deliver. There's a whole value
system and philosophy behind them. So you have to go beyond
clever words.

You also have to be careful about obscure marketing messages.
Ones that sound clever but really don't mean anything to anyone.
They are not memes and they are not good marketing.

If you hear or read a marketing message and the reaction is
"Huh?" then it probably missed the mark! A good one results in
more of an "Aha!" reaction. It speaks to a real need you have
and you instantly want to know more.

In developing your marketing messages, test people's reactions,
not their opinions. Does it result in a "Huh?" response or a
"Aha!" response?

What are the biggest mistakes people make with marketing
messages?

1. They are all about process, not solutions: "We prepare your
taxes with the X100 auditing protocol." Sorry, but nobody really
cares.

2. They are just too general: "Profitability and productivity
will increase." Ho hum. What else is new?

3. They are unbelievable: "Your profits will increase faster in
one month than they have in the past twelve." Good if you can
really deliver. But you'd better prove it or lose all your
credibility.

4. They are too convoluted: "Our management approach utilizes an
effective strategy that optimizes ten key factors in the
throughput of primary marketing initiatives with bottom line
measurability." Say what???!!!###

So just speak English. Tell what your clients get. Don't be
afraid to be bold, but make sure the message is above all clear,
meaningful and interesting. That will draw prospects closer,
wanting to know more.

But you also have to remember that your marketing message isn't
everything.

I keep talking about the game of "Marketing Ball" where people
are expecting the Audio Logo to literally win the game for them.

Admit it. You don't just want to get to first base with an Audio
Logo, you want to hit a home run! When you deliver your perfectly
crafted Audio Logo, you want people to say: "WOW!!! that's what
I've been looking for all my life! I have half a million dollars
to spend on this. Is that enough?"

Get real!

You should be thrilled if your Audio Logo gets you onto first
base, and generates some sincere interest. that's a great start,
and that's real.

What's even more important is everything that stands behind the
message - the actual Ultimate Outcome you really deliver and the
Experience of delivering it.

Look, if you produce extraordinary results for clients and they
love you and you love working with them making that difference
and it's a passion for you, I promise that it won't be hard to
deliver your Audio Logo and other messages that get through, that
grab attention and get interest.

"YOU" as a complete brand need to be authentic, need to be the
real deal in order to take anything past first base. If it's all
about the perfect phrase, the perfect follow-up, the perfect
article, the perfect whatever, you're missing the point.

I recommend everyone read Tom Asacker's gem of a book, "A Clear
Eye for Branding." I think he brings this point home very well.
He emphasizes that there are no perfect marketing techniques. The
thing you want to put more focus on are the feelings, experience
and results that clients get when they work with you.

Another way of saying it is "The message is YOU." Everything
you say, your Audio Logo, the questions you ask, your
authenticity, your web page, your eZine all need to shout out the
message that you have something great to offer, something
extraordinary.

This takes more work than crafting a perfect Audio Logo, it's
crafting a perfect brand, a perfect business that hits the mark
every single time you communicate with, and interact with, your
prospects and clients.

It's easy to identify companies who do this well (although they
are few and far between). Apple comes close; Nordstrom is great
at it; Hertz is pretty darn good. Certain restaurants you go to
have it. They all have a congruent brand that is way beyond the
marketing message. As a result they are enormously successful.

So, in crafting your Audio Logo and Tagline and Ultimate Outcome,
think about all of this stuff. What do you really stand for? What
are you going to deliver? What does it mean to the client? How
will they be better off after working with you? How will they
feel working with you?

Then your marketing messages will go beyond the words, beyond the
sound bite, beyond anything you can imagine.




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Robert Middleton, the owner of Action Plan Marketing, has been 
helping Independent Professionals be better marketers since 
1984. On his web site http://www.ActionPlan.com find valuable
resources, products and programs for attracting more clients. 
Get a free copy of his Marketing Plan Sart-Up Kit.



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