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How to Create a Brand Messaging Strategy

Free Comprehensive Guide

The Ultimate Guide to Creating a Brand Messaging Strategy

How to Make Your Audience Fall in Love with Your Product or Service

Do you have an incredible product or service, but struggle to convey its value or differentiators? If so, you're not alone. In fact, this is the most common challenge we hear from our clients...

"The copy on my brochure is completely flat, but as soon as my star salesperson gets in front of a prospect, everything suddenly clicks! They see the value in what we have to offer, when they couldn't before!"

Sound familiar? How about these?

  • “It is really hard describe my product or service in a way people understand.”
  • “My marketing messages aren't resonating with my audience.”
  • “I know my product or service is great, but I’m having trouble communicating it.”
  • “I don’t know which features of my product to focus on in my marketing materials.”

(That last one is a trick question -- you should be focusing more on benefits than features -- but more on that later.)

If you find yourself saying any of these, you need to sit down with your team and create a marketing messaging strategy for your brand. Luckily, that's exactly what this guide is going to teach you how to do.

 

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Messaging Strategy

Table of Contents

Click on any chapter to scroll directly to it.
Introduction "Wait, Why Do I Need a Messaging Strategy?"
Step 1 Choose Your Brand Strategy Style
Step 2 Identify Your Personas’ Decision-Making Styles
Step 3 Craft Decision-Making Style-Based Messaging
Step 4 Create Your Value Propositions
Step 5 Develop Key Messages for Personas & Products
Step 6 Present Your Ideas to the Group
Conclusion What Should You Do Next?

"Wait, Why Do I Need a Messaging Strategy?"

How to Create a Marketing Messaging Framework

Before we address the "why," let's start with the elephant in the room. Every business should have a marketing messaging framework. In fact, having a messaging strategy for your brand is non-negotiable.

To show you why, here's a question:

Have you ever seen little kids play soccer? (We're talking really little -- like 6 years old).

There is no structure, no precision, no strategy to their moves -- just chaos. Even the proud parents watching their enthusiastic, uniformed youngsters out on the field have to admit it pretty much just looks like a bunch of children running around in an area that happens to house a soccer ball and goals.

That is exactly what your marketing messaging will look like if you have no messaging strategy -- a bunch of inconsistent, half-baked ideas that don’t truly connect with each other or with your audience

Now, let’s contrast that with watching pros play soccer.

Watching pros is like watching gears in a finely tuned machine working in perfect harmony. All of the players are in-sync. They all work from the same playbook and each knows what the other is doing, or planning on doing next.

Similarly, if everyone in your organization is following the same playbook when it comes to marketing messaging, it will make a world of difference in your ability to win new business.

There will be continuity between different mediums or between different authors. The journey will flow seamlessly from marketing and sales, to customer service and delivery. Prospects will be able to easily see what key benefits they will get and how your product or service fits right in to relieve their pains.

A thoughtful messaging strategy will highlight your key differentiators (reasons why prospects should pick you over the competition), value propositions (what you can do for them), and detailed marketing messages you should use to win over your individual buyer personas.

In addition to making your product or service irresistible to prospective buyers, you'll see the following benefits within your own organization with the right messaging strategy in place:

  • No More Writer's Block for Your Marketers
    They won’t have to search for what to say or how to say it when asked about your product. They can just reference the playbook that is right in front of them.
  • Your Sales Reps Will Be More Effective
    With a cohesive messaging strategy for each of your different personas, sales can create easy-to-follow templates and scripts that will hit on all of the key points that matter to the different individuals they will be talking to.
  • Your Customer Service Will Improve
    Empowering those individuals who are responsible for delivering to customers with the knowledge of exactly how to position your product or service, will make customer service a breeze.
  • Disseminate Knowledge at Scale
    That will require additional testing to make sure it’s compatible with the rest of the website.
  • Create a Fool-proof Content Strategy
    Knowing exactly what each of your personas will want to see in order to make decisions gives you a clear and easy-to-follow content roadmap.
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How to Create a Marketing Messaging Framework

The best way to create a solid brand strategy and messaging framework is to treat it like a great recipe.

First:

Gather all those smart people in one room for a messaging workshop and try to pull information out of their brains -- your ingredients. You’ll want to make sure you’ve included sales leadership, executives or company owners, and product or service delivery leads. Basically, you want anyone who considers the company or the product it produces “their baby.”

recipie-intro-01

They should be able to talk at length about the offering, and ideally they should be the one’s who have a successful track record of getting people to buy.

 Jumpstart Your Messaging Strategy with Our Messaging Workshop Template

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Then:

Combine, refine, and distill that information into the first draft of a messaging matrix. (Don’t worry! We’ll show you what that looks like later!) From there, you’ll feed it back to the smart people and let them poke holes in it -- taste-testing. 

Once you’ve gathered all the feedback, you can revise and perfect that strategy into a finished product -- a new dish for your menu.

Step 1:

Choose Your Brand Strategy Style

Choose Your Brand Strategy Style

In our messaging workshops, the first place we always start is with brand strategy.

A brand strategy is different from your marketing strategy -- which defines your objectives and activities -- and is the foundation of your marketing and how you try to “sell” yourself.

There are four major types of brand strategies companies can follow.

Style 1: Arm Wrestling

Style 1: Arm Wrestling

In this style, your goal is to outsmart the market leader and beat them on their home turf. This works well where the market category is established, but there are a lot of players involved with no clear leader that's way ahead of the competition.

The classic example is Coke vs. Pepsi.

The two rival soda giants are very much alike. As a result, they're always neck-and-neck, competing for the most market share.

Advantage

Your target buyers already has a frame of reference, so it's not a big leap for them to get what you're offering to them. “Oh, I get it, what you're selling is like X.”

Risk

Do you have a lot of time and money? Good. That's what you're going to need to win with this strategy.

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Style 2: Big Fish, Small Pond

With this style, you want to focus on a small segment of an already existing market. For instance, you might create a niche for yourself, in order to cater to an underserved audience. This is particularly handy if there's a clear segment of the existing market, and the existing champion in that space is failing to address their specific needs.

fish%20in%20pond

Many marketing agencies, for example, adopt this strategy and market themselves as a specialist in providing services to a specific industry with unique needs. For instance, an IT consulting firm that only works with law firms.

Advantage

Again, your audience gets your product, because it's close to what's already out there for sale. On top of that, you're no longer trying to compete with the top dog in that general market category, since you're now trying to cater to a niche audience.

Risk

Here's the thing, though. That market leader could decide one day that they don't like you running off with that niche segment of the audience, so they start offering the same specialized services.

Style 3: Reframe the Market

Style 3: Reframing the Market

This style is simple. You take a market that already exists and redefine it in new terms. More specifically, you render the benefits previously highlighted by market leaders moot. Instead, your product or service is so innovative and advanced in a way unheard of before. Or, maybe the market itself has changed, in either needs or expectations.

Tesla and Apple made their killing by reframing the market.

Think about it. In the beginning, electric cars competed on a single feature -- the life of the battery. Then, Tesla walked through the proverbial doors and said, "Pfft! Battery life? Please. That should be assumed. Instead, we're going to talk about style. And experience. And what it means to drive a Tesla."

Tesla shifted the conversation and changed the game forever.

Tesla moved the conversation away from battery life and started talking about style.

Apple did the same thing.

"Computers should always have enough storage and boast high-speed performance. Who cares? With our products, it's about style. Our products are not only functional and top-of-the-line; they're works of art. They're a status symbol."

Advantage

In this category, what makes you different are your strengths. Not only that, they're irresistible to your audience, so they make the market leader yesterday's news.

Risk

Much like the big fish, small pond scenario, it's not always a great idea to rile up the market leader. They may wake up one morning and say, "That feature that makes our competition so different to our customers? Yeah, let's do that. Let's offer the same thing."

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Style 4: Change the Game

Style 4: Change the Game

You need to be very careful if you're considering this strategy. If there's a market category already for what you do, it won't work. You have to be the first. 

If you look around and see that you are -- and your strengths don't fit in other categories -- congratulations! You get to invent your own category. 

And we all know Uber changed the game.

That's because, before Uber, there was no such thing as a rideshare app. They literally invented it. And if you want to know if you've been successful with this strategy, wait to hear something like, "Man, they're the Uber of food delivery."

Advantage

You got to the top of the mountain first. You are the leader.

Risk

Not every idea is a good idea. So, ask yourself, "Is there really a need for my product or service?" Sometimes the reason a category doesn't exist is because it's not needed. 

And if you don't believe us, let's take a trip down memory lane, because history is littered with “innovative” product flops:

  • New Coke
  • The Facebook Phone
  • The Amazon Fire Phone
  • Google+
  • Crystal Pepsi
  • The DeLorean
  • Microsoft Zune

The other risk is that you need to get a head start with your strategy, because copy-cats will not be far behind. You have to establish yourself as the leader before someone else sees your great idea and then gets to the finish line faster.

And then you're the copy-cat.

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Differentiation vs. Disruption

Brands are always talking about how to differentiate themselves from competitors. But first, we need to talk about differentiation vs. disruption. The term “disruptor” is thrown around a lot, especially in the startup world. The idea behind it is that disruptors come in and “shake up” the market.

We want to encourage you to not think that way.

Peter Thiel says it best in his book Zero to One:

“You don’t want to be a disruptor, you want to be a leader.”

In grade school the term “disruptor” had a negative connotation. It was reserved for students who caused problems in class. As a business, the term should be no different.

Labeling yourself as a disruptor will only push others to think about how you compare to direct competitors, and highlight nitpick-y differences between you and those you are up against. Think instead about how you can be a leader and talk about what makes you amazing and unique instead of just what makes you different than that guy over there.

Instead of trying to disrupt the market, think about how you can be a leader.

If you think like a disrupter, you’ll end up looking like a game of Where’s Waldo.

Disrupter

You and your competitors all the look the same, and someone would be hard-pressed to pick you out of the crowd. If you think like a leader, you’ll end up standing where there is no crowd, and people find you with little effort at all.

This is how you should select your differentiators:

  • What do you do that nobody else can.
  • What do you offer that nobody else does.
  • What can you say about your company that no other company can say.

This is where the magic happens.

 

Step 2:

Identify Your Personas’ Decision-Making Styles

Identify Your Personas’ Decision-Making Styles

We’ve talked at length on the IMPACT blog about buyer personas, so we won’t rehash it here. We’ll just say that you must have your buyer personas in place before you do anything else.

Here are a few of our existing resources to help:

We also have a free buyer persona toolkit for inbound marketers that you can use to create your own.

Now comes our favorite part: breaking down decision-making styles. This is where the puzzle pieces start to come together.

There are four primary types of personalities, and each of them have four distinct decision-making styles. So, the next step in building your messaging strategy is to identify which type of decision-maker each of your personas really is.

decision making matrix

People make decisions across two different spectrums.

Looking at the diagram above, you can see on the X-axis is the spectrum between logical (heavily fact-based) and emotional (heavily feeling-based) decision-making. On the Y-axis is the spectrum between quick (makes decisions very quickly) and deliberate (makes decisions very slowly) decision-making.

Using the information below, assign a primary decision-making style to each of your personas.

The Competitive Decision-Maker

Individuals who fall in the top left quadrant tend to make decisions more quickly and make them based on facts and logic. This decision-making style aligns with Dominant DiSC personality type.

Competitive Personality Traits

  • Direct and decisive;
  • Prefer to lead rather than follow;
  • High self-confidence;
  • Risk takers and problem solvers;
  • Tend to be self-starters;
  • Business-like and power-oriented; and
  • Disciplined and fast-paced use of time.

The Spontaneous Decision-Maker

personality-2

Individuals who fall in the top right quadrant tend to make decisions quickly but make them based on “gut feeling” and intuition rather than facts or numbers. This decision-making style aligns with Influencer DiSC personality type.

The Spontaneous Decision-Maker

  • Enthusiastic, optimistic, talkative, persuasive, impulsive, and emotional;
  • Enjoys being the center of attention;
  • Trusts others naturally;
  • Functions best when around people or when working in teams;
  • Great encouragers and motivators of others;
  • Personal and activity-oriented; and
  • Use of time is undisciplined and fast-paced, constantly in motion.
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The Methodical Decision-Maker

personality-3

Individuals who fall in the bottom left quadrant tend to make decisions very slowly and only make them based on facts gained through rigorous research. This decision-making style aligns with Conscientious DISC personality type.


Methodical Personality Traits

  • Accurate, precise, detail-oriented, and conscientious;
  • Makes decisions carefully with plenty of research;
  • Holds very high standards for both themselves and others;
  • Avoids conflict rather than argue;
  • Business-like and detail-oriented; and
  • Use of time is disciplined and slow-paced.
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The Humanistic Decision-Maker

personality-4

Individuals who fall in the bottom right quadrant make slower decisions and tend to base those decisions on how they think the outcome of that decision will make themselves or others feel. This decision-making style aligns with Steady DISC personality type.

Humanistic Personality Trait

  • Steady, stable, and predictable;
  • Prefer close, personal relationships;
  • Patient, good listeners;
  • Strives for stability and a feeling of peace and safety;
  • Uncomfortable with change;
  • Personal and relationship-oriented;
  • They want to know the person behind the business; and
  • Use of time is undisciplined and slow-paced.

Just like with DISC personality types, it is entirely possible to have a hybrid between two decision-making styles, but one style should stick out as the primary. Try to associate only one decision-making type to each of your personas. More than that will start to get confusing.

Step 3:

Craft Decision-Making Style-Based Messaging

Craft Decision-Making Style-Based Messaging

Now that you know how each of your personas make decisions, you can begin to formulate your ideas around how you’ll message to each of those personas. Use the guidelines below to tailor your value propositions and key messages toward each individual.

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Guidelines for the Competitive Decision-Maker

The Competitive wants to know what you can do for them, not how you do it. And they want you to tell them quickly and simply. They also want a clear understanding of the options in front of them and why you are the best choice.

How to Message to the Competitive Decision-Maker

  • How to Message to the Competitive Decision-Maker
  • They must see your qualifications, records, and values;
  • Documented evidence stressing results are hard to argue with;
  • Show WHAT you can do for them, and how it will help them meet their goals;
  • Support their ideas and conclusions rather than “pushing” a solution on them;
  • Provide options, probabilities, and potentially challenge them to find something better;
  • They value freedom from the mundane and tedious tasks;
  • Motivated by new challenges, setting and achieving goals, and seeing tangible results; and
  • Be direct, to the point, and brief.

Questions You’ll Need to Answer

  • What are your competitive advantages?
  • What makes you the best?
  • How can you help me be more efficient?
  • How can I trust you?
  • Can you help me reach my goals?
  • What are your credentials?

Guidelines for the Spontaneous Decision-Maker

The Spontaneous loves being a part of the “in-crowd.” They want to know who’s used your service and why. For them, the focus is on the enjoyment of life.

How to Message to the Spontaneous Decision-Maker

  • How to Message to the Spontaneous Decision-Maker
  • Provide evidence that you are trustworthy and friendly;
  • Show that they are going to be listened to;
  • Show personal attention and interest, make them center of attention;
  • Demonstrate WHY you are the best solution;
  • Support their feelings, interests, and excitement;
  • Provide guarantees and opinions but not options;
  • Let them know they won’t have to worry about the details;
  • They are motivated by the approval, flattery, praise, popularity, or acceptance by others; and
  • Avoid feelings of rejection or disapproval.

Questions You’ll Need to Answer

  • How can you provide what I’m looking for quickly?
  • Is your service the best?
  • Can I customize your offering?
  • Can you help me narrow down my choices?
  • Can you make this process easy on me?
  • How will this let me enjoy life more?
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Guidelines for the Methodical Decision-Maker

Speaking to the Methodical is where you can break the rules about discussing how your product works. They really do care and want to know every detail, so provide it to them early in the buying process.

How to Message to the Methodical Decision-Maker

  • Show evidence of your experience, knowledge, and processes;
  • Documented evidence of success and preparation are key;
  • Demonstrate HOW can you provide a solution and the steps you take;
  • Support their principles and rational approach;
  • Provide evidence and show superior service;
  • Focus on the details rather than the larger picture; and
  • They are motivated by information and logic.

Questions You’ll Need to Answer

  • What are the details?
  • How does it work?
  • What is your process?
  • Can you walk me through the steps?
  • What is the plan?
  • Can I see the proof?
  • Do you provide a guarantee?

Guidelines for the Humanistic Decision-Maker

humanistic-decision-01The Humanistic is all about people and relationships. They want to know who they are working with and are very interested in the relationships that will accompany the use of your product or service.


How to Message to the Humanistic Decision-Maker

  • Talk about who are you, what you think, and who you know;
  • Give them recognition and approval;
  • Focus on WHO have you provided solutions to;
  • Support their ideas, intuitions, and focus on your relationship;
  • Let them know how it “feels” to work with you;
  • Offer testimony and incentives;
  • Motivated by safety and security;
  • Appreciate their loyalty and dependability; and
  • Try to be personable and build rapport.

Questions You’ll Need to Answer

  • How will your product or service make me feel?
  • Who uses your product? Do I recognize their name?
  • Who are you as a company and a team?
  • What experience have others had with you?
  • Can I trust you? And will I like you?
  • What are your values?
  • How will you help me build and strengthen relationships?
Messaging Matrix

Now, Start to Fill in Your Messaging Matrix

Product%20-%20Persona%20Messaging%20Matrix

Sample Messaging Matrix

Before you move on from step 3, and onto steps 4, 5, and 6, you will need to put together a messaging matrix to fill in. You will use this matrix to document the key messages you’ve identified in this section, as well as what follows in the remainder of this process.

The example above is one that we use to draft our messaging strategies for clients, but yours could look different. However, a successful messaging matrix must include your personas, and your product and services, as well as space, to define each of the following:

  • Value proposition;
  • Level of urgency;
  • Key messages;
  • Overcoming common objections;
  • What to avoid; and
  • A sample story.

In any case where a specific product or service offering would apply to a specific persona, the messaging strategy for that persona should be entered into that cell.

Here's an example of how you might flesh out the details for a particular persona:

messaging-by-persona

(We'll show you an example of the key messages and sample story sections later.)

The messaging matrix will be the heart of your messaging framework, so you cannot proceed without it.

Step 4:

Create Your Value Propositions

Create Your Value Propositions

Now that you have personas created and a decision-making style assigned to each, it is time start the real work -- writing value propositions! You’ll want to write a separate value proposition for each product or service line for each persona that would purchase that product or service.

A value proposition is a single sentence about your product or service that distills down the benefit it provides to the end user.

A good value proposition should try to answer all of the following questions:

  • Why do your products or services matter?
  • What problem(s) are you trying to solve?
  • What is it that you do to solve that problem?
  • What makes you different from everyone else?

Notice we don’t have “How does your product or service work?” in the list above. Your value proposition should not be about how your offering works, but should ultimately focus on the benefits your product or service provides.

A great starting point is to use the following template:

[My firm] is the only [noun, competitive category] that provides [plural noun, your target audience] with [plural noun, emotional benefit] by/through/with [adjective, your unique differentiator].

We wouldn’t recommend leaving it in that format grammatically, because that isn’t how people really talk. But, if you write it in that format first, it can help get your ideas on paper. Then you can rephrase it into a more conversational structure.

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Step 5:

Develop Key Messages for Personas & Products

Develop Key Messages for Personas & Products

Up next, you’ll want to select key messages for each of your personas and products. You should have no more than four or five key messages for each cell in your messaging matrix. These points should be the benefits provided by your product or service that this specific persona will identify with.

Here's what a fully-developed example of key messages and a sample story might look like:

sample-messaging-1

One great example of this is Domo, where they have pages on their site dedicated to outlining the value propositions for specific personas:

domo-messaging

You'll see in the address bar that this is a page designed only for CEOs. It highlights the three key benefits that come from their product for the CEO, based on their goals and challenges. This is how you should approach the creation of your key messages.

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Step 6

Present Your Ideas to the Group

Present Your Ideas to the Group

It is our firm opinion that no messaging strategy can be created in a vacuum. You can’t do it alone. One person will never be able to create a great messaging strategy. You’ll want the ability to bounce ideas back and forth and test them out.

Personally, we don’t think any company can really do a good job of creating a messaging strategy by themselves. It truly takes an objective, outside party who is willing to push back. The core team from inside the business will be too “in the weeds” to really see things from an outsider perspective. So, keep that in mind if you’re trying to do this internally.

Once you have written a messaging framework, consider it just a first draft, a “proposal” of sorts. Take it back to the same team who helped you brainstorm and let them poke holes in it, make minor tweaks and perfect it.

conclusion-team-01

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What Should You Do Next?

What Should You Do Next?

The messaging strategy you create at the close of this exercise using your matrix should be treated like gold. It truly is one of the most important documents for your company’s success. Think of it like your business’ North Star or Guiding Light. Everyone in the company should know it like the back of their hand and be comfortable speaking with outsiders about the products and services your company offers.

But once you have the framework in-hand, what should you do next?

Well, the answer to that depends on what your immediate needs and goals as a business are, but here are a few suggestions:

  • Create Your Brand's Content Style Guide
    Aside from your messaging strategy, your brand's content style guide is one of the most important strategy backbone documents you'll ever create -- it will ensure your messaging is packaged correctly every time for your ideal buyers. Learn how to create a content style guide.
  • Update Your Website Copy
    Are the messages currently on your website in-line with what your personas need to hear based on your newly-defined decision-making styles and preferences?

  • Revise Your Marketing Collateral
    Are your brochures and handouts targeting the right message for the right people?

  • Refine Sales Scripts & Templates
    What messaging changes can you make to your sales tools that will have an immediate impact?

  • Update Your Employee Onboarding
    Are there opportunities to introduce these new insights early, as part of training for new marketing, sales, and customer service team members?

And so much more.

But remember, your marketing messaging framework is not a “set it and forget it” strategy. Businesses pivot, products change, and target markets evolve. Revisit your messaging regularly -- maybe on a quarterly or annual basis.

Now, we release you! Go forth and message wisely!

Are You Ready to Talk About Your Messaging Strategy?

Learn how we can help you reach your goals -- and to see if we're the right fit for you.

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Table of Contents
Introduction "Wait, Why Do I Need a Messaging Strategy?"
Step 1 Choose Your Brand Strategy Style
Step 2 Identify Your Personas’ Decision-Making Styles
Step 3 Craft Decision-Making Style-Based Messaging
Step 4 Create Your Value Propositions
Step 5 Develop Key Messages for Personas & Products
Step 6 Present Your Ideas to the Group
Conclusion What Should You Do Next?